Richard Buckley photograph

Richard Buckley

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Gender Male
Spouse Tom Ford
Marriage location United States of America
Children Alexander John Buckley Ford
Job Journalist
Book editor
Born Binghamton
New York
United States
DiedLos Angeles
California
United States
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID458935

I-D: I-D Covers, 1980-2010
The Greedy Python
The Foolish Tortoise
The bird who couldnʼt fly
The Greedy Python: And, The Foolish Tortoise
The Dutiful Penguin: Zoology in Verse
African Lands: Challenges from Angola to Zimbabwe
Australia in Focus: Tough Choices for the 'clever Country'
World Trade: For Richer - And Poorer
The New China: Ajoining the Wider World
Singapore Miracle: The City State on a Knife's Edge
Greece, Turkey, Cyprus: Triangle of Conflict - and Opportunity
Global Warming: Science, Politics and Nature
Sudan: Old Conflicts, New Wealth in Africa's Largest Country
Antarctica: Protecting the Last Wilderness
Natural Disasters: Living with an Angry Planet
Christianity in the New Millennium: Different Times, Different Churches
Globalising India: Goodbye Gandhi, Hello World
The State of Japan: Facing Shock Waves of Change
Modernising India: from ox-plough to satellite dish
The Baltic Region: North-East Europe's Frontier of Change
Avoiding Gridlock: The Role of Public Transport
Solar Energy: Harnessing the Power of the Sun
Renewable Energy: Wind and Water Power
What is an Audit?
Indonesia in Crisis: Meltdown of Suharto's New Order
Russia on the Brink: Bandit Capitalism, Social Despair
Black Africa: Between Hope and Despair
Feeding the world : the importance of wheat and soybeans
Amazonia: An Ecological Crisis
Organised Crime: A Growing Threat to Democracy?
France Today: Le Malade Imaginaire?
Money Across Frontiers: The Explosion of Global Finance
Geothermal Energy, Power from the Heat of the Earth
International Law: Justice Between Nations?
The World of Islam: Tradition, Change and Conflict
The Rubbish Mountain: Tackling Europe's Waste
Climate Change: What's Happening to the Weather?.
Winds of Change in Latin America: Populism Versus US Imperialism
Reinventing NATO: New Friends, New Enemies
The United States: The Changing Population Mix
Global Trade: Growth, Volume and Distribution
Israel and the Palestinians: Giving Peace a Chance?
The Agony of Mexico: Bright Hopes, Dark Shadows
The Battle for Water: Earth's Most Precious Resource
Nuclear Energy: Technology, Risk and Climate Change
Migrants and Refugees: Millions of People on the Move
Healthy Cities: Improving Urban Life
South Africa: After Apartheid
Globalisation 2008: Change and Continuity in a Shrinking World
Foreign Direct Investment: Where the Money Goes - and Comes from
World Fishing: Harvesting the Oceans
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Richard Buckley Life story


Richard Buckley was an American fashion journalist and editor. Buckley wrote for Vogue Italia and New York magazine, and worked as an editor for Women's Wear Daily, Vanity Fair, and Vogue Hommes, the latter of which he was editor-in-chief from 1999 to 2005.

The Lost King: Steve Coogan defends Richard III film in university row

Oct 1,2022 12:30 am

Steve Coogan has defended a new film about The Discovery of Richard Iii 's skeleton, in a row over how it portrays some University of Leicester academics.

The Lost King tells The Story of Philippa Langley , whose research under a Car Park in The City in 2012.

The university said claims that it took credit for her work and sidelined her are " far removed" from The Truth .

But Coogan said: " The university are responsible for their own undoing. "

: " They've played this quite badly.

" Had they at the start been generous towards Philippa, and elevated her to The Front and centre position, which is where she deserves to be, this film wouldn't have been necessary.

" But at every turn they marginalised her, edged her out, because she wasn't cut from The Right cloth. "

Mrs Langley, Played By Sally Hawkins , is presented as being instrumental in The Discovery of the skeleton; the Driving Force behind identifying The Burial site and securing funding for The Dig .

But several academics and university staff are shown to be dismissive of and patronising towards her, before attempting to claim the credit when her research is found to be correct.

'Utterly false'

Richard Taylor, former deputy registrar at Leicester University, The Film was " horrendous".

" I was completely shell-shocked, " He Said . " They have portrayed me as a patronising misogynist who makes fun of Richard Iii 's curvature of The Spine . They have presented the university as being sexist, male‑dominated and dismissive of women. "

He added: " My relationship with Philippa was a good One . . To see myself portrayed as undermining her, being a sexist, patronising bully and mocking disability is horrendous and utterly false. "

Mr Taylor is reportedly so upset by his portrayal that he has threatened to take legal action to get One scene cut and a note added to the credits that the character is not based on him.

While several university staff members are portrayed in The Film as not altogether bad people, they often speak patronisingly towards Langley, or are seen trying to put themselves at the centre of media coverage.

Another real-life figure, Dr Richard Buckley , is presented as being dismissive of Mrs Langley, only agreeing to become involved when his department is threatened with closure and he faces losing his job.

However, Dr Buckley told the Mail: " There is no truth to our department being under threat of closure or my job being on The Line or anything like that. That was just nonsense. "

He added: " The Film is billed as being the True Story when clearly a lot of it just isn't true. "

The Paper said it had seen correspondence from The Time between Mrs Langley and Mr Buckley, which is " full of ideas, suggestions, co-operation and positivity".

Coogan, who co-write The Film and plays Mrs Langley's husband, told the Today programme he had been " incensed" by how she had been treated, and that there had been a " central inaccuracy" in the media reporting at The Time .

" The Search for Richard Iii was not led by Leicester University, " He Said .

Asked whether The Film portrayed university staff as " patronising glory hunters" co-writer Jeff Pope replied: " Well, I think it's slightly overstated, but I think there is something in those. . words.

" I think, Yes . . What Happened was, Philippa led The Search for The King . She paid for The Dig . She hired the University of Leicester archaeologists to dig.

" There's No Doubt that once The Remains had been found, the university academics performed the DNA analysis. But they then used that to leverage credit for the whole thing, and that's The Problem . That's what The Film seeks to address. "

In a Mrs Langley said she had felt " sidelined and marginalised".

" I was hugely vulnerable because I'm not a doctor, I'm not a professor. But in The End , I came to find My Voice , " She Said .

A spokesperson for the university said: " We do feel the portrayal of the University of Leicester's role in The Project is far removed from the accurate work that took place.

" We worked closely with Philippa Langley throughout The Project , and she was not sidelined by the university. Indeed, she formed part of The Team interview panel for every single press conference connected to The King . "



Source of news: bbc.com

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