Archive for May, 2018|Monthly archive page
Vanished – press coverage
Some excellent press coverage in both the tabloids and qualities helped ‘Vanished’, the documentary I recently made with Martin Bright and Ryan Ralph for Real Stories, bring in a very respectable quarter of a million views on YouTube in its opening fortnight.

The whole point of the coverage

Daily Mirror 10th May 2018 Could dark family secret hold the key?
The double-page spread from the newspaper appeared in the 3rd slot on the mighty Daily Mail website just below Trump welcoming home prisoners from North Korea and Barbara Windsor getting Altzheimer’s.
The story was then picked up by The Sun…
…and TheĀ Mirror
As well as being covered in The Observer/The Guardian…
…and The Belfast Telegraph (home town of one of the two protagonists, ex-counter-terrorism cop, Liam McAuley).

The Belfast Telegraph 8th May 2018
The coverage has helped progress the case bringing forward new witnesses and information which is being shared with Surrey Police, who brought on a new officer to take charge of the 23-year-old missing person investigation in March when the ‘Vanished’ team were firing a lot of questions their way. Martin Bright and I went in for an initial meeting with the investigating officers and their boss on Monday after struggling to get input from the police throughout the filming. They did show up at the screening and Q&A we ran for the community at Dorking Halls Cinema on the eve of the film going live but chose to remain incognito.
In Your Face – Week 1
A cool 9 million views for this cut-down from the documentary ‘In Your Face’ in its first week, with high engagement – 5,500 comments; 65,000 shares; 52,000 reactions. Part of this success we have concluded is down to the likeability and charm of the protagonist, Jason – (it has outperformed other similar videos and the casting seems to provide the explanation).
The full film of ‘In Your Face’ is here. The full film on Facebook/Facebook Watch has netted 1.8M views this week which is also a very decent performance and underlined that this is very much a Facebook rather than a YouTube subject, benefitting from viewers engaged through sharing and commenting and happy to pick the videos up in their stream rather than deliberately seeking it out in some way.
I have now made 40 documentaries on tattoos including these series for Channel 4:
- Tattoo Twists [8 films]
- My Secret Tattoo [9 films]
- SeXXXy Tats [6 films]
- Tattoo Fails [6 films]
- My First Tattoo [10 films]

Tattoo Twists – my first tattoo series, inspired Channel 4’s Tattoo Fixers

My Secret Tattoo – this man works with the Minister of Defence (with this hidden under his shirt & tie)

A random still from Tattoo Fails
Lead Story at the scene of the mystery
This morning journalist Martin Bright and I were interviewed on the BBC Radio Surrey breakfast show about our documentary ‘Vanished’. The documentary was the lead story on the station’s news this morning, pipping MI5 and Putin to the top spot. It has now accumulated 0.25M views on the Real Stories YouTube channel in its opening days.
[11 minutes listen]
Vanished
My sixth commission for Real Stores is ‘Vanished’. You can see it here. With a bit of luck it will cross the 200,000 views on YouTube tomorrow.
Vanished: The Surrey Schoolgirl
When should a missing person case become a criminal investigation?
Ā āEvery journalist has that story that just sticks with youā – the words of journalist Martin Bright who covered the unexplained disappearance of Surrey schoolgirl, Ruth Wilson, for āThe Observerā. Now, 23 years on, the mystery has been reignited by an ex-counter-terrorist cop who felt that something just didnāt quite add upā¦
On Monday 27thĀ November 1995, 16-year-old Ruth Wilson left for school as usual. She said goodbye to her parents in the chocolate-box Surrey village of Betchworth – but she never made it to school that day. Instead she went in to Dorking and then late in the afternoon, with the winter daylight fading, she took a taxi to the local beauty spot of Box Hill. And then she vanished off the face of the earthā¦
In the two decades after Ruthās disappearance not a word had been heard from her. Despite several appeals for information over the years, what happened to her remained a mystery. It was a mystery that bothered Liam, the retired police officer living locally, to such a degree that he contacted Martin Bright out of the blue after all those years and shared the conclusions of the investigations he had undertaken off his own bat as a private citizen and concerned resident.
The story of Ruthās disappearance would not let go of the journalist or the policeman. As they joined forces and investigated, new facts and new witnesses appeared, throwing new light on an old but not forgotten case…
āVanished: The Surrey Schoolgirlā was directed by Ryan Ralph of Below The Radar in Belfast and produced by journalist Martin Bright.
An intriguing Facebook group has grown around it which has yielded yet more witnesses and clues.
Martin Bright & I have been called in to meet the Police on Monday.
He do the Police in different voices
Coincidences No.s 344, 345 & 346
No. 344Ā (24.4.18)

