• Support Wokingham Today
  • Get the print edition
  • Sign up for our daily newsletter
Thursday, February 12, 2026
Wokingham.Today
  • HOME
  • MY AREA
    • All
    • Arborfield
    • Barkham
    • Beech Hill
    • Binfield
    • Bracknell
    • Charvil
    • Crowthorne
    • Earley
    • Emmbrook
    • Finchampstead
    • Grazeley
    • Henley
    • Hurst
    • Lower Earley
    • Norreys
    • Reading
    • Remenham
    • Riseley
    • Shinfield
    • Sindlesham
    • Sonning
    • Spencers Wood
    • Swallowfield
    • Three Mile Cross
    • Twyford
    • Wargrave
    • Winnersh
    • Wokingham
    • Wokingham Without
    • Woodley
    • Woosehill
    • Yateley
    Swallowfield bridge

    WATCH: Ancient Swallowfield bridge crumples under lorry impact

    Wokingham Town Hall

    Two more Wokingham town councillors step down

    Heritage Day, Wokingham Town Hall Picture: WIkimedia Commons

    ‘Please don’t talk our town down’: Councillor acts to clarify myths around footfall in Wokingham town centre

    Wokingham

    Residents react on social media as Wokingham named as one of UK’s ‘happiest’ retirement spots

    Gala guests will be able to celebrate Bond?s lethal charm, martini preferences, and high-stakes missions, while at the same time raising money for My Cancer My Choices. Picture: Hakan Dahlstrom via Wikimedia commons

    Bracknell goes 007: Local charity to host glamorous Casino Royale gala

    Vote on names for Wokingham Borough?s new waste vehicles. Picture: WBC

    Binderella, Recyclosaurus Rex and more: Wokingham’s bin naming contest is pure comedy gold

    Who was the real Valentine? Words from Wokingham churches. Picture: conger design via Pixabay

    Church Notes: What is real love?

    Shinfield St Mary?s Junior School has helped plant more than 130 young trees at the Covid Memorial Woodland. picture: Stewart Turkington

    From classroom to woodland: Shinfield pupils help shape Covid memorial in Wokingham

    Councillor Matteo Fumagalli.

    Wokingham Town councillor resigns

  • CRIME
  • SPORT
    • All
    • Binfield FC
    • Reading FC
    Callum Lochhead. Pic: WTFC.

    Fundraiser launched in memory of Callum

    The team that took part. Pic: Andrew Batt.

    Ashridge Park women’s support for Daisy’s Dream

    Paudie O'Connor Picture: Luke Adams

    ‘Incredibly lucky, but an important win’: Late O’Connor goal snatches victory for Reading FC away at Wigan

    Andy Rinomhota

    Reading FC boost as Rinomhota returns to the pitch after family issue lay-off

    Callum Lochhead. Pic: WTFC.

    Wokingham Town FC announces passing of player

    Reading FC Picture: Luke Adams

    Reading FC look to take advantage of woeful Wigan as Latics sack manager

    GSF Awards

    Reading athletes could win big as GSF awards open for applications

    Reaidng FC Picture: Luke Adams

    Play-off hopes over? Reading FC fans criticise performance after away defeat to AFC Wimbledon

    Leam Richardson Picture: Luke Adams

    ‘It would be a very bad look to jump ship’: Fans react as Reading FC boss is linked with Championship job

  • READING FC
  • COMMUNITY
    Wokingham Town Hall

    Two more Wokingham town councillors step down

    Heritage Day, Wokingham Town Hall Picture: WIkimedia Commons

    ‘Please don’t talk our town down’: Councillor acts to clarify myths around footfall in Wokingham town centre

    Gala guests will be able to celebrate Bond?s lethal charm, martini preferences, and high-stakes missions, while at the same time raising money for My Cancer My Choices. Picture: Hakan Dahlstrom via Wikimedia commons

    Bracknell goes 007: Local charity to host glamorous Casino Royale gala

    Visitors to the next Spencers Wood Repair Cafe can learn about energy saving tips from KillAWatt. Picture: Rudy and Peter Skitterians via Pixabay

    Pick up free tips on how to save energy costs at Spencers Wood Repair Cafe

    Who was the real Valentine? Words from Wokingham churches. Picture: conger design via Pixabay

    Church Notes: What is real love?

    Shinfield St Mary?s Junior School has helped plant more than 130 young trees at the Covid Memorial Woodland. picture: Stewart Turkington

    From classroom to woodland: Shinfield pupils help shape Covid memorial in Wokingham

    Councillor Matteo Fumagalli.

    Wokingham Town councillor resigns

    Wokingham

    ‘It reflects the needs for a diverse society’: Residents clash over potential plans for Mosque to be built in Wokingham

    Callum Lochhead. Pic: WTFC.

