British soccer star David Beckham and his pop star wife Victoria are suing their former nanny for telling a tabloid newspaper that their marriage was on the rocks, a spokeswoman for the couple said Tuesday.

Milloy said the Beckhams would also launch legal action against News of the World. The celebrity couple are already suing the newspaper over the publication last year of details of an alleged affair between David Beckham and his personal assistant Rebecca Loos.


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Place the cup at the center of the tray and tape it in place. Once you do that take some newspaper and crumple them into balls. Tape them around the cup in the shape of a mountain to start off your paper mache volcano.

Writer and director Nikyatu Jusu, a Sierra Leonean-American filmmaker, tells the story of Aisha, an immigrant living in New York City, and her job as a nanny for an upper-class family. Aisha finds herself forced to face a dark truth that threatens to ruin her ultimate goal: making a home for her child in America.

These 81 newspaper articles were published in 36 unique news publications (see Supplementary Table 1, available from: researchers.mq.edu.au/en/publications/talking-about-a-nanny-nation-investigating-the-rhetoric-framing-p): 51% were owned wholly or with a majority share by News Corp Australia, 11% by Fairfax Media, 11% by Nine Entertainment Co., 17% by Daily Mail and General Trust, and 10% by other organisations (e.g., Seven West Media, Australian Broadcasting Corporation).

Out of 81 newspaper articles, the largest group were articles that cited a broad range of public health measures, focusing on restrictions on personal choice and/or dissatisfaction with too many rules and regulations in general (19%) (see Table 2). The issues mentioned in these articles included bike helmets, e-cigarettes, firearms restrictions, seatbelts, pool fences, and smoking bans. Regulations on alcohol and road safety were the next most frequently identified issues to which nanny state language was applied, accounting for 17% and 14% of newspaper articles, respectively. Obesity-related issues accounted for 10 articles, 7% of articles dealt with taxation or regulation of sugary drinks and foods, and 5% concerned childhood obesity. Only 6% of articles focused on tobacco regulation.

Of the 88 times that articles portrayed an agent as being responsible for imposing the nanny state, 49 named governments and six cited generic authorities as being responsible (see Supplementary Table 2, available from: researchers.mq.edu.au/en/publications/talking-about-a-nanny-nation-investigating-the-rhetoric-framing-p). Of these, 49% referred to state governments, 31% referred to local governments (e.g., councils), 14% referred to government in general, and 6% referred to the Federal Government.

We identified 130 sentences which included the phrase nanny state across the 81 articles. These sentences were coded for frames which linked nanny state to other concepts. We identified 118 first framings which could be grouped and 12 others which could not be grouped (see Supplementary Table 3, available from: researchers.mq.edu.au/en/publications/talking-about-a-nanny-nation-investigating-the-rhetoric-framing-p).

Framings that might be interpreted as pro nanny state were rare (n = 9): five items identified the use of nanny state labels as a cheap shot (n = 5); politicians are called out for using nanny state as flak against regulators (n = 3), and one item conceded that proponents of the nanny state laws were pro-health.

The news media play a role in keeping issues in the public consciousness and on the political agenda. Over two matched periods in 2017 and 2018, we found 81 newspaper articles mentioning the nanny state in reporting and commentary on a range of public health-relevant issues. One in five of these nanny state articles were personal opinion columns that criticised and expressed dissatisfaction with a multitude of issues deemed by the writers to be over-regulated and restrictive of personal choice.

The results of this study suggest that proponents of new policies and regulations rarely directly challenge the use of nanny state language. If counter arguments using nanny state framing were made, they were not given sufficient prominence in newspaper coverage to appear in the sample (search captured articles using nanny state in headline/first three paragraphs). It is possible public health proponents avoided using nanny state language because it is seen as a slur which undermines health-promoting policy. News media provides a platform for anti-nanny-state commentators through opinion pieces, which are traditionally used for single-voice arguments with little or no counter-arguments or alternative voices presented.26 The failure to directly challenge nanny state framing served to reinforce the nanny state frame as a rhetorical weapon of choice for opponents.

Future directions for public health researchers to consider include investigating how public health advocates have attempted to counter nanny state rhetoric, and whether they have been effective in garnering media attention.

In retrospect, I must say that this imaginative use of a newspaper is another good argument for newsprint over going digital. A digital news site is just not going to cut it for those looking for a cheap substitute for bathroom tissue. Ben Franklin, a newspaper man and a politician, observed that political commentary usually prompted readers to demand that papers be relegated to the outhouse hole.

