Brighton Salon Partners
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Talk to us on +44 (0) 207 193 5071.8am to 8pm GMT. Click here to skype dan.travis.
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More Salon Talks
- Ferraris For All - In Defence of Economic Progress, Daniel Ben-Ami Book launch at Waterstones, July 20th 2010, 7.00pm
- Can Sport Save us All? Open House, Tuesday, 22nd June 2010 7.15pm
- Burlesque: How did a form of old-fashioned strip-tease become a mainstream theatrical art form?
- What should the University be for? Bellerbys College, Thursday, 29th April 2010 7.15pm
- Immigration - Where's the Debate? a discussion with Dolan Cummings on Wednesday 10th March 2010
- Dr Norman Lewis on The End of Privacy? The future of trust in the transparent society
- White Night Festival at The Phoenix Gallery
- The Dangerous Rise of Therapeutic Education with Kathryn Ecclestone on Thursday September 24
- Simon Fanshawe and Tim Black discuss 'Is it possible to be satirical today?' on 20th January 2010
- Adrian Hart on the Myth of Racist Kids on Tuesday November 17
- Cory Doctorow, Nico Macdonald and Michael Bull on 'The Future of Collaboration: Sharing and Work in the Networked Age' on Saturday October 17
- China: Threat or opportunity?
- Open the Borders; Allow Free Movement of the People
- Fusion: Cheap energy for all?
- Reclaiming the American Dream: The Rise of Obama
- Surveillance Society
- Challenging relationships: Love, Companionship and Robots
- The Crisis of Confidence and the Financial Collapse
- Reclaiming Childhood
- Britain After the Recession with Rob Killick
- More Power to the People the Future of Energy
- From Fatwa to Jihad with Kenan Malik
- Booze Bans
- Mind, brain and self in the age of Facebook with Dr Rob Clowes on Tuesday July 21
- The New Media Wars
- The dangers of a healthy lifestyle
- Exploring intimacy & commitment in the 21st Century
| Brendan O'Neill |
Brendan O’Neill is the editor of spiked and writes widely for publications on both sides of the Atlantic. He has also been a guest on numerous TV and radio shows in Britain, Ireland and America. Brendan has presented talks on 'China : Threat or Opportunity?' and 'Surveillence Society' at The Brighton Salon. He started his career in journalism at spiked‘s predecessor, Living Marxism, until it was forced to close in 2000 following a notorious libel action brought by ITN. When he’s not writing for and editing spiked, and commissioning journalists who have something to say and the guts to say it, O’Neill writes widely for publications on both sides of the Atlantic. His journalism has been published in the New Statesman, the Spectator, the Guardian,The Sunday Times, the British Journalism Review, the Press Gazette and the Catholic Herald in Britain, and in Salon, Slate, the Chicago Sun-Times, the American Prospect, the American Conservative and Reason magazine in the United States. He is also a feature-writer for the Christian Science Monitor in America and for the BBC in Britain. He writes a weekly blog for the Guardian website, Comment Is Free. He is a British correspondent for the Polish political weekly PrzeKroj, and has written for newspapers and magazines in Australia, South Africa, Canada, India, Germany, France, Italy and Denmark. His work covers everything from war and terrorism to free speech and junk food. He was a consultant for the book Human, published by Dorling Kindersley and winner of the British Medical Association Medical Book Award 2005. O’Neill has also been a guest on numerous TV and radio shows in Britain, Ireland and America, including on BBC radio and TV, Sky News, Channel 4 News and The Last Word on More4; The Big Bite on RTE television in Ireland and Talk Radio in Dublin; and on the Heartland show on Fox News and International Correspondents on CNN, and radio stations in New York, San Francisco, Colorado, Wisconsin and Washington, DC. He has given talks at the Edinburgh International Book Festival, the Oxford Literary Festival, the Institute of Contemporary Arts in London and the Battle of Ideas at the Royal College of Art. He was depicted in the play An Explosion, which explored the meaning of terrorism, at the Battersea Arts Centre in London in 2006 (O’Neill was played by actor Jim Pyke). O’Neill also founded and taught the Online Journalism course at the University College for the Creative Arts in Surrey, England. In his writing, O’Neill coined the terms ‘dodgy dossier’ (to describe Blair’s first dossier on Iraq, the one published in September 2002 which most journalists accepted as good coin), ‘Blairpop’ to describe today’s conformist rock’n'roll, and ‘celebrity colonialism’, in reference to celebrities’ exploitation of African states for their own gratification (which now features in the Official Dictionary of Unofficial English). In February 2004, he revealed in the Spectator and the Guardian that Saddam Hussein probably did not have a human-shredding machine, a horror story told by both the British and Australian governments to justify invading Iraq. In May 2004 he revealed in the UK Press Gazette that numerous American journalists sat on the story about torture at Abu Ghraib for months, until it was finally forced on to the front pages by persistent military families. In June 2004, in an article for spiked, he exposed that the House of Commons Health Select Committee lied when it claimed that a three-year-old girl had died from eating too much - an expose that was widely debated in the media and which led David Hinchliffe, MP and chairman of the Health Select Committee, to accuse O’Neill, without foundation, of being part of a ‘behind-the-scenes manipulation by the food industry in a battle for public opinion’. In September 2005, in an article in the New Statesman, O’Neill brought to British attention the website Now That’s Fucked Up, where American soldiers were posting grisly photos of dead Iraqis and Afghans in return for access to porn. In February 2006 he showed in a news feature for the BBC that the popular story about a paediatrician having been hounded by an anti-paedophile mob had been massively distorted and exaggerated in the retelling, effectively making it a ‘folk tale’; Sir Christopher Meyer of the Press Complaints Commission commended this BBC piece for showing that newspapers sometimes cannot be trusted. He has been described as a ‘smug shite’ by gay rights activist Peter Tatchell, as ‘exceptionally ignorant’ by Daily Mail columnist Melanie Phillips, and ‘entertaining in a Julie Burchill kind of way’ by Richard Sanderson of the Little Atoms radio show. He is a passionate defender of free speech, and was one of few British journalists to attack the Austrian authorities for imprisoning David Irving on charges of Holocaust denial; he has also argued against the censorship of homophobic Jamaican dancehall singers by the British police and their ‘gay best friends’. Nadine Strossen, President of the American Civil Liberties Union, recently described O’Neill’s site, spiked, as ‘one of those rare publications that defends free speech even when it is difficult and unfashionable to do so’. O’Neill is a co-founder of the Manifesto Club, which aims to reclaim the creative spirit of the Enlightenment for the twenty-first century, and coordinator of theFreedom Rules blog. He lives in London Bridge. |

