![]() ![]() During our interview he is called at least twice by a frantic publicist from Pluto Press (which has just published his account of his exploits in Iraq, Baghdad Bulletin), whom he talks to at length while I look gormless. For starters, Enders only works to his own rhythm. ![]() This surprisingly tiny man's laidback, almost bumbling delivery is at odds with everything he says and does. Many of his contemporaries share his sentiments, but not all of them took themselves off to Baghdad to start its first English-language weekly, in the process earning a reputation as an editor's nightmare.Įnders does not come across as an arrogant man, but he does some profoundly arrogant things, both in his professional and his daily life. A foreign correspondent who hates everything about the way in which war is reported a broadcaster who doesn't believe in rolling news and a media jobseeker who describes the industry as "the beast". ![]() David Enders is perhaps the least employable man in modern journalism. ![]()
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