Everything about Garry Bushell totally explained
Garry Bushell (born
May 13,
1955 in
Woolwich,
South East London) is a
newspaper columnist,
rock music journalist,
television presenter and
author. Bushell also plays in the
Oi! band The Gonads and manages the
New York City Oi! band Maninblack. He is a life-long fan of
Charlton Athletic F.C.. Bushell has often courted controversy because of statements on
race and
homosexuality.
Early career
The son of a fireman, Bushell attended Charlton Manor school and
Colfe's School (which was then a grammar school). He worked for
Shell as a messenger, and then the
London Fire Brigade before attending the North East London Polytechnic and the
London College of Printing. Bushell was an amateur
boxer, and he was a
musician before becoming a full-time
journalist. He first performed at
secondary school in the group Pink Tent, which was heavily influenced by
Monty Python. They wrote songs and
comedy sketches; performing at parties and at each other's houses. Bushell was involved in The National Union of School Students and The Schools Action Union, a
socialist organisation that had a strong
situationist streak that led them to mix schoolboy hijinks with
student activism. Through-out the early 1980s, Bushell was regularly confronted by members of the
British Movement, who called him a
communist. He was attacked and hospitalized by
neo-Nazis in 1981. The
National Front magazine
Bulldog denounced him as "a
race traitor" and published his home address.
Pink Tent evolved into The Gonads, an
Oi! and
punk pathetique band that has continued to perform in the 2000s. Many of their songs are comical party tunes, but they've occasionally written more serious material. Two examples of their songs that include social commentary are "Dying for a Pint" (which comments on
nightclub bouncer brutality) and "Jobs Not Jails" (a critique of the
Margaret Thatcher government's policies). One of their humorous songs was "I Lost My Love To A UK Sub", which is about the allegedly huge
libido of
UK Subs singer
Charlie Harper. The Gonads have also played
punk rock versions of old
music hall numbers such as Gus Elen's "Half A Pint Of Ale." Other Bushell musical projects have included the bands Prole, Orgasm Guerrillas, and Lord Waistrel & The Cosh Boys. Prole were a self-defined socialist punk band that also included Steve Kent, the original guitarist of the Oi! band
The Business. Bushell also managed
The Blood and
Cockney Rejects, getting them their
EMI deal. He also discovered
Twisted Sister and got them signed in the UK to Secret Records. Many bands wrote songs about him, some hostile and some positive. Examples include: "Hurry Up Garry (The Parson Farted)" by
Crass, which also attacked
Tony Parsons, "Press Darlings" by
Adam Ant), "Garry Bushell's Band Of The Week" by the Notsensibles, "C'N'C-S Mithering" by
The Fall and "I Wanna Be A Star" by
Cockney Rejects.
Journalism and book writing
In the mid-1970s, at the age of 18, Bushell became an active member of the
International Socialists, writing for the
left wing newspaper
Socialist Worker. He also wrote for
Temporary Hoarding,
Rebel, and his own punk fanzine,
Napalm. From 1978 to 1985, he wrote for
Sounds magazine, covering the
punk rock genre and other street-level
music genres such as
2 Tone, the
New Wave of British Heavy Metal and the
mod revival. Bushell was at the forefront of covering the
Oi! genre, also known as
real punk or streetpunk. In 1981, Bushell wrote the book
Dance Craze - the 2-Tone story, and in 1984, he wrote the
Iron Maiden biography
Running Free.
Bushell moved to
Fleet Street in 1985, working for
The Sun, The Evening Standard and The Daily Mirror. He went back to The Sun to write its "Bizarre" column and to be the show business editor. Thousands of articles appeared under his byline in The Sun. In 1991, he briefly became assistant editor of The Daily Star where he wrote a current affairs column called "Walk Tall With Bushell" as well as his TV column. He quit and returned to the Sun three months later after Sun Editor Kelvin MacKenzie published his thoughts on the Star's executives after a private conversation.
In the mid-1990s, Bushell hosted the television programme
Bushell On The Box (the same title as his
Sun column from 1987 to 2001); commenting on the week's TV programmes. A regular feature of his newspaper column was "Garry's Goofs", in which he highlighted an unintended
double entendre. In 2002, he published the book
King of Telly: The Best of Bushell on the Box, containing highlights of his column. In 2001, Bushell's
crime novelThe Face was serialised in the
Daily Star, leading to his dismissal from
The Sun; even though
Sun publisher John Blake admitted that Bushell had no knowledge of the serialisation deal. At the time,
Sun editor
David Yelland had decided that the book was "too filthy" to be published in
The Sun, breaking his promise to promote the book. Two years after Bushell was fired, a poll of
Sun readers named him as their favourite columnist.
After
The Sun, Bushell wrote for
The People and left that paper on February 18, 2007 to work on books and
screenplays. He announced his resignation as a TV critic, stating that he was becoming depressed at the state of British television. Bushell co-wrote the book
Cockney Reject (about the punk band
Cockney Rejects) and has written a film script for
Join The Rejects - Get Yourself Killed. In May 2007, Bushell's column returned to the
Daily Star Sunday. Bushell explained that he "missed the pressure of a weekly deadline." As of 2007, he's been presenting a monthly punk and
ska podcast show on Total Rock. Since
November 2007, he's been the resident TV critic for Nuts TV (channel 2007).
