User:Philip Cross
Appearance
(Redirected from User:Philip Cross/Archive 24)
This is a Wikipedia user page. This is not an encyclopedia article or the talk page for an encyclopedia article. If you find this page on any site other than Wikipedia, you are viewing a mirror site. Be aware that the page may be outdated and that the user whom this page is about may have no personal affiliation with any site other than Wikipedia. The original page is located at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Philip_Cross. |
Philip Cross is a Wikipedian who created an account in late October 2004. Since then, I have modified or created pages relating to biography, film, international politics, jazz, literature, and the media. I also have an active account on Wikiquote.
Articles largely written by this user
B–G
- Emma Barnett, British broadcaster and journalist
- Max Blumenthal, American journalist
- Dorothea Brooking, BBC television children's drama producer/director
- Caroline Criado-Perez, British feminist campaigner and writer
- Paul Dacre, British journalist, former newspaper editor
- Shelagh Delaney, British dramatist and screenwriter
- Buzz Goodbody, British theatre director
- Geoffrey Goodman, British journalist and Labour correspondent
- Felicity Green, British journalist and former newspaper executive
- Lars Gullin, Swedish jazz saxophonist
H–M
- James Harding, former editor of The Times and ex-head of BBC News
- Georgina Henry, British journalist, formerly in charge of The Guardian website
- Anna Home, former head of BBC Children's television
- Anthony Howard, British journalist, broadcaster and author
- Cassandra Jardine, British journalist
- Jay Landesman, Anglo-American bohemian
- Lux Film, Italian film distribution and production company
- James MacTaggart, Scottish born television drama producer/director and writer
- Geraldine McEwan, British actor
- Eleanor Mills, British journalist
- Charlotte Moore, British television executive and last controller of BBC One
N–V
- Dora Noyce, Edinburgh 'madam'/brothel keeper
- Amol Rajan, BBC Media Editor, former editor of The Independent
- Gillian Reynolds, British radio critic, journalist, and broadcaster
- Olive Shapley, British broadcaster/producer for the BBC in Manchester
- Kim Shillinglaw, British television executive, last controller of BBC Two and BBC Four
- Sally Soames, British newspaper photographer
- Stan Tracey, British jazz musician, pianist and composer
- Katharine Viner, editor-in-chief of The Guardian newspaper/Guardian Media Group
W–Y
- Michelene Wandor, British writer and broadcaster
- The Wednesday Play (1964–70), BBC television drama anthology series
- Mary Whitehouse, British Christian morality campaigner, founder and first president of the National Viewers and Listeners Association
- Wearside Jack (real name: John Humble), Yorkshire Ripper hoaxer
- Joy Whitby, British television producer and executive specialising in children's programmes
- Peregrine Worsthorne, British journalist, former editor of The Sunday Telegraph
- Yesterday's Men, 1971 BBC television documentary