Frontline Club

Former war reporter Martin Bell addressing a Frontline Club forum

The Frontline Club is a media club near London's Paddington Station. With a strong emphasis on conflict reporting, it aims to champion independent journalism, provide an effective platform from which to support diversity and professionalism in the media, promote safe practice, and encourage both freedom of the press and freedom of expression worldwide.

Since opening its doors in 2003, Frontline Club has hosted over 1,200 events. Its founders do not receive wages and the events programme is almost self-sustaining, mainly from membership fees and ticket income.

Discussions, held most weekday evenings, are broadcast live. Past participants include John Simpson, Robert Fisk, Jeremy Paxman, Tim Hetherington, Nick Robinson, David Aaronovitch, Alan Rusbridger, Jeremy Bowen, Louis Theroux,[1] Gillian Tett,[2] Christina Lamb, Julian Assange, Jon Lee Anderson the late Benazir Bhutto, Boris Berezovsky, the late Alexander Litvinenko, and his widow, Marina Litvinenko.

The building includes a restaurant open to non-members, a club room, meeting rooms, two lodging rooms and a discussion forum. The club also hosts film and documentary screenings and organizes training and workshops in such skills as camera operation and film editing. It is a registered charity.

In May 2011, award-winning broadcaster Louis Theroux said in an interview with the Evening Standard that the Frontline Club was his favorite London club.[3]

History

BBC World Affairs Editor John Simpson being questioned about his career by fellow journalists, October 2007

The Frontline Club opened in 2003. It was founded by surviving members of Frontline News TV, a cooperative of freelance cameramen formed during the chaos of the Romanian revolution in 1989.

It specialized in war reporting for television.[4] Vaughan Smith, one of two surviving founders of Frontline News TV, turned the operation into a club, offering a meeting place for those who believe in independent journalism, as well as to honour dead colleagues. It also aims to lobby for better support for the freelance journalistic community.

The clubroom has a display of relics drawn from the history of war reporting since the Crimean war. Cabinets show personal items, some with shell still embedded, that have stopped a bullet and saved a journalist's life. The walls of the Frontline Club display examples of war photography and artwork.

In December 2010 Vaughan Smith, the owner of the Frontline Club, offered Julian Assange of Wikileaks his private home in Norfolk as an address for bail.[5] Assange had been staying at the club for two months.[6]

See also

Footnotes

  1. http://www.journalism.co.uk/news-features/-i-ve-always-seen-myself-as-a-journalist--louis-theroux-on-his-style-work-and-drive/s5/a533342/
  2. http://frontlineclub.com/events/2009/07/insight-with-gillian-tett-scaremongerer-no-more.html
  3. Lucy Hunter, Johnston (23 May 2011). "Louis Theroux's My London". The Evening Standard. Retrieved 19 June 2011.
  4. Loyn, David (2006). Frontline: The True Story of the British Mavericks Who Changed the Face of War Reporting. Michael Joseph Ltd. ISBN 978-0-14-101784-6.
  5. Smith, Vaughan (7 December 2010). "Email to Frontline Club website". Retrieved 7 December 2010.
  6. Caroline Davies and Sam Jones (7 December 2010). "Assange bail request refused as Wikileaks chief fights extradition". The Guardian. Retrieved 7 December 2010.

Coordinates: 51°31′01″N 0°10′21″W / 51.5169°N 0.1725°W / 51.5169; -0.1725

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