• Thanks for stopping by. Logging in to a registered account will remove all generic ads. Please reach out with any questions or concerns.

"Bono and Bob Geldof to Guest-Edit The Globe and Mail"

The Bread Guy

Moderator
Staff member
Directing Staff
Subscriber
Donor
Reaction score
7,268
Points
1,360
Couldn't make this up if I tried - let's see how different it'll be....

In a first for the newspaper, The Globe and Mail will be edited on May 10 by two guest editors - anti-poverty activists Bono and Bob Geldof - who will produce a special issue focused on the future of Africa and its importance not just for the more than 1 billion people living on that continent, but for Canadians and the rest of the West as well.

The Globe is partnering with Bono, Geldof, and their organization ONE (www.one.org) to explore these issues in advance of Canada hosting two critically important summits of world leaders in June - the G8 and the G20. The crisis of extreme poverty in developing countries, particularly in Africa, will be a focus of the G8, while the G20 will centre on financial and economic reform. This will be the first time The Globe has invited guest-editors into the news room, and the first time Bono and Geldof have guest-edited a North American newspaper.

The online and new media component of this project will be critical, and extend into early June as part of The Globe's G8 and G20 coverage. To oversee this part of the project, the celebrated Kenyan activist and blogger Ory Okolloh will join the team as guest-editor of globeandmail.com on May 10. Okolloh will oversee stories from and about Africa and participate in a series of online discussions.

"As the only Canadian newspaper with an African bureau, The Globe has dedicated resources and reporters to deliver in-depth and ground-breaking news as it relates to Africa, its people and the issues that matter most," said Phillip Crawley, Publisher, The Globe and Mail. "Bono and Geldof have valuable insights and knowledge on the future of Africa, and The Globe is delighted to collaborate with them to bring a new perspective to Canada."

The Globe's Africa correspondent Geoffrey York, who regularly reports on evolving issues and news from the continent, is exploring two bellwether stories, specifically for the May 10 edition.

The special edition will feature content and commentary from African political leaders, business owners and grassroots activists; it will also include contributions from other well-known international political leaders and advocates.

"I'm a huge fan of great journalism - I can't wait to show up for work at The Globe. Our aim in this special edition is to crack down on a few stereotypes and showcase the opportunities surrounding the African continent, not just the problems," said Bono.

"The world will be coming to and looking at Canada this June. The older and the emerging economies will be once again be struggling to learn the new 21st century dance of cooperation and possibly even compromise, and this time under Canada's leadership. The Globe and Mail, one of the world's great papers of record, has, in a mad rush of blood to the head, agreed to let two Irish pop-singers edit their august journal for one special day, one special edition. It will be dedicated to that huge, emerging resource continent of Africa and the global necessity of coming to terms with its opportunities and obstacles. I've gone from being an old editor of the Vancouver Georgia Straight to the new editor of the The Globe and Mail and it's only taken 36 years! Now that's a career trajectory," said Bob Geldof.

The Globe and Mail is inviting readers to send in their video questions for Bono and Geldof. Video questions should be sent via www.globeandmail.com/africaone by May 6th. Select questions will be chosen, and the guest-editors will answer these questions from The Globe and Mail and shared online at globeandmail.com during the month of May.

"It will be a pleasure to hand over the editor's chair to people who have given decades of their lives to the cause of bringing world attention to Africa, a place that is now a very different, and more aspiring, continent than we've ever known it to be," added John Stackhouse, Editor-in-Chief, The Globe and Mail. "I know Bono and Geldof will bring startling and stimulating conversations to the newspaper, and Ory to our website. It's an honour to share the newsroom with such an esteemed team, and I'm delighted to extend this experience to our readers." ....

More on who Bono and Geldof are if you don't know who they are in the rest of the news release here.
 
oh....another "has been" and "never was" advising us on foreign policy? Yeah, when they hold a cheque up for 10 million dollars from their PERSONAL accounts, I might start to listen.

I'll stick with the current Foreign Affairs guys.
 
Well, to be fair, it's not like these two have jobs or anything. They've got time on their hands to guest-edit newspapers and to tell the rest of us what we should do. I mean, Live Aid happened when I was like, 15. What's Bob Geldolf done since then?
 
Bob Geldof sacrificed his budding career in order to do something about poverty in Africa.  Bono, on the other hand, has done nothing but try to guilt the everyday joe into forking over his hard earned wages.

I'll pick up that issue of the Globe and Mail if U2 allows me to guest sing for them on their next tour.  I mean, Bono is as qualified to edit a national paper as I am to sing for a rock and roll band.

I AM THE TECHNOVIKING!  HEAR ME ROAR!
 
Technoviking said:
I'll pick up that issue of the Globe and Mail if U2 allows me to guest sing for them on their next tour.  I mean, Bono is as qualified to edit a national paper as I am to sing for a rock and roll band.

I think we'd all go to that concert. Or at least check out the PPV.
 
Technoviking said:
.... if U2 allows me to guest sing for them on their next tour
Hmmmm...spontaneous bleeding from my ears. Stigmata's never happened that way before  ;)
 
Technoviking said:
Bob Geldof sacrificed his budding career in order to do something about poverty in Africa.  Bono, on the other hand, has done nothing but try to guilt the everyday joe into forking over his hard earned wages.

I'll pick up that issue of the Globe and Mail if U2 allows me to guest sing for them on their next tour.  I mean, Bono is as qualified to edit a national paper as I am to sing for a rock and roll band.

I AM THE TECHNOVIKING!  HEAR ME ROAR!

Sorry, I'll sing with Mick and Keith. They are so much more our style, are they not?
 
I'd almost pay to watch the Technoviking do a sing along Power Point.
 
Back
Top