 Here are my Media Quotes of the Year dominated by phone hacking, the closure of the News of the World, WikiLeaks, privacy and the Leveson Inquiry.
Here are my Media Quotes of the Year dominated by phone hacking, the closure of the News of the World, WikiLeaks, privacy and the Leveson Inquiry.
Phone hacking
Rupert Murdoch to the Culture,  Media and Sport Select Committee hearing into phone hacking: "This  is the most humble day of my life."
Andy Coulson on leaving Downing Street: "I stand by what I've said about those events but when the spokesman needs a spokesman it's time to move on."
Guardian editor-in-chief Alan Rusbridger on Coulson resigning: "This is the result of first class investigative reporting by one  
Guardian   reporter, Nick Davies, sustained over a very long period of  time.  From  the moment he revealed the secret payout to Gordon Taylor in  July  2009  it was obvious that Andy Coulson's  position was untenable. But  this is  not the end of the story by any  means. There are many  outstanding  legal actions, and uncomfortable  questions for others,  including the  police."
The BBC's Robert Peston on his blog:  "Not to over-dramatise, this has all the potential for the  newspaper   industry to turn into its version of the MPs' expenses  scandal."
Sky News political editor Adam Boulton:   "Two important sectors of our society now feel under a great deal of   pressure, beset by plunging fortunes and public esteem: newspapers and   politicians. As they go down they are turning in on each other with   increasing viciousness - politician against journalist, politician   against polititian, journalist against journalist."
Blogger Guido Fawkes:  "Obviously a line was crossed, catching out a liar by listening to  their voicemail can be sold to the public. Raiding the privacy of  suffering citizens cannot. This crisis is monstrous for Murdoch, but the  
Telegraph, BBC and Guardian Media Group are having an absolute field  day. Far from being a crisis for them, this is all their Christmases  rolled into one."
Tom Watson MP to James Murdoch: "You must be the first Mafia boss in history who did not know he was running a criminal enterprise."
 James Murdoch: "Mr. Watson, that's inappropriate."
AA Gill in the Sunday Times on the Culture, Media and Sport Select Committee:"Tom Watson begins the questioning. His anger is barely contained by    his bulk.  The porcine eyes flash. During the expenses scandal it was    revealed that he  claimed the maximum £4,800 as a food allowance in a    single year. No one  could accuse him of wasting it."
 Ex-News of the World legal manager Tom Crone to the DCMS select committtee: "We  went to see Mr    [James] Murdoch and it was explained to him what the  document was and what    it meant. It was clear evidence    that hacking  was taking place beyond Clive Goodman."
The Guardian's Michael White imagines a conversation between James Murdoch and his Dad: “Pops. Is Rebekah going to be our new mum?”
Chase Carey, deputy chairman, president and chief operating officer,  News Corporation:  "We  believed that the proposed acquisition  of BSkyB by News  Corporation would benefit both companies but it  has  become clear that  it is too difficult to progress in this climate."
The News of the WorldJames Murdoch on the decision to close the News of the World: "The  good things the 
News of the World  does, however, have been sullied by  behaviour that was wrong. Indeed,  if recent allegations are true, it  was inhuman and has no place in our  Company.The 
News of the World is in  the business of holding others to account. But it failed when it came  to itself."
Rebekah Brooks to News of the World staff: "Worse revelations are yet to come and you will understand in a year why we closed the 
News of the World."
Charles Moore in the Daily Telegraph: "It has surprised me to read fellow defenders of the free press saying how sad they are that the News of the World    closed. In its stupidity, narrowness and cruelty, and in its methods,    the paper was a disgrace to the free press. No one should ever have    banned it, of course, but nor should anyone mourn its passing. It is    rather as if supporters of parliamentary democracy were to lament the    collapse of the BNP."Damian McCrystal on the Guardian's Comment is Free:   "Instead of defending their wayward sibling, Britain's journalists   handed it to the wolves. It looked to an outsider like an act of   cowardice and treachery. I know for certain that other newspapers in   other media groups have, directly or indirectly, used the same   investigative tactics. If or when that emerges, giving ammunition to the   growing censorship lobby, journalists will bitterly regret their   disloyalty."
Jon Gaunt on Question Time: "The wrong red-top has gone. Rebekah should go".
