Thursday 30 September 2010

Brilliant news coverage for key clients this week!

Graham writes.... A great news week for Recognition clients. Wensleydale Creamery was featured on national BBC TV for its brilliant export achievements and TAG Energy Solutions got widespread coverage for its £20million investment announcement, see the video below!

Thursday 9 September 2010

TV is told the case for the North!


Graham writes.....the BBC has commissioned research from Experian which suggests Teesside in the North East is the area least able to hold its own at a time of public spending cuts. I don't entirely agree with the research, it uses last year's data and things have got better in the area recently, particularly with the announcement of a possible rescue for the Corus steel plant. But this week both the BBC and Sky focused on the North's fragile economy and Recognition persuaded the broadcasters to be balanced and look at the North's prospects too. Our clients TTE, Coast & Country, NOF Energy and Lingfield Point all featured on national TV putting the case for the North. Keith Hunter at TTE was particularly good, he knows his stuff, you can see him pictured here telling David Cameron how skills training should be organised. When it comes to getting people in front of cameras and microphones Recognition works very effectively!

Saturday 4 September 2010

William Hague


Graham writes....I've known William Hague for more than 20 years. He has been a political colleague, a significant client (we handled all his Northern media appearances during his time as Conservative leader) and a friend. He supported me when I ended up standing in a by-election in Tony Blair's seat, which neighbours his own (see pic). I know he is a man of character and integrity. His warmth and support during my wife's battle against cancer from 1999 to 2005 was instinctive and generous. During his time as leader I witnessed him being asked about all manner of personal things by journalists from all over the world - he has said many times he is not gay and the statement he issued recently should not have been a surprise.

When the media rang me up to ask if I would comment about it, I chose my platforms - local TV and newspapers - and issued a simple statement of my own: He has been subjected to trashy innuendo from trashy people for trashy publications. I think that it is a shame that the Amercian politics of personal destruction forced him to make his public statement but admire him for doing so nevertheless. Those sneering metropolitan commentators who say that issuing the statement was wrong are just trying to create an angle to transform this into a political issue about his judgement; they claim he made the situation worse but conveniently ignore that fact that when his adviser resigned the issue would have been a full blown media story, by issuing his statement he got his position out without, in the media phrase, 'being forced to make a statement'. It is entirely in the character of William Hague to speak plainly, not for him hiding from an issue or dashing to lawyers for gagging orders like sports stars or celebrities.

In the North his support is solid. No friend, colleague, or for that matter political opponent, has said anything snide to the regional media and the regional media have not followed the metropolitan elite who so despise a successful Yorkshireman. Hague is bigger than the small minded smear merchants who attack him. He is more important to the country and his constituents than the commentators who drip poison. I, for one, was happy to offer public, unequivocal support.