How to write a Richard Littlejohn column

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Dominic Browne presents a step-by-step guide to writing a Richard Littlejohn Daily Mail column.

Richard Littlejohn is back to his best this morning with this culturally sensitive piece on the Japanese earthquake, deciding this is the time to discuss the difficult issues of race in Japanese society and the legacy of World War 2.

For those of you who have always wanted to know how he does it, here is a step-by-step guide to writing a Littlejohn column – a long overdue and essential public resource we are sure you’ll agree.

1. Always start with a caveat

You are about to write a collection of words that to any inattentive reader might seem racist, sexist, or just plain stomach-churningly insensitive. It is important that you let them know that this is not the case and any offence they feel is entirely their fault.

Here are a few Littlejohn wrote earlier:

“No one with a shred of humanity can fail to be moved by some of the pictures coming out of Japan” – March 22nd, 2011

“A man in a wheelchair is as entitled to demonstrate as anyone else” – December 14th, 2010

The classic:

“Let’s get the caveat out of the way from the off. The five women murdered in Ipswich were tragic, lost souls who met a grisly end” – December 18th, 2006

2. Pick the most sensitive topic, raise it at the most insensitive time, and make sure you kick the victims

Few will be able to do this as well as the master himself. Who else would have thought that now, as the death toll from the Japanese disaster passes into the tens of thousands, was the best time to discuss problematic parts of the country’s history and culture? Who else would have thought that shortly after the muder of five women who worked as prostitutes in Ipswich in 2006, it was the appropriate time to state baldly:

“In their chosen field of ‘work’ death by strangulation is an occupational hazard.”

3. Simplify any complex issues and social, cultural, economic factors to the most crude and nasty soundbites you can

You may find that using readymade stereotypes and dragging up history will help you in this regard. Now is the time that you’re glad you put in the caveat at the beginning; because otherwise calling the Japanese “militantly racist” or murder victims “disgusting, drug-addled street whores” or a man in a wheelchair “like Andy from Little Britain” might make you look a bit ignorant and/or desperately bigoted and hateful.

4. Let your sub-editors, picture researchers and cartoonists do their very worst

Now that you have written your copy there is no cause to hold back with the presentation, so don’t let those pesky subs interfere with your genius. If you are writing a piece on Japan for instance, make sure they juxtapose images of post-tsunami devastation with pictures of starving Prisoners of War from World War 2.

Caption them with lines like:

“The images from Japan might be horrific, but do they really warrant such highly publicised hand-wringing?”

Or, after a disabled man has been pulled from his wheelchair by police during a march to protect students from massive fee rises, why not let your cartoonist crudely caricature/stereotype all disabled people with a comparison with a Little Britain character, after all you did.

Again caption this as crudely as possible:

“Don’t like it: Wheelchair-bound Jody McIntyre was wrong to complain about being mistreated at the student protests.”

Now you are ready to file. You won’t have long to wait to find inspiration as people are suffering all over the world just waiting for you to point out that it’s all their fault, or they shouldn’t complain, or that their grandfather did something nasty. You just couldn’t make it up.

214 Responses to “How to write a Richard Littlejohn column”

  1. Harriet

    Mouse, I find your response a bit feeble. It seems to me that you have an axe to grind and that you were looking for any opportunity to grind it. I don’t know what part of my response suggests that I do not believe in freedom. In fact, I have both endorsed and evoked the freedom of speech. I do not suggest that Littlejohn’s writing should be illegal- I suggest that the best way to counter it is through subversion and discussion.
    As regards not reading the Daily Mail, fair enough. Do what you want, whatever works for you. But if a large percentage of our country’s population are inhaling their news from that particular source, I’d like to be aware of just what they are consuming. Your Boyle analogy doesn’t work. Choosing not to watch Boyle out of taste or preference- something I completely agree with, by the way- has little ramifications upon your life or upon your society. The tabloid press wield such considerable power in this country, that ignoring one of its main constituent parts seems like ostrich behaviour to me.
    P.S. Do you feel good and silly about your Saab/Volvo response yet? What utter bullshit.

  2. William Lee-Wright

    RT @duncanjefferies: How to write Richard Littlejohn column: http://bit.ly/i9Tc2g

  3. Les

    The more I see of this “silence opposing views” drivel, the more I feel Littlejohn has a point … It is amazing how vitriolic and nasty so called caring lefties can be!

    There are people out there who disagree with you … that does not make them all “bigots”!

    Les 🙂

  4. Will

    Oh Les…

    It’s not exactly ‘vitriolic’ and ‘nasty’ to discuss (and ridicule) Littlejohn. Have you read any of his articles? If you have, it is bordering on the absurd to claim that THIS article is nasty. Rather than your instinctive attacking of ‘the Left’, why not further the debate? Do you disagree with this article? If so, where and why? Do you think Littlejohn’s insensitivity and offensiveness are justified? Or do you think that he is reasonable? This isn’t about silencing opposing views, that’s not a free democratic society, it’s about debating them, and, when they are as ridiculous as Littlejohn’s, winning the debate.

    This Left vs Right bull**** is so boring, and demonstrates everything that is wrong with UK politics.

    Much Love xxx

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