News of the World political editor David Wooding: "The loss of the 
News of the World   from our lives is a bombshell like the break-up of the Beatles, the   collapse of Woolworths and the end of Concorde. Only this time, instead   of reporting the story, we are it. Britain's crooks, thieves, conmen  and  fakers won't miss the 
News of the World. But everyone who loved a great story, well told, will."
Milly Dowler
Sally Dowler, mother of Milly Dowler, at the Leveson Inquiry on the moment she found her daughter's phone messages had been deleted and had cried out to her husband: “She’s picked up her    voicemail, Bob, she’s alive.”
Guardian amends its July story on Milly Dowler: "Editor's note: evidence secured by police following the publication of this article    has established that the 
News of the World was not responsible for  the   deletion of voicemails which caused Milly Dowler's parents to have   false  hope that she was alive."
Guardian's Nick Davies on Sky News:  “To  claim that it is the  deletion element of that story which made  all the  difference is a grotesque  distortion. There was always the  risk that if  we came out with the new evidence that  mischief-makers  would get hold  of it and try to make more of it than should  be made.”
Sun managing editor Richard Caseby to the House of Lords Communications Committee: "It is now  clear that Alan Rusbridger has effectively sexed up his  investigation  into phone hacking and the wider issue of wrongdoing in  the media.”
PrivacyThe Sun on the Appeal Court ruling that stopped the press naming a sportsman said by the paper to be a love cheat:   "Yesterday was the day Britain became a judicial banana republic.        The nation that created the rule of law bent its knee to a sportsman     who  fornicates his way through life like a dung hill rooster."
Liberal Democrat MP John Hemming in the Commons:   "In a secret  hearing this week Fred Goodwin has obtained a      super-injunction  preventing him being identified as a banker. Will the   government  have a debate or a statement on freedom of speech    and   whether  there's one rule for the rich like Fred Goodwin and one rule   for    the  poor?"
Andrew Marr in the Daily Mail about his privacy injunction: "I   did not come into journalism to go around gagging journalists. Am  I    embarrassed by it? Yes. Am I uneasy about it? Yes. But at the time     there was a crisis in my marriage and I believed there was a young child     involved. I also had my own family to think about, and I believed   this  story was nobody else's business."
Jeremy Clarkson tells the Sun why he lifted an injunction on his ex-wife: "Injunctions   don't work, they  are pointless. If you have one, everyone on Twitter   and the internet knows  you've got it. But   because I am bound by the   same order, I can't speak about it or defend    myself. There is an   assumption that I am guilty because I can't say    anything. My wife and   I decided to let it go. My ex-wife is   now free to tell her story   and  people can either believe it or not,   it's up to them."
Ex-News of the World journalist Paul McMullan at the Leveson Inquiry: "Privacy is for paedos, no-one else needs it."
Blogger Guido Fawkes' advice to celebs on Sky News: “If you don’t want to be on the front pages then don’t pay hookers to stick dildos up your bum.” Adam Boulton moved swiftly on.WikiLeaks and Julian Assange
Reuters quotes official who attended a briefing given in late  2010 by US State  Department officials: "We  were told (the  impact of WikiLeaks revelations) was embarrassing but  not damaging."Julian Assange's legal team on the dangers of his extradition to the US:  "Indeed, if Mr Assange were rendered to the USA, without assurances  that  the death penalty would not be carried out, there is a real risk  that  he could be made subject to the death penalty. It is well known  that  prominent figures have implied, if not stated outright, that Mr  Assange  should be executed."
Ian Katz in the Guardian: "By the start of this year, despite countless attempts at reassurance, Assange had decided the 
Guardian was out to get him. 
WikiLeaks now viewed the 
Guardian as akin to the Pentagon, he told me. As I write this, a 
WikiLeaks tweet rich with irony suggests the relationship may have chilled a few degrees since then: 'The 
Guardian book serialisation contains malicious libels. We will be taking action'."
Stephen Glover in the Independent on Julian Assange: "The 
Guardian  may not regret getting into bed with this seemingly awful  man, but it  certainly has no intention of being caught lingering there."