In 1993, Bushell wrote an article urging
ITV to ban comedian
Julian Clary from ever appearing on live television again, in the wake of Clary's appearance at the British Comedy Awards ceremony in
December 1993. Although the campaign has often been considered detrimental to Clary's career, it ultimately failed and Clary has continued to be seen on television following the event. Bushell did appear on Clary's own
BBC TV show,
All Rise With Julian Clary, and defended his stance; saying he objected to Clary's
fisting joke rather than his sexuality. Bushell has publicly praised many gay performers over the years, including
Frankie Howerd,
Paul O'Grady and
Joe Longthorne.
In 1994, Bushell was named critic of the year at the UK Press Awards. In 2000, Comic Heritage (formerly the Dead Comics Society, now the Heritage Foundation) gave him an award for "Services To Comedy." In 2007 they named Bushell "Critic Of The Year."
In
August 2007, Bushell made a remark during an exchange on the
talkSPORT programme
Football First implying that
homosexuality was a perversion, leading the regulator
Ofcom to find the segment in breach of standards for failing to justify offensive material by the context in which it was presented.
A discussion about the 2008 European Cup Final, which was to be held in Moscow, digressed on to the topic of a recent
gay rights march in Russia. When Bushell, while making light of the arrest of the activist
Peter Tatchell, was questioned by a co-presenter because he appeared to find the situation amusing, he responded: "I wouldn't go to another country and try and impose my views on them, it’s up to them what they do. I think there are a lot of things to put right in this country before you go around preaching the gospel of perversion." Ofcom rejected talkSPORT's claims that the comments made had been "off the cuff" and talkSPORT themselves issued a statement saying that its staff had been "made aware" that what Bushell had said was "unacceptable". Bushell later said that it wasn't homosexuality which he was referring to as a peversion, but the further lowering of the age of consent; and that his remarks were taken out of context. He has now left talkSPORT.
Writing style
Bushell's columns are notable for
similes and
metaphors that court controversy, such as describing something as being "as fair as
Frank Bruno's
arse" or (in his May 1, 2005 column) "Today's TV is so obsessively gay, it's a wonder the
Radio Times doesn't come with a pink
Versace wrap and a free glass of
Muscadet". However,
homosexual TV star
Dale Winton is the godfather of Bushell's daughter Jenna. His humour has upset some
Sun executives, such as
Rebekah Wade, but fans include
Dom Joly and
Roy Hudd, who has called him "the
Max Miller of the press."
His tabloid column and writing style were regularly satirised in adult comic
Viz, including a one-off comic strip titled
The Adventures of Gary Bushell The Bear, about a homophobic, brown-bear hating hibernating black bear.
Politics
Bushell started out as a
socialist and was a member of the
Trotskyist International Socialists, which became the
SWP. The first signs of his move from hard-left thinking were apparent from 1986. In his
On The Soap Box' column, Bushell raged against the
middle classes, who he claimed had ruined the
Labour Party. He also objected to the
European Union and unfettered immigration, because he said it under-cut working class wages. He wrote articles supporting the Smithfield meat porters who were fighting to preserve their market, and in favour of
St. George's Day, the
UDR 4, working class comedians and
Page Three girls.
In the 2000s, Bushell's main political focus has been
patriotism and individual liberty. He sees his identity as
English rather than
British. He has campaigned to have
St George's Day recognised as a
public holiday in
England, in the same way
Saint Patrick's Day is a holiday in
Ireland. He is a vocal opponent of the
European Union. Amongst his heroes listed on his
MySpace page are
George Orwell and
Percy Bysshe Shelley.
In the
2005 General Election, he stood as a candidate for the
English Democrats Party, who promote the establishment of an
English Parliament, and want England to leave the European Union. Bushell got 1216 votes (3.4% share) in the
Greenwich and Woolwich constituency, finishing fifth out of seven in a race won by
Nick Raynsford of the
Labour Party. The result represented the high point for the English Democrats in the election, and Bushell finished ahead of the
UK Independence Party candidate in that constituency. Bushell also represented the party in
South Staffordshire, in the delayed vote (due to the death of a candidate) on June 23; winning 643 votes (2.51%) His campaign was supported by the
Campaign for an English Parliament and
Veritas. It has been reported that he's considering standing as a candidate for
Mayor of London against
Ken Livingstone in 2008. His nomination was submitted to the English Democrats in June 2007, and his campaign slogan was to be "Serious About London".. Due to work reasons Garry pulled out of the mayoral race in January 2008 and stood aside for
Matt O'Connor.
Family
Bushell has five children; three with Carol Bushell (Julie, Danny, and Robert) and two with Tania (
nee Ashbee) - Jenna, born May 1999,who is the God daughter of Dale Winton and Ciara, born March 2002.Hw also so has one brother, Terry Bushell and one niece Lauren Bushell. Tania Bushell performs as the
country music singer Leah McCaffrey. In November 2006, Bushell appeared on the
Channel 4 programme
100% English and offered a sample of his
DNA for testing. The results suggested that he was 8%
Sub-Saharan African, most likely the result of a single ancestor within the previous five generations. Bushell took the news with good humour and later wrote on his website "I’d be delighted if it were true." However, he questioned the science and the motivation of the programme makers, concluding:
"Only Nazis, and, it appears C4, think of national identity in terms of racial purity... Besides, you could apply the same tests to the French or Italians and get similar results, but no-one questions their right to nationhood."
Footnotes
Further Information
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