James Murdoch knew about hacking email
September 8th 2011 00:08
However Prime Minister David Cameron has praised the "tough message" that the courts have been handing out.
Seated at a table in the centre of the sunlit room, surrounded by exercise equipment including a treadmill and weights station, he leafs through the pages of the Herald Sun.
"For all the people that like you there's going to be people that hate you, so if I get 200 or 300 people that like me that's still good," he told Perth radio 92.9FM's Lisa, Baz and Sam this morning.
Minutes later he ran out, with a knife in one hand and a bag full of money in the other. Once in the car, he screamed: "Drive, drive, drive."
He has been described wrongly as al-Qaeda's third in command but in reality was the organisation's commander of external affairs and involved, it is believed, in training a group of European jihadists in Pakistan's lawless tribal areas.
Overnight commentary on Twitter and Facebook quickly labelled him as the local version of Rebecca Black who found fame with her "so bad, it's good" song Friday.
A witness said: "They hugged as if saying, 'We're finally free'. And then they laughed."
Times have not changed, so with winter on our doorstep why not make a Hungarian goulash or a chicken and lentil stew.
This is smart, sharp comedy from a comedian with one of the most distinctive voices in the game.
Seated at a table in the centre of the sunlit room, surrounded by exercise equipment including a treadmill and weights station, he leafs through the pages of the Herald Sun.
"For all the people that like you there's going to be people that hate you, so if I get 200 or 300 people that like me that's still good," he told Perth radio 92.9FM's Lisa, Baz and Sam this morning.
Minutes later he ran out, with a knife in one hand and a bag full of money in the other. Once in the car, he screamed: "Drive, drive, drive."
He has been described wrongly as al-Qaeda's third in command but in reality was the organisation's commander of external affairs and involved, it is believed, in training a group of European jihadists in Pakistan's lawless tribal areas.
Overnight commentary on Twitter and Facebook quickly labelled him as the local version of Rebecca Black who found fame with her "so bad, it's good" song Friday.
A witness said: "They hugged as if saying, 'We're finally free'. And then they laughed."
Times have not changed, so with winter on our doorstep why not make a Hungarian goulash or a chicken and lentil stew.
This is smart, sharp comedy from a comedian with one of the most distinctive voices in the game.
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