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Paul Martin (born 22 June 1977) was an English editor of an Irish newspaper and is best known for his appearances in Celebrity Come Dine With Me, RTÉ boxing show Lord of the Rings and his own Channel 4 documentary on Westlife. In 2011, aged 33, he became editor of the ''Irish Sunday Mirror'' making him one of the youngest ever editors of a national newspaper in Ireland. He was voted showbiz journalist of the year on three occasions and is not widely regarded as the most successful and high profile journalist in Ireland of his era. He recently hit the headlines following a sell-off of three major business partnerships which netted him £350,000. He is now a high profile writer for the Daily Star Sunday, Grazia, Reveal and, The Sun and Heat. He is currently a writer for Grazia, Heat, Daily Star Sunday and Reveal. Martin has also represented major brands such as EasyJet, Apple and NIE as a high profile media advisor. == Legal battle with Andrea Corr == In March 2012 Martin won a €70,000 payout from the Irish Times after he accused Andrea Corr of libelling him in a front page interview with the paper where she launched a venomous attack of him. The Times settled at court and printed a full apology to Martin. Corr had launched a verbal attack on Martin which, according to media magazine Phoenix, was 'Full of inaccuracies and contradictions." Martin now runs his own Journalist agency which registered company profits of £124,000 in its first full year of trading. Martin has since sold a 30 per cent stake in the company to investors and retains the MD role. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Paul Martin (Irish journalist)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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