And the winner isn't

To the Riverbank Park Plaza on London's Albert Embankment (short walk from Vauxhall Station) for the MDAs and the MJAs, that's the Magazine Design Awards and the Magazine Journalism Awards, combined for the first time to create a fairly typical industry bash with 22 perspex logos handed out after a perfunctory mass-catering dinner at which the vinegary wine runs out before the hard bread rolls have been eaten. I'll be honest, this was a nice break from book-writing exile. I went out for breakfast with Phill Jupitus in Old Compton Street at 10.30 at a lovely upmarket cafe called Balans (three-egg omelette with ham, mushrooms and mozzerella), which was an entirely pleasant occasion. I also had a meeting this afternoon with my friends at TCM, Tuner Classic Movies, for whom I am hosting the Classic Shorts Awards again, next week at the NFT, just to run through order of events, so I was up and down, in and out all day. It was nice to do a bit of walking. All too sedentary, the author's life.
Anyway, I was invited to the MDA/MJAs, thrown by trade magazine Press Gazette, by my benefactors Radio Times, who had entered me, without my knowledge, for Reviewer Of The Year. I had been shortlisted. I didn't expect for a moment to win, and this was not false modesty, but it would have been rude not to get the suit dry-cleaned and show my face. Half of the awards were for design, half for journalism. My category looked like this:
Andrew Billen, New Statesman
Andrew Collins, Radio Times
Boris Johnson, GQ
Kieran Long, Icon
Matt Master, BBC Top Gear Magazine
Ben Walters, Time Out London
Now, in my opinion, Andrew's Billen's TV reviews in the NS are in a category of their own: possibly the only really essential TV writing outside of Mark Lawson in the UK media. Not since Clive James in the Observer or Paul Morley in Arena has television been so lovingly, intelligently and incisively covered in print. I look forward to his column every week. I confess I have never read Boris's car reviews in GQ (my new friends at Top Gear who shared Table 16 with the RT overspill, tell me that Boris often returns his cars with dents in), nor any of the other nominees. I met Matt Master, as he was sitting opposite me, and we agreed to root for each other, since we are both owned by BBC Worldwide. In the event, the best man won: Andrew Billen. It was, in fact, a memorable night for the newly-revamped, modest-circulation NS, as they almost swept the board, winning just about every design award going, plus Exclusive Of The Year for their political editor Martin Bright, and a commendation in Columnist Of The Year for Peter Wilby. Only Grazia equalled it for gongs, bafflingly enough (unless fooling the public into thinking you're something you're not is a consideration), with GQ a close second. (It was nice to see my old NME and Q pal and former Loft member Bill Prince on the GQ table beforehand - where he is still deputy editor - another good, social reason to attend such an otherwise gruelling event.)
RT didn't win anything, despite nominations for Best Design, Best Subbing Team and Best Cover (the Daleks and Cybermen one, in case you're interested, and unless you're "in the industry", you're entitled not to be). But it was good to see them all, including the venerable Andrew Duncan, who was walking with a stick after a recent accident. Main drawback to the evening? The sheer density of carcinogenic smoke on my bloody table. I was literally hemmed in by smokers: all four of my RT colleagues, plus most of Top Gear, who in line with the programme they are branded after, look death in the face and laugh. It was, if I may say so, disgusting. The smoke screen and the excrutiating a capella soul group, The Magnets, who were our "entertainment", hastened my teetotal exit when it was all over.
But not before what turned out to be an actual piece of "networking." (Use of the very phrase nauseates me slightly, unless it's the fag smoke.) I was moved to go over the victorious NS table, already carousing with champagne and their backs sore from slapping, to state for the record that Andrew Billen deserved to beat me. He seemed unsurprisingly bamboozled by my fan-like behaviour, but it was sincere, and from a peer of sorts, and not a drop of drink had been taken on my part. (Drink at these dos and you end up sucked into banging the table and being a corporate dick.) I think a good TV critic needs telling, and I was happy to have done so. Anyway, before slipping away and leaving them to it, I was accosted myself by Martin Bright, their award-winning political editor, who declared himself a fan of mine. How topsy turvy this all was! I batted back the adoration and explained that I was an NS subscriber of long-standing, and then he told me I should write for them. I informed him that I had, in the distant past, written a piece about Billy Bragg and a couple of reviews, but under previous regimes, so he demanded that I meet their editor, John Kampfner, who probably had carousing to be getting on with, but was polite enough to engage me in conversation and give me his card.
So, I walked back to Vauxhall Station with a possibly champagane-fulled and certainly vague NS offer of work in my wallet, and a deep strata of smoke in my dry-cleaned suit and poor old asthmatic lungs. We'll see if John Kampfner remembers me in the morning, when I turn up at their offices demanding work!








9 Comments:
I did a month-long internship at the New Statesman last year, shortly after John Kampfner took over as editor. He was jolly encouraging, as were all the writers and publisher - it was an inspirational atmosphere. Interns are asked to join the weekly editorial meetings and make article suggestions (my idea for a Patti Smith diary for that week – during Meltdown - unfortunately didn't happen...but neither did the Andrew Collins diary suggestion. One day...)
Wow, shiny foyer, I'm sure I'd feel unworthy, but is that a tree on that desk?
Next time you go to an awards ceremony, try one in Scotland. No smoking allowed thank you very much. It's quite nice to go home after a night with friends and not be stinking of smoke. Actually, it's great.
I went to a wedding reception a couple of weeks ago, where lots of the guests smoked and was thoroughly repulsed by it. It did surprise me how used to smoke-free environments I am these days though, so that has to be progress.
I was one of the other nominees for this award - sorry we didn't meet, actually. I find these awards very strange, especially as we are a relatively independent magazine rubbing shoulders with such exalted titles. I wholly agree with you about Andrew Billen's victory, although I have to say I was mystified by New Statesman's success in the design awards - a really drab and neutral contemporary-style redesign, I think.
Despite icon magazine being shortlisted for seven awards, we won nothing - proof if it were needed that if your table is near the back of the room, you're out of the running.
Congratulations on the website, by the way.
I was very much against the ban on smoking when I first heard of it, even though I am a non smoker myself, mainly due to the fact I felt it was an attack on civil liberties by a nanny state government. However, I have recently travelled to both the Irish Republic and Scotland, where smoking is banned, and it is indeed very nice to go home not reeking of nicotine. In London I am always very wary of a "lunchtime drink" as it inevitably means spending the rest of the day stinking up the office/train.
I love the idea of a smoking ban. I always felt that rather than it being an attack on the right to smoke it was championing the right of non-smokers not to have to breathe in everyone else's smoke. Of course I'm biased - my partner is very asthmatic so we have to be careful - but it generally seems a good thing.
Andrew - shame you didn't win. Also a shame Nancy Bank-Smith wasn't nominated - OK she isn't exactly highbrow, but her soap reviews are brilliant :-)
All the best
Px
Nice to hear from you, Kieran. Oh, and Radio Times' table was very near the front, and we won nothing either! (I always thought they put some winners at the back to create some drama! We always used to with Oasis and the Q Awards, and boy did Liam use that walk.)
Oh, and px - Nancy Banks-Smith was not eligible as it the wards were for magazine journalism.
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