Was a similar post last week about Dublin live creating articles based entirely off an r/Ireland post.
Seems the sub is riddled with gutter rag “journalists”
You need to get on to Roisin Phelan and tell her to stop cogging your work.
Also it’s in the “Fabulous” section lol
Scum. They are the worst.
Something for the LinkedIn profile: Published author !
Bastards!
does that mean sun journos are trawling….wtf, mind blown, and if they are …….
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u r cunts
It’s interesting because they technically didn’t identify you directly and it is posted in the public domain but there is something gross about it too.
I feel like maybe a DM telling you they were running with it. There isn’t much you could do to stop them but at least they’d acknowledge you.
This is hilarious! How is it newsworthy 😄
Some pain in the balls that
[deleted]
#For The Sun writers who are reading this post, you’re all scumbags.
—
In January 1988 the Sun described Chris Mullins efforts on behalf of the wrongly convicted Birmingham Six as being “Loony MP Backs Bomb Gang” and “If the Sun had its way, we would have been tempted to string ‘em up years ago”.
—
In 1987 The Sun reacted to acclaimed poet Benjamin Zephaniah applying to be a visiting fellow at Cambridge by writing a piece titled “Would you let this man near your daughter?” Noting that “he is black” and “looks like he could do with a shampoo and a scrub”
—
The Sun responded to the AIDS health crisis on 8 May 1983 with the headline: “US Gay Blood Plague Kills Three in Britain”
On 17 November 1989, The Sun headlined a page 2 news story titled “STRAIGHT SEX CANNOT GIVE YOU AIDS – OFFICIAL.
The Sun also ran an editorial arguing that “At last the truth can be told … the risk of catching AIDS if you are heterosexual is ‘statistically invisible’. In other words, impossible. So now we know – everything else is homosexual propaganda.
—
In May 1987, gay men were offered free one-way airline tickets to Norway to leave Britain for good: “Fly Away Gays – And We Will Pay” was the paper’s headline.
—
On a story about the first same-sex kiss on the BBC television soap opera EastEnders as “EastBenders”, describing the kiss between Colin Russell and Guido Smith as “a homosexual love scene between yuppie poofs … when millions of children were watching
—
During the miners’ strike of 1984–85, The Sun supported the police and the Thatcher government against the striking NUM miners, and in particular the union’s president, Arthur Scargill. On 23 May 1984, The Sun prepared a front page with the headline “Mine Führer” and a photograph of Scargill with his arm in the air, a pose which made him look as though he was giving a Nazi salute. The print workers at The Sun refused to print it
—
On 1 March 1984, the newspaper extensively quoted an American psychiatrist claiming that British left-wing politician Tony Benn was “insane”, with the psychiatrist discussing various aspects of Benn’s supposed pathology. The story, which appeared on the day of the Chesterfield by-election in which Benn was standing, was discredited when the psychiatrist quoted by The Sun publicly denounced the article, describing the false quotes attributed to him as “absurd”.
—
Three days after the Hillsborough accident, The Sun published an editorial which accused people of “scapegoating” the police, saying that the disaster occurred “because thousands of fans, many without tickets tried to get into the ground just before kick-off – either by forcing their way in or by blackmailing the police into opening the gates”. The next day, under a front-page headline “The Truth”, the paper falsely accused Liverpool fans of theft and of urinating on and attacking police officers and emergency services.
—
UK Cabinet Minister Peter Mandelson was “outed” by Matthew Parris (a former Sun columnist) on BBC TV’s Newsnight in November 1998. Misjudging public response, The Sun’s editor David Yelland demanded to know in a front-page editorial whether Britain was governed by a “gay mafia” of a “closed world of men with a mutual self-interest”.
—
The Sun published a front-page story on 4 July 2003, under the headline “Swan Bake”, which claimed that asylum seekers were slaughtering and eating swans. It later proved to have no basis in fact. Subsequently, The Sun published a follow-up, headlined “Now they’re after our fish!