Two bearded men
I am at a meeting at ITV about a project related to Burke & Wills, the Irishman and Englishman who were the first non-natives to cross the heartland of Australia in one of those mad Victorian expeditions.
I get home and in my Facebook feed is a post by an Irish colleague in digital media announcing he is moving to Brighton and does anyone know a good moving company. The one that jumps out at me among the replies isĀ Burke & Wills.
No. 345 (7 & 8.5.18)

One slightly bearded man
I am reading Ezra Pound’s Cantos in the garden and look up his Wikipedia entry for some background. At one point it says: “he seemed in an “abject despair, accidie, meaninglessness, abulia, waste”. I haven’t seen the word “accidie” since Mr Fitch taught it to us in Lower Sixth English in relation to something to do with courtly love over three decades ago.
The word comes up again the next day. I am reading John Buchan’s final Edward Leithen novel ‘Sick Heart River’, a very different text and context. (Although both writers had a shared interest in hating Jews.)
No. 346 (5-9.5.18)

One clean shaven woman – Harriet Shaw Weaver in 1907
Quakers keep coming up all week. On Saturday I’m walking from Tavistock Square to Euston and when I cut through the gardens of the Quakers HQ opposite the station (Friends House) it is swarming with delegates to some major conference, one where they review their rules (as I hear the next morning on the radio). This is the second time I’ve found myself in this cut-through garden in the last few days – a couple ofĀ days previously it was with my friend Safiya, talking YouTube videos and channels – not too spiritual.
I am reading about Ezra Pound in Wikipedia [see above] – his father was a Quaker; he went to Quaker schools.
I am reading Finn Fordham’s book ‘Lots of Fun at Finnegan’s Wake‘ in the Humanities Reading Room of the British Library – it is the first book I have called up since the Reading Rooms moved here years ago from the British Museum, I got a new Readers Ticket on Saturday. (The last book I called up was a Dr Seuss one called ‘The Big Leap’ as I wanted to use it as the basis of a script – that was back in The British Museum circular reading room where Pound worked daily). In it I learn Joyce’s patron, Harriet Shaw Weaver, was a Quaker.
I’m pretty sure there were a couple of other path-crossings with Quakers this week – one to do with a Quaker business.
***
While on the subject of Harriet Shaw, I noticed whilst reading Finn’s book today (Finn leads the Finnegan’s Wake Research Seminar I go to every month at the University of London/Senate House) how appropriate Joyce’s patron was called Weaver as weaving the text into an organic whole seems to have been the goal/result of his compositional method in The Wake, adding layer upon layer and gradually inserting references to other parts of the text to bind it all together.
There seem to be lots of words that connect writing and material/cloth:
weaving – text – texture – textile – Stoff (Ger. material) – stuff – thread – skein
text
late Middle English: from Old Northern French texte, from Latin textus ātissue, literary styleā (in medieval Latin, āGospelā), from text– āwovenā, from the verb texere “to weave, to join, fit together, braid, interweave, construct, fabricate, build” .
The ripples from ‘Vanished’ documentary
New witnesses and facts have continued to emerge in the wake of the release of ‘Vanished: The Surrey Schoolgirl’ last week on Real Stories, my latest commission for the channel made with journalist Martin Bright and director Ryan Ralph.
Today it appeared as the subject of a double-page spread in The Belfast Telegraph focused on Martin’s partner in crime investigation, ex-counter-terrorism cop Liam McAuley.