Tom Junod in Esquire on the New York Times' executive editor Bill Keller and his relationships with the founder of WikiLeaks:  "What Bill Keller really wants the public to know is that when he  climbed  into bed with Julian Assange, he made sure to wear a condom,   manufactured from the impermeable rubber of his own distaste."
Benedict Brogan in the Telegraph after it led on a WikiLeaks inspired story about Libya: "A while back I questioned
 how interesting the material released by
 WikiLeaks was. Excuse me while I reverse my ferret."
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, speaking at Cambridge University:  "While the internet has in some ways an ability to let us know to an   unprecedented level what government is doing, and to let us co-operate   with each other to hold repressive governments and repressive   corporations to account, it is also the greatest spying machine the   world has ever seen."
Julian Assange as told to Ian Hislop: "The reporters on the 
Guardian  disappointed me they failed my masculinity test. They behaved like gossipping schoolgirls."
David House, a friend of Bradley Manning, the soldier accused of passing secrets to WikiLeaks, in the Guardian: "You  can hear Bradley coming from a long way away because of the chains –   his feet have chains on them, they go to a leather belt around his   waist. His hands go into them and he has no free movement of his hands."
Journalism StandardsGreg Reardon, the boyfriend of Jo Yeates on coverage of her murder:  "Jo's  life was cut short tragically but the finger-pointing and   character  assassination by social and news media of as yet innocent men   has been  shameful.  It has made me lose a lot of faith in the   morality of the  British press and those that spend their time fixed to   the internet in  this modern age."
BBC College of Journalism executive editor Kevin Marsh speaking at Gray's Inn debate on libel law reform: "We  journalists - particularly in gatherings like this or when we're   delivering disingenuously serious-minded, ironic, hypocritical keynote   speeches at Editors' Conferences - deceive ourselves about why we're   loathed by the very public in whose interest we profess to report. We  tell ourselves it's because we're independent, bloody-minded,  won't be  bamboozled, stand up to pressure and tell it how it is.  But surely we  know it's none of those things. It's because too many journalists make  up too much, too often. And  then, when they're found out, writhe every  which way rather than put it  right."
Daily Star reporter Richard Peppiatt’s "I quit" letter to proprietor Richard Desmond:  “ 'The flap of a butterfly’s wings in Brazil sets off a tornado in  Texas'.Well, try this: 'The lies of a newspaper in London can get a  bloke’s head caved in down an alley in Bradford.' If you can’t see that  words matter, you should go back to running porn magazines. But if you  do, yet still allow your editors to use inciteful over insightful  language, then far from standing up for Britain, you’re a menace against  all things that make it great."
Roy Greenslade in Media Guardian:  "It is time for the responsible, serious section of the British press  to  disengage from any coalition with the popular newspapers. The   willingness to ignore their misconduct has led us all astray and   increased the public's lack of trust in all journalism."
Jane Goldman interviewed in the Sunday Times: “People  who work on tabs have to dehumanise the people they write about,  otherwise they can’t live with themselves. They have to think everyone  is publicity-hungry and an attention whore, and not worthy of your  respect as a fellow human being, or how do you do your job?”
Andrew Alexander in the Daily Mail: "Every  few years politicians succumb  to the desire to impose codes of ethics  on journalists. We have had  three attempts in the past half century or  so to achieve this by  committee of inquiry without much result. David  Cameron wants us to try again. It will be like grappling with a  blancmange."
Reed Business Information's editorial development manager Adam Tinworth: "From now on, I'm a blogger not a journalist. Don't want my credentials dragged down by association with newspaper hacks."
Gordon Brown at the Edinburgh Festival: “In  Britain, what the press do, if they really want to get at  someone, is  they challenge their motives and their integrity. They try  to suggest  that they’re not the person that they say they are. The way  the press  works in this country is they try to doubt the motives of  people all  the time. They try to suggest that you’ve got a malign  purpose in what  you’re doing. And they try to take pieces of people’s  characters and  destroy those pieces so they can make their political  point as a result  of that. You can’t say it is not hurtful.”
Nick Davies interviewed by the Media Matters for America website on the impact of Rupert Murdoch on journalism in the UK: "Rupert Murdoch has made Britain a more racist, more sexist and more stupid place. Because of what he did to the Sun, and what the Sun did to other newspapers."
