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Geordie - Geordie in the media |  | Geordie - Geordie in the media: Encyclopedia II - Geordie - Geordie in the media |  | In recent times, the Geordie accent has featured prominently in the national media, arguably more so than ever before, perhaps encouraged by the success of Auf Wiedersehen, Pet in the early 1980s. Television presenters such as Ant and Dec, and Marcus Bentley, are now happy to use their natural accents on air. The commentator on the UK edition of Big Brother is often perceived by southerners to have a Geordie accent (North-East accents do sound very alike to the untuned ear). However, he grew up in Stockton on Tees. Brendan Fost ...
See also:Geordie, Geordie - Derivation of the term, Geordie - Geographical coverage, Geordie - The Geordie dialect, Geordie - Vocabulary, Geordie - Geordie in the media, Geordie - Famous Geordies |  | | Geordie, Geordie - Derivation of the term, Geordie - Famous Geordies, Geordie - Geographical coverage, Geordie - Geordie in the media, Geordie - The Geordie dialect, Geordie - Vocabulary |  | |
|  |  | Geordie: Encyclopedia II - Geordie - Geordie in the media
Geordie - Geordie in the media
In recent times, the Geordie accent has featured prominently in the national media, arguably more so than ever before, perhaps encouraged by the success of Auf Wiedersehen, Pet in the early 1980s. Television presenters such as Ant and Dec, and Marcus Bentley, are now happy to use their natural accents on air. The commentator on the UK edition of Big Brother is often perceived by southerners to have a Geordie accent (North-East accents do sound very alike to the untuned ear). However, he grew up in Stockton on Tees. Brendan Foster and Sid Waddell have both worked as television sports commentators. However, in general, the Geordie accent still tends to be employed for comedy effect as opposed to serious usage.
The accent was also popularised by the comic magazine Viz, where the accent itself is often conveyed phonetically by unusual spellings within the comic strips. Viz magazine itself was founded on Tyneside by a couple of Geordie lads, Chris Donald and his brother Simon.
Mention must also be made of the pioneering efforts of Newcastle natives Mike Neville and George House (aka Jarge Hoose), presenters of the BBC local news program Look North in the 1960's and 1970's. Not only did they incorporate Geordie into the show, albeit usually in comedy pieces pointing up the gulf between ordinary Geordies and officials speaking Standard English, but they were responsible for a series of recordings, beginning with Larn Yersel' Geordie which attempted, not always seriously, to bring the Geordie dialect to the rest of England.
The mastermind behind Larn Yersel' Geordie was local humourist Scott Dobson, who wrote several booklets on the theme in the early 1970s, including Histry o' the Geordies, Advanced Geordie Palaver, The Geordie Joke Book (with Dick Irwin), The Little Broon Book
Other related archives1745, 1788, 1820, 1823, 1970s, 1980s, 1991, AC/DC, Alan Price, Alan Shearer, Alex Glasgow, Andy Taylor, Angle, Anglo Saxon, Anglo-Saxon, Ant and Dec, Auf Wiedersehen, Pet, BBC, Big Brother, Blaydon Races, Bobby, Bobby Robson, Bobby Thompson, Brendan Foster, Brian Johnson, Bruce Welch, Bryan Ferry, Catherine Cookson, Chas Chandler, Cheryl Tweedy, Chris, Chris Donald, Chris Waddle, Coronation Street, County Durham, Dave Stewart, Davy lamps, Denise Welch, Dire Straits, Donna Air, Duran Duran, Durham, England, Eric Burdon, Eurythmics, French, Geordi La Forge, Geordie, George II, George III, George IV, George Stephenson, German, Girls Aloud, Grace Darling, Great North Run, Guelph, Hank Marvin, Hanoverian kings, Harry Woolf, Baron Woolf, Hartlepool, Henry 'Harry' Clasper, Humphry Davy, IPA, Jack Charlton, Jackie Milburn, Jacobite Rebellion, Jayne Middlemiss, Jimi Hendrix Experience, Jimmy Nail, John Woodvine, Kevin Whately, Lancelot 'Capability' Brown, Latin, Look North, Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales, Lord Collingwood, Lowland Scots, Mackem, Mackems, Marcus Bentley, Mark Knopfler, Maximo Park, Michael Bridges, Mike Neville, Monkey hangers, National Anthem, Neil Tennant, Newcastle, Newcastle Brown Ale, Newcastle United, Newcastle upon Tyne, Norman conquest, North East of England, Northumbria, Old English, Old Norse language, Owen Brannigan, Paul Gascoigne (Gazza), Paul Smith, Pet Shop Boys, Peter Beardsley, Peter Taylor, Baron Taylor of Gosforth, Pitmatic, Queen Caroline, Races, Ridley, Robson Green, Roma, Ross Noble, Roxy Music, Simon, Simon Donald, Slade, Smoggies, South Shields, Spanish, Standard English, Steve Cram, Sting, Stockton on Tees, Teesside, Television, The Animals, The Police, The Shadows, Thomas Allen, Thomas Bewick, Tim Healy, Tony Scott, Tow Law, Tyne, Tyneside, United Kingdom, Viking, Viz, Wearside, William George Armstrong, 1st Baron Armstrong, cigarettes, clown, club, coal mining, comedian, comic, commentator, conurbation, darts, deeky, dialect, divorce, engineer, fair, football, jackal, magazine, miners, mining, music hall, national media, pitman, regent, rock, safety lamps, showman, the "Hoppings", tobacco, vocabulary
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Geordie in the media", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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