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Murdoch's World (INTL PB ED) (Paperback, International edition)
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Murdoch's World (INTL PB ED) (Paperback, International edition)
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In July 2012 Rupert Murdoch experienced what he called "the most
humbled day of my life" (he misspoke - he meant "humbling") when he
was testifying in front of a British Parliamentary inquiry into the
activities of his British newspapers and was assailed by a man
carrying a paper plate full of shaving foam. Murdoch looked tired,
old, and out of touch with the organization he had created. It
seemed that he was within weeks of losing control of the business
he had amassed and unquestionably loved: his global newspapers,
prominent among them the British no-prisoners-taken red-topped
tabloids. Within six months it was as if it had never happened.
News International's share price was robust, Murdoch's control
unquestioned and he had promoted a bold division on News into two
companies, one focusing on digital and TV, the other on print. The
summer's stories of the jockeying among Murdoch's children and
corporate lieutenants to succeed him were silenced; what promised
to be the second half of King Lear never unfolded - the king
remained resolutely on his throne. No sons or daughter would
displace him anytime soon. There had been casualties - the
flame-haired Rebecca Brooks faced a prison sentence; Prime Minister
David Cameron was embarrassed; and the News of the World was
shuttered. But the company in general, and Murdoch in particular
marched on relentlessly to the sound of its own song, the News
Internationale, as it were. Other news barons are more flamboyant -
Murdoch cannot match Silvio Berlusconi for tawdriness, and he does
not own a sports franchise - but none is as significant a factor in
the popular culture across the English speaking world. Murdoch has
changed the landscape of news in Australia, first, Britain and now
America. Always controversial, he has also overseen an talent pool
of newspapermen and women that are the envy of their rivals. Almost
no one in the US wants the Wall Street Journal to return to what it
was before Murdoch bought it in 2007. Murdoch may not be liked, but
he is respected. His competitive instincts are second to none. And
in Fox TV, he owns America's most fearlessly disruptive popular
cable station. So much has happened in the Murdoch story that it's
amazing that almost five years have passed since the last full
biographical treatment. NPR News's David Folkenflik brings us up to
date with the ongoing greatest story of all time: the man who makes
the news, literally: Rupert Murdoch.
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