Mr. Murdoch, if you have so little influence over the editorial line of your papers, why do you think that David Cameron had you over for “a cup of tea” days after he was elected?
Mr. Murdoch, you said you didn’t dismiss the former News of the World chief reporter Neville Thurlbeck after the Max Mosley case because you’d never heard of him. Perhaps you would have read about Thurlbeck in your own papers?
Mr. Murdoch, Jr., you said that you didn’t know about wrongdoing because “I, at the time, was the regional head for Europe and Asia.” Are you an employee of Dunder Mifflin?
You say you haven’t made a decision about making the Sun a Sunday paper—one that might simply take the place of the Sunday N.O.T.W. Why can’t you commit to saying that you will not?
Why are N.O.T.W. employees responsible for things that happened years ago that they were not involved in, but you’re not?
Why do you continue to insist that Rebekah Brooks is a trustworthy person, when she said, in 2009, that the Guardian had “substantially and likely deliberately misled the British public” by reporting that phone hacking was a widespread practice at the News of the World?
Will you ever resurrect the BSkyB bid?
Did you pay that guy to smash the pie in your face?
Mr. Murdoch, Jr., what the *%&! are “thresholds of materiality”?