The Scribbler: Wolff unveils plans for new Murdoch tale
A new biography of global media mogul Rupert Murdoch is to be penned by Vanity Fair columnist and author Michael Wolff.
A new biography of global media mogul Rupert Murdoch is to be penned by Vanity Fair columnist and author Michael Wolff.
It’s the match of the season: Roy Keane vs the Wags.
Eugene O’Brien’s hugely successful play, Eden, is being made into a film, but he is keeping quiet about his next TV project, despite the popularity of his previous show, Pure Mule.
Always properly defrost cheese pies. That was the lesson learned by regional newsreader Kenny Toal last week when, gripped by stomach spasms midway through his evening show, North East Tonight, broadcast from Newcastle upon Tyne, Toal realised he was
It’s Star Trek, Jim, but not as we know it.
Judi Curtin and Malachy Doyle will feature in the Children’s Books Festival 2007 which takes place from October 3-26 in venues across the country.
To think they used to say it was Mick who had the talent for publicity.
This isn’t something I like admitting to, because I know full well that it’s bad and wrong, but here goes anyway: I have a tendency to judge people by their jobs.
Wicklow-born singer-songwriter Fionn Regan has been nominated for the Mercury Music Prize in Britain for his debut album, and the timing simply couldn’t be better.
AFTER THIS. By Alice McDermott, Bloomsbury, €16.15.
He’s bringing sexy back, you say? Spitting, more like. The man the paparazzi call Trousersnake has been alienating fans with his odd behaviour.
First Christopher Hitchens, now the Duchess of York: Paris Hilton is finding friends these days in unlikely quarters.
It was the ending the bookies hadn’t foreseen.
NINA TODD HAS GONE. BY LESLEY GLAISTER, Bloomsbury, €16.15.
Be careful: you never know who you might meet online. That was the lesson learned by a bunch of internet surfers recently when, on a website to discuss the new Die Hard movie, Live Free or Die Hard (or Die Hard 4.0 as it’s known outside the US), post