    Fundraiser launched in memory of Callum

  • LIFESTYLE
    • All
    • Food
    • Health
    • Obituaries
    • People
    Wokingham

    Residents react on social media as Wokingham named as one of UK’s ‘happiest’ retirement spots

    Wokingham

    ‘It reflects the needs for a diverse society’: Residents clash over potential plans for Mosque to be built in Wokingham

    WPD's next meeting will look at ways in which businesses can be more sustainable and socially responsible. Picture: StartupStockPhoto via PIxabay

    Naturally Speaking: a talk will give fresh insight into business sustainability

    The petition.

    Campaigners declare victory as council backs Wokingham mosque plans

    Terence Ernest Carpenter

    Wokingham Picture: Wikimedia Commons

    The UK’s happiest retirement town? Wokingham features in new study

    Clive Jones, Wokingham MP, welcomes the National Cancer Plan, but warns that more funding is needed. Picture: Liberal Democrats

    Clive Jones welcomes National Cancer Plan, but adds warning

    Wokingham Half Marathon Pictures: Andrew Batt

    All you need to know about the David Cliff Wokingham half marathon

    It is expanding access to a pioneering health and fitness programme.

    Places Leisure’s new programme for those with MSK conditions

  • WHAT’S ON
    • All
    • Arts
    • Entertainment
    Gala guests will be able to celebrate Bond?s lethal charm, martini preferences, and high-stakes missions, while at the same time raising money for My Cancer My Choices. Picture: Hakan Dahlstrom via Wikimedia commons

    Bracknell goes 007: Local charity to host glamorous Casino Royale gala

    REVIEW: “Lark Rise to Candleford” at The Watermill Theatre, Newbury

    A concert at Earley St Peter's Church will raise funds for Alexander Devine and the church. Picture: Michael Ford via Wikimedia Commons

    Enjoy an afternoon of choral music in aid of Alexander Devine

    Rewind Festival Picture: Rewind Festival 2025

    Rewind Festival returns to Henley-on-Thames this August with Human League and The Proclaimers

    Only the Poets Picture: Andrew Merritt

    RaW Sounds Today: Only The Poets, Asia, The Primitives

    Join Daisy's Dream 30th Birthday Bake-off celebrations. Picture: Daisy's Dream

    Join Daisy’s Dream’s birthday bake-off

    Wokingham Festival Picture: Andrew Merritt

    Wokingham Festival reveals acts with announcement of 2026 line-up

    Enjoy a night of opera gems in Wokingham

    Spriggan Mist Picture: Andrew Merritt

    RaW Sounds Today: Spriggan Mist, Nicole Allen, Lake Acacia

  • BUSINESS
  • ADVERTISE
  • CONTACT
No Result
View All Result
Wokingham.Today
No Result
View All Result
Home Featured

George, news is a demanding mistress: advice from one editor to another

by Phil Creighton
March 18, 2017
in Featured, Opinion, Politics
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Well done George Osborne on your appointment as the 31st editor of the London Evening Standard. You join a select list of editors to one of the biggest local newspapers in the country including fellow politician, the late Michael Foot.

Eros Evening Standard
Evening Stanard logo with Eros

With its woodcut Eros masthead and vendors standing outside tube stations across the capital, the Evening Standard is as much an icon of London as red phone boxes, the Tower and the Gherkin.

The paper is a rare beast: it fuses news from London with insight into the day’s big national and international stories. The nearest like it in the country is the daily Wolverhampton Express and Star – a far cry from your weekly paper, the Knutsford Guardian. 

As a youngster, on the rare occasions I travelled through London, catching the different editions of the Standard was a fun sport: spotting the changes between them all the way through to the West End Final.

A skilled team of journalists, reporters, photographers, sub-editors and printers worked tirelessly throughout the day to bring the latest news, and the papers would hit the streets often with the ink still wet.

Wokingham Paper
Like the Evening Standard, we cover all the big issues that matter to our readers

Technology has changed enormously, but the demands on the job remain the same. The internet has replaced the daily editions – and the website needs to be updated round the clock.

Related posts

Man arrested after crash near Wokingham leaves motorcyclist with life threatening injuries

Man charged with sexual assaults

Like you, I edit a local newspaper. It covers a busy news patch, nowhere near as big as the seven million people who live and work in London – although with Wokingham borough being commuter belt, we share some of the same readers.

We cover political intrigues, planning issues, building concerns – all types of stories that you will have in your newslists and be sweating over as you determine the shape of that day’s book. 

Theresa May
We are more likely to cover the Prime Minister’s work as a constituency MP than her role in 10 Downing Street

We even share the Prime Minister.

