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Attitudes toward women -- never thought of as particularly enlightened at The Sun, a paper still famous for its topless
Page 3 models -- did not improve under Brooks, Taggart said. "We were regularly encouraged to refer to women with misogynistic names like
'tarts,' 'slappers' or 'hookers' in our copy if there was conceivably any question mark over their sexual proclivities," he said. "We were expected to childishly objectify women. So blonde-haired women were described as
'beauties' and generously chested women 'looked swell,' whether they'd wanted the attention or not." Faking facts was also part of tabloid life under Brooks, reporters said. A third News of The World reporter, who spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because he too is still working in the media industry, said some editors at the News of the World deliberately inserted bogus details to sensationalize copy. The reporter, who worked at the tabloid for seven years, said protesting was not an option. He said the paper "was no place to question what you were being asked to do; the answer was always the same mantra: Do what you have to do to get a result." "Anyone mentioning ethics or refusing to be cooperative with dubious practices would have been effectively exiled by the news desk and labeled as
'flaky.'"
[Associated
Press;
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