Veteran foreign correspondent and broadcaster Michael Buerk is getting tired of “bleeding heart” celebrities. In an interview in the latest issue of the Radio Times, Buerk said that he was “a little sniffy about celebs pratting around among the world’s victims”. He went on to single out actors Benedict Cumberbatch and Emma Thompson for wearing their hearts a little too regularly on their sleeves
In a supposedly ‘anti-political’ age the scholarly literature on celebrity politicians argues that ...
Popbitch may not be the biggest celebrity gossip website in the world but it is one of the most inte...
How effective are celebrities, not just in helping to draw attention to distant suffering, but in ac...
Veteran foreign correspondent and broadcaster Michael Buerk is getting tired of “bleeding heart” cel...
If you want to get noticed, get a celebrity. That’s been the maxim for charities desperately seeking...
Celebrity is a fact of political life, in fact, it is a vital part of modern politics, and politicia...
Britain’s premier political discussion programme Question Time turned into what Iain Dale has rightl...
When Sharon Stone says she will kiss just about anybody for peace in the Middle East then a hostile ...
I’ve written elsewhere about the effortlessness with which the BBC’s Question Time programme seems t...
Celebrity coverage is defined as mediated attention provided to well‐known individuals who through t...
Sam Delaney is one of our leading celebrity magazine editors and one of the most thoughtful journali...
Tony Harrison’s new play, Fram, at the National Theatre reminds us that celebrity humanitarianism go...
A decidedly promiscuous brand of renown, celebrity has a bad reputation. That reputation was charact...
The testimonies of celebrities affect the lives of their many followers who pay attention to what th...
After the recent US television awards, global audiences were assaulted by the rather nauseating sigh...
In a supposedly ‘anti-political’ age the scholarly literature on celebrity politicians argues that ...
Popbitch may not be the biggest celebrity gossip website in the world but it is one of the most inte...
How effective are celebrities, not just in helping to draw attention to distant suffering, but in ac...
Veteran foreign correspondent and broadcaster Michael Buerk is getting tired of “bleeding heart” cel...
If you want to get noticed, get a celebrity. That’s been the maxim for charities desperately seeking...
Celebrity is a fact of political life, in fact, it is a vital part of modern politics, and politicia...
Britain’s premier political discussion programme Question Time turned into what Iain Dale has rightl...
When Sharon Stone says she will kiss just about anybody for peace in the Middle East then a hostile ...
I’ve written elsewhere about the effortlessness with which the BBC’s Question Time programme seems t...
Celebrity coverage is defined as mediated attention provided to well‐known individuals who through t...
Sam Delaney is one of our leading celebrity magazine editors and one of the most thoughtful journali...
Tony Harrison’s new play, Fram, at the National Theatre reminds us that celebrity humanitarianism go...
A decidedly promiscuous brand of renown, celebrity has a bad reputation. That reputation was charact...
The testimonies of celebrities affect the lives of their many followers who pay attention to what th...
After the recent US television awards, global audiences were assaulted by the rather nauseating sigh...
In a supposedly ‘anti-political’ age the scholarly literature on celebrity politicians argues that ...
Popbitch may not be the biggest celebrity gossip website in the world but it is one of the most inte...
How effective are celebrities, not just in helping to draw attention to distant suffering, but in ac...