The Leveson inquiry included Swan Bake as evidence newspapers ‘wilfully’ produce stories ‘which are factually incorrect’ in order to ‘fit with a newspaper’s adopted viewpoint’. ‘Unidentified people were cited as witnesses to the phenomenon, but it seemed there was no basis to the story: The Sun was unable to defend the article against a PCC complaint
—
On 22 September 2003, the newspaper appeared to misjudge the public mood surrounding mental health, as well as its affection for former world heavyweight champion boxer Frank Bruno, who had been admitted to hospital, when the headline “Bonkers Bruno Locked Up”
—
The Sun has been openly antagonistic towards other European nations, particularly the French and Germans. During the 1980s and 1990s, the nationalities were routinely described in copy and headlines as “frogs”, “krauts” or “hun”. As the paper is opposed to the EU, it has referred to foreign leaders who it deemed hostile to the UK in unflattering terms. Former President Jacques Chirac of France, for instance, was branded “le Worm”. An unflattering picture of German chancellor Angela Merkel, taken from the rear, bore the headline “I’m Big in the Bumdestag”
—
During the 2007 Scottish Parliament election the front page featured a hangman’s noose in the shape of an SNP logo and stated “Vote SNP today and you put Scotland’s head in the noose”. The SNP won the subsequent election and has formed the Scottish Government since 2007.
—
The Irish Sun often views stories in a very different light to those being reported in the UK editions. Editions of the paper in Great Britain described the film The Wind That Shakes the Barley being “designed to drag the reputation of our nation through the mud” and “the most pro-IRA ever” conversely, the Republic of Ireland edition praised the film and described it as giving “the Brits a tanning”.
—
An attack on Gordon Brown backfired after criticising him for misspelling a dead soldier’s mother’s name, The Sun was then forced to apologise for misspelling the same name on their website
—
On 28 January 2012, police arrested four current and former staff members of The Sun as part of a probe in which journalists paid police officers for information; a police officer was also arrested in the probe. The Sun staffers arrested were crime editor Mike Sullivan, head of news Chris Pharo, former deputy editor Fergus Shanahan, and former managing editor Graham Dudman, who since became a columnist and media writer. All five arrested were held on suspicion of corruption.
—
On 17 April 2015, The Sun’s columnist Katie Hopkins called migrants to Britain “cockroaches” and “feral humans” and said they were “spreading like the norovirus”
—
The Sun officially endorsed the Leave campaign regarding brexit on 23 June 2016, urging its readers to vote for the United Kingdom to leave the EU. The “BeLeave in Britain” front-page headline was only present on copies distributed in England and Wales; editions for Scotland, Northern Ireland (and the Republic of Ireland) led on other topics
—
In August 2017, The Sun published a column by Trevor Kavanagh which questioned what actions British society should take to deal with “The Muslim Problem”.
—
The UK Sun endorsed the conservatives in the 2015 and 2017 UK general elections which caused confusion as the Scottish Sun supported the SNP.
The Scottish Sun urged its readers to back the SNP. While in England and Wales, the paper saw a vote for the Conservatives as a means to “stop [the] SNP running the country”, the edition north of the border said the SNP would “fight harder for Scotland’s interests at Westminster”
—
In October 2016 The European Commission against Racism and Intolerance (ECRI) took aim at The Sun for “offensive, discriminatory and provocative terminology”.
—
In April 2017 it was announced that police were investigating a widely reviled column former editor Kelvin Maczkenzie wrote likening mixed race England footballer Ross Barkley to a gorilla.
—
In June 2018, The Sun provoked controversy after it criticised the dress worn by a 17-year-old actress, Isobel Steele, to the British Soap Awards. The paper critiqued Steele for her decision to “cover up from head to toe” and told her to “flash a bit of flesh”.
—
In June 2018, The Sun was criticised for coverage of Raheem Sterling. On the eve of the World Cup, it published a front page story based on a tattoo of a gun on Sterling’s leg.
The story included a “series of ethical failings” according to Simon McEnnis Principal Lecturer in Journalism at the University of Brighton, which, he said, “make accusations of racism, bullying and victimisation against Sterling difficult for The Sun to defend.”
