View Single Post
  #18   Report Post  
Old 19-03-2011, 07:51 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
rbel rbel is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Oct 2006
Posts: 100
Default OT Does anyone here read the Mail on Sunday?

On Sat, 19 Mar 2011 07:04:12 -0000, Sacha wrote:

On 2011-03-18 19:19:51 +0000, "alan.holmes"
said:

"Sacha" wrote in message
...
On 2011-03-15 23:41:06 +0000, jim said:

On 15/03/2011 23:09, Mike Lyle wrote:
Certainly not. If it did, it would no longer be able to brand
something a cause one week and a cure the next.
How do you confuse the editor of the DM?
Gryy uvz vyyrtny vzzvtenagf ner gur angheny cerl bs nflyhz frrxref.

Occasional readers of the the Mail may find this dictionary helpful

http://www.angrymob.uponnothing.co.u...ail-dictionary
Jim
NE England
Hmmmmm- I know which paper has the higher readership figures,
though. ;-)

Are you going to put us all out of our misery and tell us, please?
Alan


The Daily Mail by a mile. Figures from the Audit Bureau of Circulation
show that The Sun sells just over 3 million, the Mail just over
2,100,000, The Guardian 279,308 and the Independent 185,035. These are
figures for January. In order of sales numbers they are The Sun, Daily
Mail, Daily Mirror, Daily Star, Daily Telegraph, Daily Express, The
Times, Financial Times, Daily Record, The Independent, i. No figures
are given for the Evening Standard, Express & Star or the Manchester
Evening News so they may have fallen below 100,000. These figures are
copies sold per day, readership figures are higher. Sunday papers in
order of circulation are News of the World, The Mail on Sunday, Sunday
Mirror, Sunday Times, Sunday Express, The People, Sunday Telegraph,
Sunday Mail, Sunday Post, Daily Star Sunday, The Observer, Independent
on Sunday.



Ah, quantity is in inverse proportion to quality, which I suppose is now
common throughout the fourth estate.

--
rbel