Roy Greenslade responds:  "I don't hate journalists. But I do hate hackers,  stalkers, users of agents provocateur and routine users of subterfuge."
Business ModelsTim Rutten in the Los Angeles Times: "The 
Huffington Post  is a  brilliantly packaged product with a particular flair for  addressing the  cultural and entertainment tastes of its overwhelmingly  liberal  audience. To grasp its business model, though, you need to  picture a  galley rowed by slaves and commanded by pirates."
Guardian editor-in-chef Alan Rusbridger: “By  becoming a digital-first organisation we’re taking the next natural   step, one which we believe all newspapers will eventually have to take.”
Steve Bowbrick in The Word magazine on blogs vs. social networks: "The  blogs, because of their independence and energy and the sense that  anything is possible, have defied the irrelevance threatened by the  social networks. They represent the richness and value of human  subjectivity and the potential for open and honest communication, even  in the age of collapsing business models and fading media behemoths."
Journalism Cuts:Mike Lockley editor of the Chase Post closed down by Trinity Mirror Midlands: "Times  and technology change, people’s desire to know what’s happening in   their community doesn’t. A town without its own weekly newspaper is a   town without a heart."
Woking News & Mail reader Rachel Tytherleigh on the closure of the paper: "My daughter, Lucy Constantine, has been a  member of the 
WN&M's Press   Gang for a couple of years now. She was  looking forward to seeing her   10th birthday printed in the Press Gang  section on March 24.  Unfortunately, ...this can no longer happen."
Chris Morley, the NUJ’s Northern and  Midlands organiser, in a blog for Ethos PR:  “Local newspapers are not dead but they are  being killed by remote and  irresponsible owners who care nothing for  them but as a source of  ready cash. The damage is being compounded by  the air of defeatism  being generated by often timid editors (with a few  honourable  exceptions) who refuse to challenge the bean counters to  protect their  own titles."
Grey Cardigan in Press Gazette on why the "grey men in grey suits" forced out Northcliffe's outspoken editors: "They  couldn't handle the boardroom  battles, the cult of 'Editorial is King'  and the notion that people  would fight to the death for what was right  for their newspapers, their  readers and their staff. So off they had  to go."
Covering the riotsPaul Lewis in the Guardian on covering the riots: 
   "The first portal for communicating what we saw was  Twitter. It   enabled us to deliver real-time reports from the scene, but  more   importantly enabled other users of Twitter to provide constant  feedback   and directions to troublespots. While journalists covering  previous   riots would chase ambulances to find the frontline, we followed  what   people on social media told us. By the end of the week, I had    accumulated 35,000 new Twitter followers."BBC reporter Ruth Clegg: "As   I pulled up by Salford precinct, I was greeted by crowds  of young    people - some as young as 10 or 11. Seconds later cars  screeched by as    young boys pulled wheelies on motorbikes. Within minutes of  leaving  my  car and standing by BBC Radio  Manchester's radio-car, bricks  were   hurled at myself and a colleague. We  took cover by the empty    markets...Gangs cheered as the radio-car went up in  flames."
Unemployedhack on his blog:   "Journalists are finally being shown in a good light. The reporters,    just days ago dismissed as 'scum', are now celebrated as they report  on,   photograph and film riots across London and the UK. Someone even   mentioned that reporters are on low pay while they  respond to early   morning calls to report on and film burning cars,  looted shops and the   smashed windows along high streets."
Kevin Marsh in Press Gazette on covering the aftermath of the riots:   "What if the press and broadcasters - especially local and regional   media  - saw their role as helping to find the answers? What if we   realised  that whining on the margins wasn't good enough any more?    Maybe that would change the way we looked at and reported the   deep-seated problems that affect us all. And maybe we journalists would   find we were relevant, respected and trusted once more."
Bryony Gordon sends a love letter to a Sky News reporter via her Telegraph column: "Mark Stone, beefcake, hunk, my hero. A 
Sky News   reporter who makes Buzz    Lightyear look like Postman Pat, a breath  of  broadcasting fresh air after    hours of Identikit aerial shots from   the ubiquitous Skycopter.    This chiselled god of news fearlessly  took  to the streets of Clapham on Monday    night to confront the feral   youths rampaging through his local branch of    Currys Digital."