Those failings included “no clear indication of an attempt to contact Sterling for an explanation in the original story” and a disregarding of “the febrile climate surrounding the footballer after he was the victim of a racist attack for which a man was jailed for six weeks in December 2017”.
Sterling would later reveal the tattoo was in memory of his father who was shot dead when the footballer was a boy.
—
In September 2018, the Australian edition -The Herald Sun, printed a cartoon featuring 23-time Grand Slam winner Serena Williams jumping on a broken racket during her dispute with a chair umpire during the US Open final under the headline “Welcome to PC World.”
Critics of Knight’s cartoon described it as a clear example of a stereotype facing black women, depicting Williams as irate, hulking and big-mouthed, jumping up and down on a broken racket. The umpire was shown telling a blonde, slender woman — meant to be Osaka, who is Japanese and Haitian — “Can you just let her win?”
—
On 14 February 2020, a day before Caroline Flack was found dead in her flat, The Sun published an article about a “brutal” Valentine’s Day card mocking Flack on its website.
—
In June 2020, shortly after J. K. Rowling published a blog in which she described her first marriage as “violent”, The Sun interviewed Jorge Arantes, Rowling’s former husband, and published a front-page article entitled “I slapped JK and I’m not sorry”
Ah Jesus. I don’t know whether to laugh or cry for you OP.
What the fuck. I was shocked for a second and then….oh yeah….the Sun. So low.
Does it pay well? Some gig. Browse Reddit, copy/paste, get paid.
Why do your own work when you can steal someone’s else story?
Assholes. Not gonna click the link. Last thing I want to do is give them the click they want.
Shower of cunts.
Did they show the picture of your cock too?
Well it was either that or make up some lies about immigrants. They must have flipped a coin
Journalism is dead. At least you can be happy in the knowledge that they get paid feck all for their work these days.
4 syllables, that’s a lot for a Sun writer
A guy I was in a club with had a car accident where his 1 year old child died. A few hours later someone from the sun rang me looking for his mobile number. Told him to go fuck himself. Scum.
I’m so sorry dude, this is not okay at all. Mods remove our copy and paste articles from behind paywalls but the reverse is okay, they can copy work from here. This is another Joe.ie.
Fuck The S*n
Fuck the S*n
Send them an invoice.
Well my advice is don’t do it anyway, can check my post history. 15-30% of guys get chronic discomfort after it, about 2% get suicidal levels of pain and I was in that group. Had to have a reversal after 9 months to resolve the incredible pain. No way of telling who will get pain afterwards, my fertility test after reversal showed I produce roughly 3.5x the average amount and my diagnosis was congestive epididymitis so I guess maybe one way is to have sperm analysis before the procedure to see if you’re a big producer likely to get issues.
You shouldn’t even link to their “work”. I was lucky enough to go to university in Liverpool. The scum isn’t worth naming as a newspaper. It tried to destroy the lives of a city the combined size of Connacht. Bottom feeders. Scum. No English word is strong enough.
I was never as proud of my father as the day he came to a match with me and there was a “journalist” from the scum there trying to interview people and my father shouted at him “Go mbrise an diabhal do chnámha”.
Everyone should just fire an email off to them complaining about it. It might not accomplish anything but who know, it might actually do something.
THEY DELETED IT
Fair dues for using their full title, The Fucking S*n.
Don’t buy the S*n
Fuck the sun and all their journalists. Absolute Scum. The entire fucking lot of them.
If anyone reading this comment buys the sun will you please take a second to internalise and accept the fact that you’re a massive cunt. You will remain so until you stop buying the sun!
its a dirt rag, Only just a lil more valuable than toilet paper cause it has letters printed on it..the suns only real value is you can cut it up and make a ransom note from it or wipe your ass with it..
Don’t buy the S*n. Scum of the earth.
“Page unavailable”. And fuck the sun. And the enquirer. And any other tabloid for that matter
39 comments
You’ll be on Dublinlive as well probably
Congrats
‘ course they did, they’re the fucking sun.
