David Johnson wrote:
> Can individuals sell stories to newspapers and get
> > substantial sums of money in return? Yes or No?
>
> Not anymore no.
>
> Better tell the Sun to stop then!
>
>
http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/24 ... e-Sun.html
>
> They refer to stories being worth thousands with more being
> paid if you have pictures. ?5K might be nothing to you but for
> a lot of people it is a substantial sum of money.
Of course they say that but they NEVER NEVER pay "thousands". Give a tip to a paper and you'll get ?50, a lead (the main story on the page) and you'll get ?400 or so. David, even you should know not to believe everything you read in the newspapers!
>
> 2.Can individuals and newspapers avoid libel and slander cases
> > for their stories re. events 40 years ago, by choosing a
> target
> > who died a year ago? Yes or No?
>
> Yes although they would be unlikely to get paid for a story
> that happened years ago about someone who is dead."
>
> Looking at the wall to wall news coverage of the Savile story
> in the newspapers and on television, I don't see how you can
> generalise with a one size fits all approach as you do with
> regard to payments for stories that happened years ago.
Did the girl (not his ex-girlfriend) who came forward to accuse Gary Glitter get paid? No. Did any of Jonathan King's victims? No. They were "stories that happened years ago".
>
> "3. If you as an individual or a newspaper received/paid for
> > that story, would you be likely to highlight/make known that
> > you received/ got paid for the story? Yes or No?"
>
> You dont seem to have understood the question. You ask Bamboo
> who has paid the women re. the Savile story. My point is that
> in the event of payments being made for a story, neither the
> payer nor the payee are going out of the way to highlight the
> payment. Rather undermines the veracity of the story being
> peddled!!!
No, it doesn't because everyone will get paid but the sums are relatively tiny or non-existent.