Johann HariJohann Hari in the Independent: "In   my work, I’ve spent a lot of time dragging other people’s flaws into   the    light. I did it because I believe that every time you point out   that    somebody is going wrong, you give them a chance to get it right   next time    and so reduce the amount of wrongdoing in the world.  That’s  why, although it    has been a really painful process and will  surely  continue to be for some    time, I think in the end I’ll be  grateful my  flaws have also been dragged    into the light in this way.  I would like  to apologise again to my readers,    my colleagues and  the people hurt  by my actions. I know that some of you    have lost  faith in my work. I  will do everything I can now to regain it. I     hope, after a period of  retraining, you will give me the chance."
Blogger Fleet Street Fox offers to train Johann Hari:   "I'll send him out on deathknocks, pack jobs, magistrates' hearings,     junkie inquests, tell him to drive 300 miles on a hopeless tip at 10pm     then insist he's back at work for 7am, make him spend his birthday  at a    late-night local council planning committee, publish his phone  number    and paint his name on the side of his car so everyone knows  who he  is.   I'll show him what to do when someone comes at him with a  lump of  wood   or collapses in tears, and how to file off a notebook  down a bad  line   while you're being shot at to someone who's drunk."
Osama Bin LadenTIME magazine's  headline on story about journalism graduate Vice-Admiral  William  McRaven, who commanded the SEAL team that hunted down and  killed Osama  Bin Laden: 'The Most Deadly Would-be Journalist in the World.'
Death of GaddafiGuardian readers' editor Chris Elliott on the use by the paper of pictures of Gaddafi's bloodied corpse:  "At the time I agreed with the 
Guardian's decision to publish. On  reflection – and having read the complaints – I feel less convinced  about the 
way    we used these photographs, although I still feel  strongly that they    are an important part of this story and should have  been used. The    scale of the photo on the newspaper front page of 21  October and    prominent picture use on the website took us too close to  appearing to    revel in the killing rather than reporting it. And that is  something    that should feature in our deliberations the next time – and  there  will   be a next time – such a situation arises."
Sky News' Alex CrawfordRichard Edmondson in the Independent:   "If you want to make my wife, Alex Crawford, angry you might either   call her a female reporter or suggest she does not care much about her   children. If you want to end it all you could mix a fatal cocktail of   the two. Tell her that a woman journalist should not be going to war   zones, especially when there are kids back home to cuddle. It would be a   swifter end than strychnine." Shagging
Hugh Grant after being asked 'How frustrating is it for you that people are more interested in your love life than your films?' by a BBC interviewer in 2003:"I  do get frustrated, but I understand where the instinct comes from. When  I think about actors I know, I’d much rather hear about who they’re  shagging than what film they’re doing next."
Dominique Strauss-KhanNew York Post columnist Andrea Peyser gives Dominique Strauss-Khan a Glenda Slagg-style send off:  "Get back on that Air France jet and soil your linens back home, Mr. Big Shot. We don't like your kind."
Cocktail cock-upGuardian correction: "The  actor Tom Hardy said in an interview  that his training for a role as a  cage fighter in the film Warrior  included "two hours mai tai" each day  - he meant the combat sport "muay  thai", not the fruity cocktail."
Teaser of the yearMailOnline: 'How I stole my husband's sperm in the middle of the night by Liz Jones'.Garth Gibbs RIP
Ex-Mirror journalist Garth Gibbs, who died in August, on his hunt for Lord Lucan:  "I  regard not finding Lord Lucan as my most  spectacular success in   journalism. Of course, many of my colleagues  have also been  fairly  successful in not finding Lord Lucan. But I have  successfully not   found him in more exotic spots than anybody else. I  spent three   glorious weeks not finding him in Cape Town, magical days  and nights   not finding him in the Black Mountains of Wales, and  wonderful and   successful short breaks not finding him in Macau either,  or in Hong  Kong  or even in Green Turtle Bay in the Bahamas where you  can find  anyone."
Leveson on Leveson
Lord Justice Leveson on his inquiry into media ethics: “I want this inquiry  to mean something. I am very  concerned that it should not simply form a  footnote in some professor of  journalism’s analysis of the history of  the 21st century while it gathers  dust.”
And another thing...
Jon S - Happy Christmas to all my readers