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John Pilger – Frontline Club http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com Championing Independent Journalism Tue, 12 Nov 2013 13:50:09 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Reflections with John Pilger: “Journalism was an enormous privilege” http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/reflections_with_john_pilger_journalism_was_an_enormous_privilege/ http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/reflections_with_john_pilger_journalism_was_an_enormous_privilege/#comments Wed, 27 Jun 2012 22:06:24 +0000 http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/dev/reflections_with_john_pilger_journalism_was_an_enormous_privilege/ By Helena Williams

Veteran investigative journalist John Pilger cannot explain what has driven him to travel the world and cover some of its most important stories for the past half century. From being the youngest journalist to be named Journalist of the Year – and winning the award twice – to witnessing numerous conflicts – Pilger’s reputation precedes him.

“I can’t start to analyse why I do it. I’ve always felt that being a journalist was an enormous privilege, being allowed to go into people’s lives, gaining their trust, finding out what the hell is going on – I pursued that as a journalist.”

“Labels have been stuck on me but I never put one on myself. I tried to give you a glimpse of that in my own development tonight.”

In conversation with journalist and writer Charles Glass, Pilger explained to the audience the ins and outs of his extraordinary career.

He left his birthplace in Sydney, Australia, in the 1960s and joined Reuters, later moving to the London Daily Mirror – then Britain’s biggest selling newspaper.

From then he pursued his one goal in life, “a pretty simple ambition at that point – I wanted to be a journalist and travel the world.”

His critical reporting from an often appraised neutral eye is a characteristic that has won Pilger his reputation for excellence. On covering his first conflict, Vietnam, he said: “I didn’t go there thinking this was a wrong war. I just knew very little about it.”

“But starting to understand how Vietnam happened changed me very quickly. When I went to the MeKong delta and saw villages hit by Napalm, all kinds of questions arose for me. [Martha] Gelhorn was the first to identify this was a war against civilians, which is a precursor to wars now, and a precursor to how I would approach a war now.”

He described a number of anecdotes which defined his career through a series of past video clips. They covered Cambodia, East Timor and Myanmar’s tragedies and struggles; Aung San Suu Kyi’s detention, the American invasion of Iraq and the rise of Wikileaks, to name a few.

He But he also looked to the present state of the media – blasting the Leveson inquiry as “extraordinary waffle shop.”

“Leveson has not even mentioned that the media’s greatest and most disreputable role has been in the promotion of wars that has cost a vast number of lives and devastation of countries,” he explained.

“Most media is an extension of established order and power, with the occasional honourable exception.”

“Journalism students should be taught to be sceptical of their employers, sceptical of their governments. Governments are still portrayed as benign if they’re ours, and if they’re other’s, they’re not.”

“Media is an extension of power but when we recognise that we become aware of official drivel and understand that the truth is subversive. It always is.”

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FULLY BOOKED Reflections with John Pilger http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/reflections_john_pilger/ http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/reflections_john_pilger/#respond Wed, 27 Jun 2012 19:00:00 +0000 http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/dev/reflections_john_pilger/ In association with BBC College of Journalism

Renowned investigative journalist, author and documentary film-maker John Pilger will be joining us in conversation with broadcaster, journalist and writer Charles Glass to look back on half a century of reporting from around the world.

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Renowned investigative journalist, author and documentary film-maker John Pilger will be joining us in conversation with broadcaster, journalist and writer Charles Glass to look back on half a century of reporting from around the world.

Born in Sydney, Australia, Pilger arrived in London in the 1960s and joined Reuters later moving to the London Daily Mirror, then Britain’s biggest selling newspaper and undergoing remarkable changes to a serious tabloid.

He has reported from all over the world, covering numerous wars, notably Vietnam and the Middle East. He was the youngest journalist to be named Journalist of the Year and the first to win it twice.

In the United States Pilger reported the upheavals of the late 1960s and 1970s, marching with America’s poor from Alabama to Washington following the assassination of Martin Luther King. He was in the same room when Robert Kennedy, the presidential candidate, was assassinated in June 1968.

His newspaper reports and films from Cambodia and East Timor alerted much of the world to those tragedies and struggles He has won an Emmy and a BAFTA for his documentaries, which have also won numerous US and European awards, such as as the Royal Television Society’s Best Documentary.

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