News (Media Awareness Project) - Wire: Novelist admits taking heroin on Major's plane |
Title: | Wire: Novelist admits taking heroin on Major's plane |
Published On: | 1997-04-24 |
Source: | Reuter 4/19/97 |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-08 16:37:21 |
Novelist admits taking heroin on Major's plane
LONDON, April 19 (Reuter) British author and journalist Will Self has
admitted snorting heroin on Prime Minister John Major's election campaign
jet.
``So I was smacked out on the Prime Minister's jet, big deal,'' one of
Britain's most fashionable and shocking writers told The Independent on
Sunday.
The Observer newspaper, which employed Self as a restaurant and television
critic and occasional columnist, sacked him after being told of the incident
by another journalist.
Self, a selfconfessed former heroin addict, whose novels include ``My Idea
of Fun,'' ``The Sweet Smell of Psychosis'' and ``Scale,'' had originally
denied the allegations.
But in an interview with the Independent on Sunday, he said: ``I confessed to
(Observer Editor) Will Hutton...that I'd had a bad patch with smack and as it
happened I did take a little.''
In his article about his day with Major's press party, published in last
Sunday's Observer, Self was scathing.
``So sparse is the content of the campaign, we were reduced to manufacturing
news among ourselves,'' Self wrote, presumably unaware that he would become
the news event from that day.
LONDON, April 19 (Reuter) British author and journalist Will Self has
admitted snorting heroin on Prime Minister John Major's election campaign
jet.
``So I was smacked out on the Prime Minister's jet, big deal,'' one of
Britain's most fashionable and shocking writers told The Independent on
Sunday.
The Observer newspaper, which employed Self as a restaurant and television
critic and occasional columnist, sacked him after being told of the incident
by another journalist.
Self, a selfconfessed former heroin addict, whose novels include ``My Idea
of Fun,'' ``The Sweet Smell of Psychosis'' and ``Scale,'' had originally
denied the allegations.
But in an interview with the Independent on Sunday, he said: ``I confessed to
(Observer Editor) Will Hutton...that I'd had a bad patch with smack and as it
happened I did take a little.''
In his article about his day with Major's press party, published in last
Sunday's Observer, Self was scathing.
``So sparse is the content of the campaign, we were reduced to manufacturing
news among ourselves,'' Self wrote, presumably unaware that he would become
the news event from that day.
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