It would be nice if our governor called for limiting use of toilet paper squares on a daily basis considering the current shortage. He would undoubtedly be tarred as a nanny-state dictator. The liberty-loving gun-toters would scream in protest at the statehouse. If only we could wipe the slate clean of political extremes in this time of national emergency. Wipe it clean using no more than 3 squares.

London's Daily Mail reported yesterday that Charles was "livid" after seeing a tabloid photo of 13-year-old Harry descending the wall of the 160-foot Welsh dam without a helmet or backup safety rope. The ex-nanny, Tiggy Legge-Bourke, was visiting her parents with Harry and brother William, 16, when last week's incident occurred.

The Mirror, another London newspaper, thoughtfully suggested an appropriate punishment for such careless handling of the royal scion. "People who endangered royal lives used to be hauled off to the Tower of London, via Traitor's Gate, pending a short walk to the executioner's block," it huffed. "Let's see some heads roll again." Glenn for Breakfast?

Charlie Sheen was spared prison time yesterday for his use of illegal drugs. A Malibu, Calif., judge instead extended Sheen's probation for another year after the actor admitted he used drugs. Sheen has been in rehab since May 28 . . . Jimmy Carter, whose efforts on behalf of the nationwide Habitat for Humanity are well known, is building a little goodwill this summer in his own home town. The former president is helping to construct a pool and rec center in Plains, Ga. . . . John Lennon's "Double Fantasy" album that the former Beatle autographed for Mark David Chapman is reportedly for sale for nearly $2 million, the New York Post reported yesterday. Chapman killed Lennon on Dec. 8, 1980, just hours after asking for his autograph outside New York's Dakota apartment house. Dealer Gary Zimet says he's selling the LP, which is signed "John Lennon, 1980" on the cover, for $1.8 million for an anonymous fan who found it at the murder scene . . . Just can't get enough of Monica, Plato, et al.? Now you can catch an update of the activities outside the offices of Lewinsky lawyers Plato Cacheris and Jacob Stein every 10 minutes via Monicacam (www.webdevs.com/monicacam ). The scene at 1:37 p.m. yesterday: an empty street, an even emptier sidewalk . . . The Reliable Source is on vacation. The column will resume Aug. 18. CAPTION: Prince Harry, whose nanny was chastised for neglecting the royal's safety.

Jealous was eventually suspended for his roles in student protests and moved to Mississippi, where he was a field organizer for a campaign to stop the state from closing two historically black universities. He became a reporter for the Jackson Advocate, an African-American newspaper that was frequently firebombed, reporting on corruption among state prison officials and a black small farmer wrongfully accused of arson. He became managing editor.

The extreme and grotesque cases of domestic worker exploitationperiodically make newspaper headlines: "Couple Held Two Servants Captivefor Years, U.S. Says," "Ex-Teacher Maude Paulin Convicted of ForcingSlavery," "Diplomatic Immunity Leaves Abused Workers in Shadows."[1] The daily, commonplace devaluation and exploitation of domestic workers,however, is often unnoticed by many of us who have learned to accept thestatus quo. Imagine if your middle-class buddy suddenly facedtermination without severance pay or unpaid holidays, vacation or sickdays in her job. What if she worked 70-80 hours per week with pay belowthe minimum wage and without compensation for overtime? What does itmean that so little attention is paid to the fact that an entire sectorof labor is structured in this draconian fashion? And what would oursociety do without the labor of the countless women, predominantly womenof color, who, as our contributors note, make all other workpossible?

Sassen's contribution is followed by Arlie Russell Hochschild's work on the global trend to hire immigrant women for care work in theindustrialized world and the deepening of inequality through what sheand others have called the 'global care chain.' Hochschild notes that,"A typical global care chain might work something like this: an olderdaughter from a poor family in a Third World country cares for hersiblings (the first link in the chain) while her mother works as a nannycaring for the children of a nanny migrating to a First World country(the second link) who, in turn, cares for the child of a family in arich country (the final link)". Pei-Chia Lan's contribution gives us anexample of the care chain that Hochschild analyzes in her piece. Lanlooks at the changing dynamics in East Asia as wealthy families incountries such as Taiwan are increasingly reliant on immigrant labor fordomestic work as a way to push women into the workforce. She arguesthat 'guest worker' programs in these countries "have maintained thestatus of migrant workers as disposable labor and as transientresidents," which further exploits these women. e24fc04721

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