To you she is the leader of the country, to us she is one of the four constituency MPs who serve our borough.

We’re more likely to picture her opening a village fete or handing out prizes at a fun run than cover her pow-wowing with Donald Trump or Angela Merkel as she pushes through Brexit (interesting fact for the dinner parties: Wokingham voted to remain, despite one of its MPs, John Redwood, passionately imploring us to leave).

But there is so much more to local journalism than turning up the Standard’s offices to sign off the front page and listen to the news conference before popping into BlackRock Investment Institute to give them some advice, making a speech for the Washington Speaker’s Bureau, helping the Northern Powerhouse, researching some material for the McCain Institute or, if you’ve got the time, heading to the House of Commons to answer Mrs Jones’ letter about the cost of parking in Tatton Street car park.

You’ve got a busy diary even before you look at the Londoners’ Diary – how will you cope with the daily rigours of the local newspaper office?

I often joke that news is a demanding mistress. It puts pressures on me that go far beyond what a normal day job will ever make. It is not a nine-to-five job, let alone the nine-to-noon role you are envisioning.

Rob Wilson
Rob Wilson presents a prize at the Woodley Festival to Sofia Kar Almazan, who sang Home On The Range

Today is my day off.

That has meant squeezing in an early morning photo op with Rob Wilson, another of our four MPs, as he presented prizes at a local arts contest for children.

I then took my children to their Saturday activities and, while they were dancing or tae kwon do-ing, for the sake of another story, I popped over to a local pub where there had been an altercation.

A quick cuppa at home and then it was out to take photos of a hockey match before collecting my daughter.

While helping them with the homework, I’m also multi-tasking by looking at the readers’ letters that have come over and checking sources lest there be any breaking news.

Weekdays – my normal working day – are little better.

Our newsroom is a lot smaller than yours, so I double up as tea boy, page setter and arbitrator to readers’ queries.

That often means fielding 20-minute phone calls from someone who wants to talk to us about a story we’ve run. These calls can range from rants to tips that add new details to stories we’ve already run. At least you’re already used to being called every name under the sun. 

Readers have been contacting us with their views on Wokingham possibly switching to fortnightly bin collections

Yesterday, for example, one reader called to let us know about how the council assist her to get the rubbish out each week as she has limited mobility. Thanks to her call, we can now help an elderly reader who wrote to us to say they were struggling with the same issue.

I’ve also had convicted drug dealers on the phone pleading us not to run their story – something different from others wanting us to cover the opening of their school fete or launch of their new album.

There is something hugely rewarding about this interaction. Yes, it’s time consuming but we know that what we write has an impact and makes a difference to the community in which we serve.

We love our scoops and we’re often busy researching as well as writing, making sure the facts fit and our sources are accurate with their tip-offs. It’s important to get this spot on. 

Before we go to press, we always ask – much to Donald Trump’s chagrin – is it right, is it accurate and is it fair? No fake news for us. Our readers simply wouldn’t forgive us.   

Then there are the finer details. The nitty gritty bits of journalism that are far from glamourous.

There is nothing sexy about writing NIBs (news in brief) – items that matter so much to the local community but will never set the world alight in the same way that your pasty tax did a few years ago. 

The gig guide doesn’t write itself. The theatre listings and the what’s on information all come from hours of meticulous research. Laborious and thankless tasks but vital ones to ensure the community knows what’s going on around it.

Every detail in every story much be checked to avoid anything libellous, scandalous or contains a double entendre so massive that you’ll find it plastered over the internet before you can get a chance to correct it. Watch out for those JOBS BLOW headlines. Or leaking the budget ahead of the chancellor’s speech – something that the Standard did in 2013. Mistakes can be costly, not just financially but also to your reputation.

Daily Mirror 1903
First issue of the Daily Mirror. The usual performance took place in the evening, not the morning

The first editors of the Daily Mirror once wrote a story about a theatrical couple who were appearing in a play. They got married in the afternoon and ‘the usual performance took place in the evening’. They meant the play. At least, we think they did…

You’ll have the schmoozing to do.

While I doubt you’ll have to spend a wet Thursday evening attending to the details of a parish council meeting, you will be invited to parties, press launches and briefings.

When they take place at lunch or evening, it’s a good bet that alcohol will be involved and, because you’re the editor, people will want to bend your ear, share their great ideas and invite themselves to write for the paper if you let them.

You will get letters from students wanting work experience or the opportunity to get a rung on the journalistic ladder.

In future, we’ll encourage them not to get their NTCJ qualification or work on their shorthand, but instead encourage them to run for Parliament and follow your career path. It might take longer, but the salary they’ll get, even as a backbencher, will dwarf the one they’ll get in regional journalism (you’ll be amazed at what I’m on George, you make more in a second than I do in a year).

