Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Shafta_Awards> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 42 of
42
with 100 triples per page.
- Shafta_Awards abstract "The Shafta Awards are British awards given annually for "the very worst in tabloid journalism". They were established in 1987 following a Daily Star story "Princess Margaret to appear in Crossroads" by Geoff Baker and Pat Codd, in honour of which they are also known as the "Princess Margaret Awards". The Guardian wrote in 2008 that "Shaftas host Johnny Vaughan often sums up the awards' ethos by quoting a tabloid journalist who once told a colleague: 'Fuck the facts, just quote a friend - the pub's open in 10 minutes.'" Piers Morgan, winner of a lifetime achievement Shafta in 2005, described the awards as "celebrat[ing] what I believe to be the very essence of Fleet Street: the regular ability of adult, intelligent, well-educated, street-smart journalists to behave like complete and utter numbskulls." The awards were originally little more than a meeting in a pub, and were not held between 1997 and 2001, when they were revived by The People's showbiz editor Sean O'Brien.Winners include Sean Hoare and Piers Morgan, winning lifetime achievement Shaftas in 2004 and 2005 respectively. James Desborough also won the ""can we hear the tape?" award for verbatim quotes" in 2002 for an interview with George Martin that Salon.com alleged included a fabricated quote.".
- Shafta_Awards wikiPageID "32483369".
- Shafta_Awards wikiPageLength "2661".
- Shafta_Awards wikiPageOutDegree "15".
- Shafta_Awards wikiPageRevisionID "551630445".
- Shafta_Awards wikiPageWikiLink Category:1987_establishments_in_the_United_Kingdom.
- Shafta_Awards wikiPageWikiLink Category:Awards_established_in_1987.
- Shafta_Awards wikiPageWikiLink Category:British_journalism_awards.
- Shafta_Awards wikiPageWikiLink Category:Ironic_and_humorous_awards.
- Shafta_Awards wikiPageWikiLink Daily_Star_(British_newspaper).
- Shafta_Awards wikiPageWikiLink Daily_Star_(United_Kingdom).
- Shafta_Awards wikiPageWikiLink Geoff_Baker.
- Shafta_Awards wikiPageWikiLink George_Martin.
- Shafta_Awards wikiPageWikiLink James_Desborough.
- Shafta_Awards wikiPageWikiLink Johnny_Vaughan.
- Shafta_Awards wikiPageWikiLink Piers_Morgan.
- Shafta_Awards wikiPageWikiLink Salon.com.
- Shafta_Awards wikiPageWikiLink Salon_(website).
- Shafta_Awards wikiPageWikiLink Sean_Hoare.
- Shafta_Awards wikiPageWikiLink The_Guardian.
- Shafta_Awards wikiPageWikiLink The_People.
- Shafta_Awards wikiPageWikiLink The_Sunday_People.
- Shafta_Awards wikiPageWikiLinkText "Shafta Awards".
- Shafta_Awards hasPhotoCollection Shafta_Awards.
- Shafta_Awards wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:For.
- Shafta_Awards wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Shafta_Awards subject Category:1987_establishments_in_the_United_Kingdom.
- Shafta_Awards subject Category:Awards_established_in_1987.
- Shafta_Awards subject Category:British_journalism_awards.
- Shafta_Awards subject Category:Ironic_and_humorous_awards.
- Shafta_Awards hypernym Awards.
- Shafta_Awards type Award.
- Shafta_Awards type Award.
- Shafta_Awards type Establishment.
- Shafta_Awards type Thing.
- Shafta_Awards comment "The Shafta Awards are British awards given annually for "the very worst in tabloid journalism". They were established in 1987 following a Daily Star story "Princess Margaret to appear in Crossroads" by Geoff Baker and Pat Codd, in honour of which they are also known as the "Princess Margaret Awards".".
- Shafta_Awards label "Shafta Awards".
- Shafta_Awards sameAs m.0h1c6z_.
- Shafta_Awards sameAs Q17101698.
- Shafta_Awards sameAs Q17101698.
- Shafta_Awards wasDerivedFrom Shafta_Awards?oldid=551630445.
- Shafta_Awards isPrimaryTopicOf Shafta_Awards.