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Barry Toberman

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Barry Toberman,

Barry Toberman

Opinion

The JC at 175: The atmosphere was akin to that of a library, only quieter and depressing

November 10, 2016 11:55
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4 min read

Difficult though it is to credit now, in Jewish terms the only way was Essex in the 1970s. So much so that the JC started a weekly Redbridge Extra insert to attract new readers from the then thriving community.

An Essex boy in those days, I got the call from JC deputy editor Geoffrey Paul to be the junior reporter on the Redbridge Extra team. It meant giving up a job with a merchant bank - a relief at the time, foolhardy in retrospect - and extending my Central Line commute beyond the City to Chancery Lane and the paper's Furnival Street offices.

It became quickly apparent that not all the JC top brass were enthused about the spin-off project. The Redbridge Extra bunker was sited well away from the main news operation and although Geoffrey was encouraging, there was otherwise little interchange. A winter of economic uncertainty and power cuts helped seal the supplement's fate and I was moved onto the main staff. That's when proper culture shock kicked in.

No open plan offices then. The key editors had their own enclosed dens on the second floor, some with red lights on the door deployed to repel unwanted visitors, or indeed any intrusion from other staff members. The lesser luminaries and reporters were squeezed together in a room next to the loos. If memory serves, there was no one within 30 years of me. Mutual antipathy was rife among many of the long-servers, who conversed only if strictly necessary. The atmosphere was akin to a library reading room, only quieter and depressing, the silence broken by the clatter of the urn pushed by the ancient tea ladies.

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