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Conversations At Scarfes Bar: Matthew Parris

Charlotte Metcalf about ambition, working with Margaret Thatcher and his ‘undistinguished’ life. I’d met Matthew Parris briefly before when I went to watch him interviewing the ceramicist Emma Bridgewater about her sister Nell Gifford, who started Gifford’s Circus. In a crowded room he probed Emma, still raw from her beloved sister’s very recent death, with kindness and gentle restraint. It made me want to know more of the person behind the consummate interviewer. Most people know Matthew as a columnist and from Radio 4’s biographical programme Great Lives – he’s presented over 500 episodes. Last year came Fracture, Matthew’s book about how geniuses and great lives are often forged in trauma. Ed Vaizey and I talked to him about

Peter Gary, Founder of One of the Nation s Top Advertising Agencies, Launches Summit Advertising a Full-Service Advertising and Marketing Firm Dedicated to the Automotive Industry

Share this article Share this article BOCA RATON, Fla., Jan. 19, 2021 /PRNewswire/ Peter Gary, founder of Pinnacle Advertising, proudly announced that it has launched Summit Advertising, a dynamic full-service advertising and marketing firm offering traditional advertising, digital marketing, public relations, social media marketing, millennial marketing, media buying, creative and production services focused on the automotive industry.  www.summitadgroup.com (PRNewsfoto/Summit Advertising) Because of our immense expertise in automotive marketing and our brilliant addition of John Hyland as President, it made perfect sense to create this new entity called Summit Advertising that will be entirely automotive specific, said Peter Gary. 

I was David Barclay s ghostwriter – until, suddenly, I wasn t

I was David Barclay s ghostwriter – until, suddenly, I wasn t Tim Walker © Provided by The Guardian Photograph: Michael Stephens/PA For all that Daily Telegraph editors professed to be their own men, the newspaper seldom, if ever, took a view on a major issue of the day – most notably Brexit – that didn’t happen to coincide with that of Sir David Barclay. “I owned the toy shop and got to play in it,” Barclay, who died on Sunday at the age of 86, once gleefully admitted to me. Slight, dapper and with a curious resemblance to the elderly Stan Laurel, Barclay, the co-owner of the Telegraph with his twin brother, Sir Frederick, kept a studiously low public profile, but was in private forthright and clearly used to getting his own way.

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