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1 Background  





2 Career  





3 Books  





4 References  














James Steen (journalist)







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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


James Steen is a British journalist and author and former penultimate editor of Punch.

Background

[edit]

James Edward Steen is the son of the photographer David Steen and the journalist Shirley Flack.

Career

[edit]

Steen worked on Today and freelanced for most of the other nationals including the Daily Mail, The Sunday Times and Sunday Express when Eve Pollard was the editor. He became the editor of Punch in 1997 following the departure of Paul Spike. Although the magazine never gained a large circulation, under Steen's editorship it became a powerful voice puncturing the pomposity of the powerful and covered stories that the mainstream media shied away from. An advertising campaign emphasised the new approach with the slogan: "If we catch you at it, you're in it."[1] It helped to uncover the true story behind the loan that led to the first sacking from the cabinet of Peter Mandelson in December 1998.[1] It was also at the vanguard of the investigation into the murder of the TV presenter Jill Dando. Punch also revealed that high-street banks routinely abandoned confidential information inside bin-bags deposited on the street, rather than shredding it. "How your secrets are left on the street", blazed the cover line, and a seven-page report detailed exactly what was found in bags left outside a handful of London banks.[1]

Among the journalists who worked on the magazine during Steen's editorship were Jerry Hayes who covered politics, Dominic Midgley who was the deputy editor, John McVicar who wrote about crime, Nick Foulkes (luxury goods), Jono Coleman (restaurant critic), George Best (football), James Hipwell and Anil Bhoyrul (finance) after they left the Daily Mirror.[2]

Steen left Punch in 2001 and became co-editor (with Midgley) of the Scurra gossip column on the Daily Mirror. The paper's then editor and now television presenter Piers Morgan called Steen "the world's most mischievous journalist".[3] The column was dropped when Morgan was sacked in 2004.

Steen turned his hand to ghosting the autobiographies of celebrity chefs beginning with the enfant terrible of cookery Marco Pierre White and White Slave (entitled The Devil In The Kitchen in North America and in the paperback version)[4] was published in 2006. The three-starred chef admitted that Steen had written all of the book "but I did lots and lots of interviews with him and it's the most wonderful form of counselling ever, free of charge, and I was being paid for it."[5] Steen followed up by working with Raymond Blanc and Keith Floyd. In November 2008, Steen won the Association of Publishing Agencies' Effectiveness Awards Journalist of the Year gong for his writing on Waitrose Food Illustrated. His work for the John Brown-published magazine included an interview with Marcus Wareing regarding his ex-boss Gordon Ramsay, which was picked up by a number of national newspapers. The judges said:

"Steen grabs your attention from the very first word. You feel like you're getting an exclusive look at his subject and come away with a real insight into what they're really like."[6]

Books

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c "Punching above its weight". The Independent. 13 April 1998. Retrieved 7 July 2020.
  • ^ "BBC News | BUSINESS | Share scandal journalists sacked". news.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 7 July 2020.
  • ^ White Slave The Autobiography The Godfather Of Modern Cooking – Marco Pierre White (London: Orion 2006)
  • ^ Marco Pierre White (2007). The Devil In The Kitchen. London: Orion. ISBN 978-0-7528-8161-4.
  • ^ Lynn Barber (interviewer) (21 October 2007). "What's Eating Marco? (Observer Food Monthly interview)". The Observer. London. Retrieved 5 February 2013. {{cite news}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  • ^ http://www.pressgazette.co.uk/node/42547 [dead link]

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=James_Steen_(journalist)&oldid=1073404446"

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