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The Celeb Diaries: The Sensational Inside Story of the Celebrity Decade

The Celeb Diaries: The Sensational Inside Story of the Celebrity Decade

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Author: Mark Frith
Publisher: Ebury Press
Category: Book

List Price: £14.99
Buy New: £6.77
You Save: £8.22 (55%)



New (20) Used (5) from £5.65

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 18 reviews
Sales Rank: 679

Media: Hardcover
Pages: 352
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.4
Dimensions (in): 9.2 x 6.4 x 1.3

ISBN: 0091927986
EAN: 9780091927981
ASIN: 0091927986

Publication Date: September 4, 2008
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Condition: IN STOCK - BRAND NEW - IMMEDIATE FIRST CLASS DISPATCH

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Customer Reviews:   Read 13 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Juicy, addictive and nostalgic   November 14, 2008
sam155 (Gloucestershire)
I have been buying Heat since 2000 and have watched in amazement as a Channel 4 programme called Big Brother and a little known listings mag called Heat changed celebrity culture as we know it. Heat is largely responsible for this seismic change to noughties pop culture and if you want to blame someone, blame Mark Frith.

I couldn't wait to buy this book and I haven't been disappointed. It's a fascinating pop history of Britain in the noughties, starting from when Spice Girls were accessible and chummy, and from when the jury was still out on Big Brother 1. Its weird hearing the names of former BB contestants and remembering when they were red hot and the interviews that everyone wanted. Yet in typical"famous for fifteen minutes" fashion, where are they now?

As you would expect, there is name dropping a plenty from the all round good eggs to the more remote stars who become Heat enemies. Considering the clout and influence that Heat has and still wields, you would think anyone in need of publicity would see the sense in maintaining good relations with them. Frith's style is chatty and incisive. He's not afraid to admit his mistakes, from the silly to the colossal- sleepless-nights sort of mistakes. Nobody can fail to admit he has done phenomenally well, sticking his neck out to get sales from 60,000 to over half a million. He shamelessly copies when he needs to, and is tenacious when protecting his exclusives.

If you want to be a journalist, this wouldn't be a bad read since there is a lot on media relations and etiquette here. However, its not very glamorous and the hours seem to exclude relationships, life or sleep. I have read Piers Morgan's diaries too and they compare quite well. Both diaries are deliciously scandalous whilst being touchingly reflective and showing more (and sometimes less) integrity than you would imagine. Nobody can accuse Mark of copying Piers though- the diary has been around since Pepys and beyond. A brilliant read.



3 out of 5 stars Avid Heat readers only   November 12, 2008
EmsyP (UK)
I've been buying Heat every week for years, and I loved Smash Hits during his years as well, so I was interested to see Mark Frith had written this. He's a great magazine editor, but unfortunately that talent hasn't transferred to the writing of this book.

I agree with other reviewers that feel it is rushed. It seems like he wrote this in six months after he left Heat and his memory seems to fail him a lot. Stories are dealt with quickly. Stories that are covered in more detail, like the fall of Jade, which is one of the most interesting bits, only have a couple of pages devoted to them. Often a days diary entry is only a hundred words or so long and just states a big story that broke that day, e.g. Britney got married, with little other information such as his feelings on it. At one point he mentions a lunch with Simon Cowell and a few tidbits of information, I was dying to hear what he thought of Simon, but he never goes into any detail. Thats the thing, its very factual with little depth and I feel he holds a lot back.

My overall feeling is he's done it as a quick moneyspinner and thats a shame because it could have been much better.



3 out of 5 stars Rather tame and lacking true Heat juice   October 16, 2008
mopla (uk)
I too was really looking forward to this but was mildly disappointed - Frith is modest, self-deprecating and likeable as an author. Clearly he's moved in some high celeb circles but for all that, doesn't quite manage to reveal anything that juicy/interesting. Encounters with celebs are glossed over and the author holds back from the critical honesty that makes Piers Morgan's books such value for money. More of a timeline of the rise of 'famous for being famous' celebrity cult, which is moderately entertaining.


1 out of 5 stars Pointless, uninspired, boring, badly written rubbish   October 5, 2008
Colin Morrison (UK)
0 out of 1 found this review helpful

This book is a major, major disappointment. Obviously edited backwards from what Frith considers the key issues from today's perspective and not a real diary at all, this is a collection of pointless anecdotes and tedious magazine politics told in a pre-school fashion.

He never misses an opportunity to tell us what a great guy/boss/boyfriend/employee/editor he is. Urgh!

Avoid like the plague.



3 out of 5 stars I thought Mr Frith used to be an editor...   September 25, 2008
Lan (West Midlands, England)
1 out of 2 found this review helpful

I'm only on page 52 and so far have spotted 2 spelling mistakes which is really off putting! Sack the proof reader Mr Frith! I imagine you would not have stood for such sloppiness when editing heat!

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