Rosie Boycott

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Rosel Marie Boycott (born 13 May 1951), better known as Rosie Boycott, is a British journalist and feminist.

Contents

[edit] Journalism career

Daughter of Betty Boycott nee Le Sueur, Rosel Boycott was born in St Helier, Jersey and was educated at the independent Cheltenham Ladies' College and read mathematics at the University of Kent. After working briefly for the radical magazine Friends in 1971,[1] she co-founded the feminist magazine Spare Rib in 1971 with Marsha Rowe. Two years later she and Rowe co-founded Virago Press, a publishing concern committed to women's writing, with Carmen Callil, who had had the idea the previous year.

From 1992-96, she was editor of the men's magazine Esquire. Boycott was the first female editor of two national broadsheets, heading The Independent and its sister publication the Independent on Sunday (1996-98). While editing the Independent on Sunday in 1997, she campaigned for the decriminalisation of cannabis use by individuals,[2], earning her the nickname "Rizla Rosie".[3] She addressed the Decriminalise Cannabis rally in London's Trafalgar Square on 28th March, 1998.[4] Later, she edited the Daily Express (May 1998 - January 2001), leaving soon after the newspaper was bought by Richard Desmond, who replaced her with Chris Williams.

[edit] Outside journalism

Boycott has made several appearances on Newsnight Review and other cultural and current affairs programmes, where the fact that she is a recovering alcoholic has been discussed. She started drinking heavily again after losing her job at the Express.[5] She was banned from driving for three years in September 2003 after crashing on the A303, injuring another driver. She was cut free from the wreckage. A court was told she had also been caught drunk driving the day before.[6]

Boycott has presented the BBC Radio 4 programme A Good Read. She has sat on judging panels for literary contests, notably chairing the panel judging the 2001 Orange Prize for Fiction. She is also a media advisor for the Council of Europe.[7] In September 2007, Boycott appeared in the third series of Hell's Kitchen, and was the first contestant to be voted off.

In March 2002, she denounced the New Labour government as "more reminiscent of a dictatorship than a free healthy democratic system"[8], and announced her support for the Liberal Democrats. She is rumoured to be considering becoming a Parliamentary candidate.

Since her accident, Boycott has been running a farm in Somerset.[9]

[edit] Publications

  • Batty Bloomers and Boycott: A Little Etymology of Eponymous Words, Peter Bedrick Books, 1983, ISBN 0-911745-12-2
  • All For Love, Fontana Press, 1989, ISBN 0-00-617698-4
  • A Nice Girl Like Me: A Story of the Seventies, 1988, ISBN 0-330-30103-9
  • The fastest diet, London: Sphere, 1984. ISBN 0-7221-1960-7
  • Our Farm: A Year in the Life of a Smallholding, London: Bloomsbury, 2007

[edit] References

  1. ^ ibiblio: Friends magazine: Rosie Boycott
  2. ^ News briefs: British Newspaper, the Independent on Sunday, Calls for Marijuana Decriminalization
  3. ^ BBC News: Boycott's climb to the top
  4. ^ Rosie Boycott's speech in Trafalgar Square, 28 March 1998
  5. ^ Josh Lacey Here be monsters, The Guardian, 26 May 2007, accessed 6 January 2008
  6. ^ Steve Bird Alcoholic ex-editor gets driving ban, The Times, 4 September 2003, accessed 6 January 2008
  7. ^ New Statesman - Full list of judges
  8. ^ BBC News: Mowlam turns up heat on Blair
  9. ^ Mark Townsend My rebirth as a latterday land girl, The Observer20 May 2007, accessed 6 January 2008

[edit] External links

[edit] Notes


Media offices
Preceded by
Charles Wilson
Editor of The Independent on Sunday
1996- May 1998
Succeeded by
Rosie Boycott
Preceded by
Andrew Marr
Editor of The Independent
January 1998 - March 1998
Succeeded by
Rosie Boycott and Andrew Marr
Preceded by
Rosie Boycott
Editor of The Independent
(jointly with Andrew Marr)

March 1998 - May 1998
Succeeded by
Simon Kelner
Preceded by
Richard Addis
Editor of the Daily Express
1998 - 2001
Succeeded by
Chris Williams