Jerome Taylor Is The Election Best Story (And Best Pictures)
THE best story of the election was not Gordon Brown calling an elderly woman a bigot but the one in which reporter Jerome Taylor got beaten up as he investigated electoral fraud in East London.
Taylor exhibits the kind of journalism that might have exposed the dodgy dossier or the troughing MPs – the Telegraph’s scoop on greedy MPs only came to light because someone was offering to sell the story and they spotted the chance and had the cash (the Sun, for one, turned it down).
It’s the kind of in-yer-face journalism that makes no freinds and gets you in trouble.
Anyhow, As Jerome Taylor is having all colours of the election kicked out him he not only offers readers’ tips on how to get beaten up and survive but keeps an eye on his attackers.
As their fists and feet slammed into me, all I could think about was some advice a friend had given me. She’s a paramedic and has dealt with countless victims of assault. “Whatever you do don’t get knocked to the ground,” she once said. “Blows on the floor are much more dangerous.” …
Soft skin between hard ground and hard boot. Taylor hits the deck. He is saved by a passer by. With the shoeing over, he talks to his savious who has seen two of the attackers run “into the candidate’s house“.
Terrific journalism. Brave. Maybe a bit foolish. But it’s the mix of unpreparedness and curiosity that makes a good reporter. Don’t expect too much. Let the story show itself…
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THIS PICTURE IS A TRANSMISSION OF A SELECTION OF THE PRESS ASSOCIATION'S BEST PICTURES OF THE 2010 GENERAL ELECTION CAMPAIGN. File photo dated 12/04/10 of Election coordinator Douglas Alexander (centre left) briefing journalists on the Labour Party campaign bus before Prime Minister Gordon Brown launched Labour's manifesto for the May 6th General Election at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham, during the 2010 General Election campaign.
Posted: 5th, May 2010 | In: Reviews Comment | TrackBack | Permalink