Economics/Business
Australian Magazine Kills Profile of Wendi Murdoch | Australian Magazine Kills Profile of Wendi Murdoch |
| Written by Our Correspondent | |
| Friday, 20 April 2007 | |
|
First they commission a major profile of media mogul Rupert Murdoch’s young Chinese wife, then they spike the story. Could it be hazardous to upset Rupert down in Oz?
After commissioning an A$30,000 article about Wendi Deng, the glamorous Chinese third wife of media titan Rupert Murdoch, an Australian magazine apparently had second thoughts about running it shortly before it was to appear and killed it permanently. The story, an exhaustive 10,000-word profile by Singapore-based Australian journalist Eric Ellis, was scheduled to appear in the magazine Good Weekend, an offshoot of the Sydney Morning Herald, which is owned by Fairfax Media, which publishes newspapers and magazines in Australia and New Zealand. Murdoch owns a small stake in Fairfax though his News Corp company. But Ellis’s story was ordered killed, either by editor Judith Whelan or someone above her, according to Crikey, a gadfly online newsmagazine based in Sydney. The Australian-born Murdoch, chief executive officer of News Corp, is one of the most powerful men in the world of global media. News Corp controls magazines, supermarket tabloids, television networks, Internet operations and, among other news and entertainment outlets in the United States, the right-wing television network Fox TV. Certainly, there is enough grist in the story to satisfy the publisher of any supermarket tabloid. Murdoch, born in 1931, met Deng, born in 1968, in 1997 or 1998 when she was an intern at Star TV in Hong Kong, which is controlled by News Corp. Murdoch divorced Anna Torv, to whom he had been married for 31 years, and married Deng the same year. According to a bruising entry in Wikipedia, the online encyclopedia, Deng had a tumultuous personal life before she met Murdoch. She was said to have moved to the United States in 1988 “under the sponsorship of Joyce Cherry of California, who taught Deng English when she was in China with her husband, Jake Cherry. When Deng arrived in California, she moved into the home of Joyce and Jake Cherry. Within a year after Deng's arrival, Joyce found compromising photos of Deng in a hotel room in Jake's possession. Joyce kicked out both Deng and Jake, who moved in together and eventually married. Within months of this marriage, Jake kicked Deng out after finding out she had been seeing a man in his 20s.” Ellis spent three months on the assignment, traveling to London, New York, Los Angeles, and to Xuzhou in Jiangsu province, where Deng, originally named Deng Wenge, which means Cultural Revolution, was born into a family headed by an upper level line manager in a factory. Crikey reported that Ellis talked to dozens of people, including the ex-wife of Deng’s older first husband, Murdoch watchers, current and former executives and Wendi’s school friends and teachers. The sheer logistics and ambition of the task suggest it was one of the most expensive and ambitious projects ever undertaken by Good Weekend for a single feature, Crikey reported. The story is believed to be the most detailed account ever written about one of the world’s most interesting and – through her marriage – powerful women. It follows a provocative Wall Street Journal profile of Deng in 2000, titled "Rupert Murdoch's Wife Wendi Wields Influence at News Corp", which caused a furor within Murdoch family circles because of the information it revealed about the genesis of the Rupert-Wendi relationship and the sensitive area of the breakdown of Murdoch’s 31-year marriage to Anna, the mother of Elisabeth, Lachlan and James. Last year, according to the Crikey story, Hong Kong's Next Magazine investigated Deng's early years, interviewing teachers, friends and classmates, dredging up some embarrassing childhood snippets. "She had many talents basketball, badminton, volleyball", said teacher Zhang Shan Li. "Academic ability was just above average." Neither Wendi nor Rupert talked to Ellis for the Good Weekend piece, Crikey reported. “After receiving the story several weeks ago, Whelan this week decided not to publish – although Crikey said it is unaware whether Fairfax senior executives or board members were consulted in making the decision. But given its enormous sensitivity, not to mention the fact that News Limited is currently a 7.5 percent shareholder in Fairfax, it seems almost impossible to believe that most senior figures at Fairfax were not consulted in the decision to kill the story,” Crikey wrote Crikey sought further information this morning from Whelan but she said she had a strict policy of not commenting on Good Weekend's story list. Eric Ellis also had a staunch "no comment,” Crikey reported. Ellis also declined to comment to Asia Sentinel. Comments
(1)
|
| Winning Hearts and Minds in AfghanistanMichelle Price Full Story |
| Other Articles |
| The Chinese ChallengeFriday, 23 July 2010 | Markus Jaeger Full Story |
| Previous posts: |
| Book About Land and Power in Hong KongFriday, 02 July 2010 | Alice Poon
The Chinese edition of “Land and the Ruling Class in Hong Kong” has finally come to life. The title of the book is “地產霸權” and it is co-published... Full Story |
| Previous posts: |
| From vultures in Delhi, to coups in Pakistan, a journalist's un-edited take on current events |
|
http://www.wendimurdoch.com
Rupert Murdoch libelled him so now he's biting back.