Thursday, October 25, 2012

News: 'Jimmy Savile is Innocent' art show opens on Upper Street


This is my second published article for Islington Now, the website and newspaper run by City University MA Journalism students.

You can visit the website and see the published article here.

'Jimmy Savile is Innocent' art show opens on Upper Street

Imogen Blake

Curator David West. Photo: Imogen Blake

The curator of an art show launched in response to the Jimmy Savile scandal insisted the late BBC presenter is innocent until proven guilty at the show’s opening last night.
Curator David West said the artwork, on display in the Bread and Butter Gallery on Upper Street, is not a comment on the accuracy of child abuse claims against Savile but a reaction to tabloid coverage of the allegations.
He said: “The exhibition isn’t commenting on whether the allegations are true or false. The media coverage has been a bit chaotic and we should all remember that he is innocent.”
Installations include a photo of a young girl revealing her uncovered backside with a picture of Jimmy Savile in the background, and a cartoon of Savile as Gargamel, the evil wizard from The Smurfs, chasing a Smurfette-like girl.
The walls display press cuttings and interactive pieces, inviting the audience to write what they think of Savile and to highlight “possible evidence” with a black pen on pages of his autobiography.
Artist Katharine Fry, who attended the opening, didn’t know whether to come along to the exhibition when she first heard about it.
A cartoon Jimmy Savile chases an unsuspecting little girl in one artwork installation.
Photo: Imogen Blake
She said: “I thought it might be too soon. The exhibition is a strange antidote to the nauseating media coverage, which has gone from strange claim to strange claim, the latest of which is that he was a necrophile.
“I used to think Jimmy Savile was an eccentric guy who smoked cigars. I now have a retrospective squeamishness about him.”
Mr West said people had reacted positively to the show so far. The exhibition runs until 26 October and entry is free.
IB


News: Islington 'living wage' Council advertises unpaid internship


Sorry for not updating the blog in a while. A hectic summer working and relaxing after an even busier third year at university has been followed by the start of my MA in Newspaper Journalism.

I absolutely love the course so far - though with its 22 contact hours a week and (so much) additional work on top, it's very different from an English Literature undergraduate degree!


Here's my first article for Islington Now, the website and newspaper run by MA journalism students. This article was the top story for the week.

Islington 'living wage' Council advertises unpaid internship

Imogen Blake
Photo: Alan Stanton


A three month unpaid work experience placement is advertised on Islington Council’s website despite its pledge to pay all employees and apprentices the living wage.
Interns would work up to 35 hours a week and receive a maximum of £5 a day for expenses, depending on how many hours they clock up.
The internship is part of the council’s ‘Fair Islington work experience placement scheme’ which aims to offer unemployed borough residents “an insight into working life.”
As accredited living wage employers, the council choose to pay all employees a minimum of the London living wage, currently set at £8.30 an hour.
Under the National Minimum Wage Act (1998), councils are exempt from paying interns and apprentices for work but Islington Council pays its 16 to 19-year-old apprentices the living wage.
A spokesperson from the council’s recruitment team said the experience will not lead directly to a job and interns will have to apply for paid work after completing their internship.
Hours are flexible so Islington residents can still claim Jobseeker’s Allowance if they work less than 16 hours a week. If interns work more hours, their benefits will be affected.
HR resourcing manager at Islington Council, Savvas Tsattala, responded: “The placement is unpaid even if interns work 35 hours a week but we provide training and an insight into working life. We’re providing opportunities for the unemployed residents of Islington.”
Last week at the Labour Party Conference, Shadow Chief Secretary to the Treasury Rachel Reeves highlighted Islington’s flagship role and said Labour councils following the policy gave her “immense pride”.
In June, Islington Council advertised two unpaid placements requiring interns to work up to 35 hours a week for three months in either office administration and customer services or procurement, the process of obtaining goods and services.
A representative of Living Wage Foundation, launched by Citizens UK in 2011 to accredit living wage employers, said: “We would recommend everyone is paid the living wage but apprenticeships and work experience fall under different guidelines and don’t have to be paid.”
An Islington councillor wrote a blog post yesterday on the Local Government Association website speaking out against unfair wages for workers. Andy Hull, Highbury West ward councillor and co-chair of the Islington Fairness Commission, which recommended the council became a living wage employer, said in his post: “No-one should do a hard day’s work for less than they can live on.”
Charlotte Goodhart, 22, a MA student in Museum Studies at UCL, interned part-time unpaid with no expenses at the Jewish Museum in Camden between October 2011 and January 2012.
She said: “Unpaid internships are outrageous but necessary. I wouldn’t have been able to get onto my MA without museum experience but I had to get three jobs while I was interning and my parents helped me out with half my rent.”
IB