The Belfast Telegraph 8th May 2018
Ex-Met officer from Belfast and his search for missing teen Ruth Wilson
Belfast man Liam McAuley is part of a new film which looks at the cold case of Surrey girl Ruth Wilson who disappeared 23 years ago
Ruth Wilson vanished in 1995 after travelling to a beauty spot in Surrey, England. Fifteen years later Liam McAuley, a former north Belfast man who had just retired from the Metropolitan Police, picked up a newspaper, read her story and became enthralled.
Mr McAuley (58) began investigating the disappearance, and has joined forces with an English journalist called Martin Bright, and produced the documentary Vanished: The Surrey Schoolgirl, in the hope of shining a new light on the seemingly forgotten case.
Liam retired from the police nine years ago. A year later, while perusing a Surrey newspaper, he came across the Ruth Wilson case. The 16-year-old girl had gone missing in Surrey in 1995, and he was immediately intrigued.
“I happened to be reading a local paper and came across the article about Ruth,” he said.
“It just didn’t seem to add up to me instinct ively. This was a 16-year-old schoolgirl, who has just disappeared and nothing has been heard of her ever since. We are now approaching 23 years.
“When I read the article for the first time, I just had that feeling that something was just not quite right. A 16-year-old just can’t disappear.
“She comes from a rural village. She wouldn’t have been street smart like her city cousins.
“She’s left home in the clothes that she’s standing up in. She had a bank card that was not activated. She was dropped in a rural part of the country and that was the last that was seen of her.
“You have to think there was something not quite right there.”
The 30-minute film, which is on YouTube, works from the standpoint that Ruth is no longer alive. Surrey Police and the Wilson family opted not to contribute, but many of Ruth’s school friends, along with her ex-boyfriend, did come forward.
“The police in the area remained tight-lipped and were no help. It was all very odd,” he added.
The film claims Ruth had been unaware that her mother, who had died when she was young, had taken her own life until shortly before she disappeared.
It also features interviews with Ruth’s friends who claim she had discussed running away.
Later, the film suggests there is potentially more information available which has not yet been explored.
Liam left Northern Ireland as a teenager and spent 30 years in the Metropolitan Police and Counter Terrorism Unit, focusing solely on Islamic Terrorism.
“I grew up in north Belfast,” he explained. “I lived in what was classed as the ‘murder triangle’. I lived all through the Seventies, going to school hearing all the tragic stories from friends and some of the pupils at school, what happened to them.
“Where I lived I had friends on both sides of the community. When you grow up somewhere like that you think this is your world, this is it. But it was a case of do you get stuck with it or try and carve on with your own life?
ARTICLE CONTINUES in The Belfast Telegraph
The Neo-Romantics
This is following up a pub conversation from last Friday evening. The British painters & artists referred to as Neo-Romantic include:
Paul Nash (1889-1946)

Totes Meer [Dead Sea] (1940-1) – Paul Nash
Graham Sutherland (1903-1980)

Pastoral (1930) – Graham Sutherland
John Craxton (1922-2009)

Dreamer in Landscape (1942) – John Craxton
John Minton (1917-1957)

Summer Landscape (1950) – John Minton
John Piper (1903-1992)

Somerset Place, Bath (1942) – John Piper
Ivon Hitchens (1893-1979)

Damp Autumn (1941) – Ivon Hitchens
Keith VaughanĀ (1912-1977)

September (1956) – Keith Vaughan
Michael AyrtonĀ (1921-1975)

Skara Brae, Orkney (1959) – Michael Ayrton
Henry Moore (1898-1986)

Tube Shelter Perspective (1941) – Henry Moore
The movement centred on the run-up to the Second World War and the wartime, and was based in landscape painting.
In 1940 the British government commissioned artists includingĀ Paul Nash,Ā John Craxton, John Minton, Leslie Hurry, David Jones, and Ceri Richards, to document lives in villages and towns across the nation under the umbrella title āRecording Britain.ā The initiative was intended to boost national morale during the War by celebrating the country’s landscape and architecture.
Age in 1940
- Paul Nash 51
- Graham Sutherland 37
- John Craxton 18
- John Minton 23
- John Piper 37
- Ivon Hitchens 47
- Keith Vaughan 28
- Michael Ayrton 19
- Henry Moore 42

Paul Nash c.1940

Graham Sutherland with his portrait of Churchill

John Craxton

John Minton

John Piper at Fawley Bottom farmhouse c.1935

Ivon Hitchens

Keith Vaughan

Michael Ayrton by Lola Walker [Lola Marsden] (1950)

Henry Moore by Lee Miller

Henry Moore & director Jill Craigie during the filming of ‘Out of Chaos’ (1943) in Holborn tube station
Finn Fordham and members of the Finnegan’s Wake Research Seminar at Senate House, University of London got on to this subject via Powell & Pressburger:

Black Narcissus (1947)

The Red Shoes (1948)

A Matter of Life and Death (1946)

The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp (1943)

I Know Where I’m Going! (1945)