Being a news junkie, you’ll find it hard to switch off. You see, our work is addictive. You don’t mind news being a mistress when she’s so seductive, so alluring, always offering you variety and something new. 

That letter from your constituent about the cost of parking in Tatton Street will seem so mundane compared to the thrill of the press and getting the perfect front page off-stone in time.

You’ll be in the Commons listening to a debate about EU regulations on the correct pronunciation of scones while simultaneously be wanting to bash out a vital leader column on something more pressing.

You see George, being a newspaper editor isn’t a morning-only commitment. It isn’t a nine-to-five role either. It isn’t even a job. It’s a life.

News will be your demanding mistress. She will not let you go.

Mistreat her, and your readers will be, like they do to the wallpaper from your family’s firm, giving you a pasting.

Keep up to date by signing up for our daily newsletter

We don’t spam we only send our newsletter to people who have requested it.

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

Tags: Evening StandardGeorge OsborneGeorge Osborne MPjohn redwood mpLondon Evening standardnewspapersOsbornePostReading EastReading Evening PostRedwoodstandardTheresa MayTheresa May MPWokinghamwokingham paper
Previous Post

CCTV released after break-in at Newbold College

Next Post

REACTION: Nick Kennedy thanks the crowd as London Irish win “game of two halves”

FOLLOW US

POPULAR THIS WEEK

MP Clive Jones

FROM THE MP – Clive Jones: National Cancer Plan

February 6, 2026
Left to right: Jane Holmes, CEO and founder of Building for the Future (BftF), Dorota Dregier, Thames Valley Park Estate Manager, Helen Hobson, Loddon Valley Ramblers (LVR), Cllr Catherine Glover, Wokingham Borough Council (WBC), Richard Hatton (LVR), Cllr Carol Jewell (WBC), Jason McMahon (BftF). Pic: WBC.

Wokingham Borough mayor completes fundraising challenge

February 8, 2026
Callum Lochhead. Pic: WTFC.

Wokingham Town FC announces passing of player

February 10, 2026
Gala guests will be able to celebrate Bond?s lethal charm, martini preferences, and high-stakes missions, while at the same time raising money for My Cancer My Choices. Picture: Hakan Dahlstrom via Wikimedia commons

Bracknell goes 007: Local charity to host glamorous Casino Royale gala

February 12, 2026
Leam Richardson Picture: Luke Adams

‘It would be a very bad look to jump ship’: Fans react as Reading FC boss is linked with Championship job

February 6, 2026
Thames Valley has seen another increase in shoplifting figures as the government's policing bill seeks to reclassify 'low-value' offences. Picture: PixaBay

Retail union raises concerns over yet another rise in shoplifting statistics

February 6, 2026

ABOUT US

Wokingham Today is dedicated to providing news online across the whole of the Borough of Wokingham. It is a Social Enterprise, existing to support the various communities in Wokingham Borough.

Wokingham.Today is a Social Enterprise and aims to ensure that everyone within the Borough has free access to independent and up-to-date news. However, providing this service is not without costs. If you are able to, please make a contribution to support our work.

CONTACT US

[email protected]

Keep up to date with our daily newsletter

We don’t spam we only send our newsletter to people that have subscribed

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

  • Support Us
  • Book Advertising
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Get the Print Edition
  • Sign up for our daily newsletter

The Wokingham Paper Ltd publications are regulated by IPSO – the Independent Press Standards Organisation.
If you have a complaint about a  The Wokingham Paper Ltd  publication in print or online, you should, in the first instance, contact the publication concerned, email: [email protected], or telephone: 0118 327 2662. If it is not resolved to your satisfaction, you should contact IPSO by telephone: 0300 123 2220, or visit its website: www.ipso.co.uk. Members of the public are welcome to contact IPSO at any time if they are not sure how to proceed, or need advice on how to frame a complaint.

No Result
View All Result
  • HOME
  • MY AREA
    • Arborfield
    • Barkham
    • Beech Hill
    • Binfield
    • Bracknell
    • Charvil
    • Crowthorne
    • Earley
    • Emmbrook
    • Finchampstead
    • Grazeley
    • Henley
    • Hurst
    • Lower Earley
    • Norreys
    • Reading
    • Remenham
  • CRIME
  • COMMUNITY
  • LIFESTYLE
  • SPORT
  • READING FC
  • OBITUARIES
  • WHAT’S ON
  • BUSINESS
  • PHOTOS
  • ADVERTISE WITH US
  • CONTACT US
  • WHERE TO GET THE PRINT EDITION
  • SUPPORT US

© 2022 - The Wokingham Paper Ltd - All Right Reserved.