Was a similar post last week about Dublin live creating articles based entirely off an r/Ireland post.
Seems the sub is riddled with gutter rag “journalists”
You need to get on to Roisin Phelan and tell her to stop cogging your work.
Also it’s in the “Fabulous” section lol
Scum. They are the worst.
Something for the LinkedIn profile: Published author !
Bastards!
does that mean sun journos are trawling….wtf, mind blown, and if they are …….
​
​
​
​
​
​
​
​
​
u r cunts
It’s interesting because they technically didn’t identify you directly and it is posted in the public domain but there is something gross about it too.
I feel like maybe a DM telling you they were running with it. There isn’t much you could do to stop them but at least they’d acknowledge you.
This is hilarious! How is it newsworthy 😄
Some pain in the balls that
[deleted]
#For The Sun writers who are reading this post, you’re all scumbags.
—
In January 1988 the Sun described Chris Mullins efforts on behalf of the wrongly convicted Birmingham Six as being “Loony MP Backs Bomb Gang” and “If the Sun had its way, we would have been tempted to string ‘em up years ago”.
—
In 1987 The Sun reacted to acclaimed poet Benjamin Zephaniah applying to be a visiting fellow at Cambridge by writing a piece titled “Would you let this man near your daughter?” Noting that “he is black” and “looks like he could do with a shampoo and a scrub”
—
The Sun responded to the AIDS health crisis on 8 May 1983 with the headline: “US Gay Blood Plague Kills Three in Britain”
On 17 November 1989, The Sun headlined a page 2 news story titled “STRAIGHT SEX CANNOT GIVE YOU AIDS – OFFICIAL.
The Sun also ran an editorial arguing that “At last the truth can be told … the risk of catching AIDS if you are heterosexual is ‘statistically invisible’. In other words, impossible. So now we know – everything else is homosexual propaganda.
—
In May 1987, gay men were offered free one-way airline tickets to Norway to leave Britain for good: “Fly Away Gays – And We Will Pay” was the paper’s headline.
—
On a story about the first same-sex kiss on the BBC television soap opera EastEnders as “EastBenders”, describing the kiss between Colin Russell and Guido Smith as “a homosexual love scene between yuppie poofs … when millions of children were watching
—
During the miners’ strike of 1984–85, The Sun supported the police and the Thatcher government against the striking NUM miners, and in particular the union’s president, Arthur Scargill. On 23 May 1984, The Sun prepared a front page with the headline “Mine Führer” and a photograph of Scargill with his arm in the air, a pose which made him look as though he was giving a Nazi salute. The print workers at The Sun refused to print it
—
On 1 March 1984, the newspaper extensively quoted an American psychiatrist claiming that British left-wing politician Tony Benn was “insane”, with the psychiatrist discussing various aspects of Benn’s supposed pathology. The story, which appeared on the day of the Chesterfield by-election in which Benn was standing, was discredited when the psychiatrist quoted by The Sun publicly denounced the article, describing the false quotes attributed to him as “absurd”.
—
Three days after the Hillsborough accident, The Sun published an editorial which accused people of “scapegoating” the police, saying that the disaster occurred “because thousands of fans, many without tickets tried to get into the ground just before kick-off – either by forcing their way in or by blackmailing the police into opening the gates”. The next day, under a front-page headline “The Truth”, the paper falsely accused Liverpool fans of theft and of urinating on and attacking police officers and emergency services.
—
UK Cabinet Minister Peter Mandelson was “outed” by Matthew Parris (a former Sun columnist) on BBC TV’s Newsnight in November 1998. Misjudging public response, The Sun’s editor David Yelland demanded to know in a front-page editorial whether Britain was governed by a “gay mafia” of a “closed world of men with a mutual self-interest”.
—
The Sun published a front-page story on 4 July 2003, under the headline “Swan Bake”, which claimed that asylum seekers were slaughtering and eating swans. It later proved to have no basis in fact. Subsequently, The Sun published a follow-up, headlined “Now they’re after our fish!
