Is there a name for the kind of press articles that are 90% repetition (usually with many errors) of what was in the press yesterday or a few days ago, plus a few cliches including in the headline or strapline?
According to the Standard, CM lived a "life of crime":
Marten’s mother Virginie and brother Tobias both attended her Old Bailey trial — but where are the rest of her family, and what can the five of them tell us about her descent into a life of crime? Katie Strick reports
www.standard.co.uk
According to the Mirror, CM inflicted a "final act of cruelty" on her baby. I read the article wanting to find out what they were alleging this act was, but I am none the wiser:
A killer couple's movements around the country became increasingly frantic as they tried to avoid social services - and sadly their baby was already dead by the time they was found
www.mirror.co.uk
I think they call this kind of thing "clickbait".
Another Mirror article quotes a person who taught journalism skills to CM 10 years ago and who has been employed as Head of Diploma Training at the Press Association. There are two photos of her - one outside with her dog, the other at a desk in her office. She appears to have a remarkably good memory for her students and unusual prowess at assessing their personalities and interactions with other students. She's taught thousands of journalists over the years.
Constance Marten and her partner Mark Gordon were convicted of gross negligence manslaughter of their infant daughter. Marten had previously shown an inability to connect with others
www.mirror.co.uk
Someone here predicted there would be a rash of accounts by those who knew one or both of the defendants, alleged friends or colleagues or whatever. This material is still repulsive to read. And there will probably be more.
The Daily Mail is frontrunner for winning the biscuit, though, for the sentence
"
Experts have described Gordon, 50, as a sociopathic sex offender considered so dangerous that experts compared his sadistic crimes to the American serial killer Ted Bundy or Australian-American serial killer Christopher Wilder." (BBM)
Runaway aristocrat Constance Marten and her lover Mark Gordon have been today convicted of killing their baby, Victoria.
www.dailymail.co.uk
I wonder how many weeks the author of that impressive piece of prose spent at journalism school!
Whatever view one takes of this case, CM has not lived a "life of crime", there is no reason to think she inflicted a "final act of cruelty" on her baby, and MG is not in the same category as a serial killer. But all these newspapers with their supposedly different political positions must to some extent be telling their readers what they want to hear.