The Leveson inquiry included Swan Bake as evidence newspapers ‘wilfully’ produce stories ‘which are factually incorrect’ in order to ‘fit with a newspaper’s adopted viewpoint’. ‘Unidentified people were cited as witnesses to the phenomenon, but it seemed there was no basis to the story: The Sun was unable to defend the article against a PCC complaint
—
On 22 September 2003, the newspaper appeared to misjudge the public mood surrounding mental health, as well as its affection for former world heavyweight champion boxer Frank Bruno, who had been admitted to hospital, when the headline “Bonkers Bruno Locked Up”
—
The Sun has been openly antagonistic towards other European nations, particularly the French and Germans. During the 1980s and 1990s, the nationalities were routinely described in copy and headlines as “frogs”, “krauts” or “hun”. As the paper is opposed to the EU, it has referred to foreign leaders who it deemed hostile to the UK in unflattering terms. Former President Jacques Chirac of France, for instance, was branded “le Worm”. An unflattering picture of German chancellor Angela Merkel, taken from the rear, bore the headline “I’m Big in the Bumdestag”
—
During the 2007 Scottish Parliament election the front page featured a hangman’s noose in the shape of an SNP logo and stated “Vote SNP today and you put Scotland’s head in the noose”. The SNP won the subsequent election and has formed the Scottish Government since 2007.
—
The Irish Sun often views stories in a very different light to those being reported in the UK editions. Editions of the paper in Great Britain described the film The Wind That Shakes the Barley being “designed to drag the reputation of our nation through the mud” and “the most pro-IRA ever” conversely, the Republic of Ireland edition praised the film and described it as giving “the Brits a tanning”.
—
An attack on Gordon Brown backfired after criticising him for misspelling a dead soldier’s mother’s name, The Sun was then forced to apologise for misspelling the same name on their website
—
On 28 January 2012, police arrested four current and former staff members of The Sun as part of a probe in which journalists paid police officers for information; a police officer was also arrested in the probe. The Sun staffers arrested were crime editor Mike Sullivan, head of news Chris Pharo, former deputy editor Fergus Shanahan, and former managing editor Graham Dudman, who since became a columnist and media writer. All five arrested were held on suspicion of corruption.
—
On 17 April 2015, The Sun’s columnist Katie Hopkins called migrants to Britain “cockroaches” and “feral humans” and said they were “spreading like the norovirus”
—
The Sun officially endorsed the Leave campaign regarding brexit on 23 June 2016, urging its readers to vote for the United Kingdom to leave the EU. The “BeLeave in Britain” front-page headline was only present on copies distributed in England and Wales; editions for Scotland, Northern Ireland (and the Republic of Ireland) led on other topics
—
In August 2017, The Sun published a column by Trevor Kavanagh which questioned what actions British society should take to deal with “The Muslim Problem”.
—
The UK Sun endorsed the conservatives in the 2015 and 2017 UK general elections which caused confusion as the Scottish Sun supported the SNP.
The Scottish Sun urged its readers to back the SNP. While in England and Wales, the paper saw a vote for the Conservatives as a means to “stop [the] SNP running the country”, the edition north of the border said the SNP would “fight harder for Scotland’s interests at Westminster”
—
In October 2016 The European Commission against Racism and Intolerance (ECRI) took aim at The Sun for “offensive, discriminatory and provocative terminology”.
—
In April 2017 it was announced that police were investigating a widely reviled column former editor Kelvin Maczkenzie wrote likening mixed race England footballer Ross Barkley to a gorilla.
—
In June 2018, The Sun provoked controversy after it criticised the dress worn by a 17-year-old actress, Isobel Steele, to the British Soap Awards. The paper critiqued Steele for her decision to “cover up from head to toe” and told her to “flash a bit of flesh”.
—
In June 2018, The Sun was criticised for coverage of Raheem Sterling. On the eve of the World Cup, it published a front page story based on a tattoo of a gun on Sterling’s leg.
The story included a “series of ethical failings” according to Simon McEnnis Principal Lecturer in Journalism at the University of Brighton, which, he said, “make accusations of racism, bullying and victimisation against Sterling difficult for The Sun to defend.”
Those failings included “no clear indication of an attempt to contact Sterling for an explanation in the original story” and a disregarding of “the febrile climate surrounding the footballer after he was the victim of a racist attack for which a man was jailed for six weeks in December 2017”.
Sterling would later reveal the tattoo was in memory of his father who was shot dead when the footballer was a boy.
—
In September 2018, the Australian edition -The Herald Sun, printed a cartoon featuring 23-time Grand Slam winner Serena Williams jumping on a broken racket during her dispute with a chair umpire during the US Open final under the headline “Welcome to PC World.”
Critics of Knight’s cartoon described it as a clear example of a stereotype facing black women, depicting Williams as irate, hulking and big-mouthed, jumping up and down on a broken racket. The umpire was shown telling a blonde, slender woman — meant to be Osaka, who is Japanese and Haitian — “Can you just let her win?”
—
On 14 February 2020, a day before Caroline Flack was found dead in her flat, The Sun published an article about a “brutal” Valentine’s Day card mocking Flack on its website.
—
In June 2020, shortly after J. K. Rowling published a blog in which she described her first marriage as “violent”, The Sun interviewed Jorge Arantes, Rowling’s former husband, and published a front-page article entitled “I slapped JK and I’m not sorry”
Ah Jesus. I don’t know whether to laugh or cry for you OP.
What the fuck. I was shocked for a second and then….oh yeah….the Sun. So low.
Does it pay well? Some gig. Browse Reddit, copy/paste, get paid.
Why do your own work when you can steal someone’s else story?
Assholes. Not gonna click the link. Last thing I want to do is give them the click they want.
Shower of cunts.
Did they show the picture of your cock too?
Well it was either that or make up some lies about immigrants. They must have flipped a coin
Journalism is dead. At least you can be happy in the knowledge that they get paid feck all for their work these days.
4 syllables, that’s a lot for a Sun writer
A guy I was in a club with had a car accident where his 1 year old child died. A few hours later someone from the sun rang me looking for his mobile number. Told him to go fuck himself. Scum.
I’m so sorry dude, this is not okay at all. Mods remove our copy and paste articles from behind paywalls but the reverse is okay, they can copy work from here. This is another Joe.ie.
Fuck The S*n
Fuck the S*n
Send them an invoice.
Well my advice is don’t do it anyway, can check my post history. 15-30% of guys get chronic discomfort after it, about 2% get suicidal levels of pain and I was in that group. Had to have a reversal after 9 months to resolve the incredible pain. No way of telling who will get pain afterwards, my fertility test after reversal showed I produce roughly 3.5x the average amount and my diagnosis was congestive epididymitis so I guess maybe one way is to have sperm analysis before the procedure to see if you’re a big producer likely to get issues.
You shouldn’t even link to their “work”. I was lucky enough to go to university in Liverpool. The scum isn’t worth naming as a newspaper. It tried to destroy the lives of a city the combined size of Connacht. Bottom feeders. Scum. No English word is strong enough.
I was never as proud of my father as the day he came to a match with me and there was a “journalist” from the scum there trying to interview people and my father shouted at him “Go mbrise an diabhal do chnámha”.
Everyone should just fire an email off to them complaining about it. It might not accomplish anything but who know, it might actually do something.
THEY DELETED IT
Fair dues for using their full title, The Fucking S*n.
Don’t buy the S*n
Fuck the sun and all their journalists. Absolute Scum. The entire fucking lot of them.
If anyone reading this comment buys the sun will you please take a second to internalise and accept the fact that you’re a massive cunt. You will remain so until you stop buying the sun!
its a dirt rag, Only just a lil more valuable than toilet paper cause it has letters printed on it..the suns only real value is you can cut it up and make a ransom note from it or wipe your ass with it..
Don’t buy the S*n. Scum of the earth.
“Page unavailable”. And fuck the sun. And the enquirer. And any other tabloid for that matter