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        <title>Dan Brown | Tags | The Punch</title>
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        <description>Politics, political opinion, world news, sports news and the latest news and views updated live, daily on The Punch - Australia's best conversation.</description>
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        <pubDate>Thu, 09 Feb 2012 18:00:13 +0000</pubDate>
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        <item>
            <title>In praise of Dan Brown</title>
            <link>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/in-praise-of-dan-brown/</link>
            <description>&#8216;Do not start me on The Da Vinci Code. A novel so bad that it gives bad novels a bad name&#8217;. That&#8217;s how Salman Rushdie described Dan Brown&#8217;s 2003 blockbuster in an interview with the Lawrence Journal&#45;World in 2005. 



Rushdie isn&#8217;t alone in his unflattering assessment of Dan Brown&#8217;s writing. More recently, professor of linguistics at the University of Edinburgh, Geoffrey Pullum told the Daily Telegraph that &#8216;Brown&#8217;s writing is not just bad; it is staggeringly, clumsily, thoughtlessly, almost ingeniously bad&#8217;. 

And Pullum isn&#8217;t just being a high&#45;minded literary snob, either; the professor has a point. To illustrate his case, Pullum cites a passage from Angels and Demons in which the lead female character hears about the death of her scientist father. &#8216;Genius, she thought. My father . . . Dad. Dead&#8217; writes Brown.</description>
            <author>piotrowskid@newsltd.com.au (Daniel Piotrowski)</author>
            <category>Article</category>
            <comments>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/in-praise-of-dan-brown/#comments</comments>
            <enclosure url="http://www.thepunch.com.au/images/uploads/thumbnails/danbrown100.jpg" type="image/jpeg" />            <guid>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/in-praise-of-dan-brown/#item1391</guid>
            <pubDate>Thu, 09 Feb 2012 18:00:13 +0000</pubDate>
            <source url="http://www.thepunch.com.au/rss/tags/dan-brown/">The call from the picture editor on The Australian came early on a Tuesday. Not unusual, but the pictorial brief was to photograph inside the Freemasons&#8217; Grand Lodge in the centre of Sydney, drawing back the veil of secrecy around the organisation which features in Dan Brown&#8217;s new book, The Lost Symbol.



I&#8217;m not a fan of Dan Brown, nor do I profess to be Freemansony. I knew very little about the subject when I walked into the lift at the Freemasons United Grand Lodge..

I knew that with Freemasons there were handshakes, secret passwords, aprons and something to do with architecture.</source>
        </item>
        
        <item>
            <title>Light and shade as Masons let us into their world</title>
            <link>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/light-and-shade-as-masons-let-us-into-their-world/</link>
            <description>The call from the picture editor on The Australian came early on a Tuesday. Not unusual, but the pictorial brief was to photograph inside the Freemasons&#8217; Grand Lodge in the centre of Sydney, drawing back the veil of secrecy around the organisation which features in Dan Brown&#8217;s new book, The Lost Symbol.



I&#8217;m not a fan of Dan Brown, nor do I profess to be Freemansony. I knew very little about the subject when I walked into the lift at the Freemasons United Grand Lodge..

I knew that with Freemasons there were handshakes, secret passwords, aprons and something to do with architecture.</description>
            <author>piotrowskid@newsltd.com.au (Daniel Piotrowski)</author>
            <category>Article, Behind the picture</category>
            <comments>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/light-and-shade-as-masons-let-us-into-their-world/#comments</comments>
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            <pubDate>Thu, 09 Feb 2012 18:00:13 +0000</pubDate>
            <source url="http://www.thepunch.com.au/rss/tags/dan-brown/">The call from the picture editor on The Australian came early on a Tuesday. Not unusual, but the pictorial brief was to photograph inside the Freemasons&#8217; Grand Lodge in the centre of Sydney, drawing back the veil of secrecy around the organisation which features in Dan Brown&#8217;s new book, The Lost Symbol.



I&#8217;m not a fan of Dan Brown, nor do I profess to be Freemansony. I knew very little about the subject when I walked into the lift at the Freemasons United Grand Lodge..

I knew that with Freemasons there were handshakes, secret passwords, aprons and something to do with architecture.</source>
        </item>
        
        <item>
            <title>Exposed: the fake world of &#8220;real&#8221; television news</title>
            <link>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/exposed-the-fake-world-of-real-television-news/</link>
            <description>This is what happens when a group of media are sent to cover an event but miss the &#8220;money shot&#8221;.

We&#8217;re going to take you behind the scenes. Our unedited video captures the moment some media crews faked an event not once but twice.


 VIDEO: &#8216;Oops&#8217; missed it
 See what happens when the media pack miss their money shot.


//



For the launch of author Dan Brown&#8217;s new thriller The Lost Symbol, various media assembled to shoot a group of speed readers. The idea was the fastest reader could give the book&#8217;s first&#45;ever review. The trouble was, after two and a half hours of waiting for the keen readers to plough through 500 pages most of the media had their eyes off the ball.</description>
            <author>piotrowskid@newsltd.com.au (Daniel Piotrowski)</author>
            <category>Article</category>
            <comments>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/exposed-the-fake-world-of-real-television-news/#comments</comments>
            <enclosure url="http://www.thepunch.com.au/images/uploads/thumbnails/faketv100.jpg" type="image/jpeg" />            <guid>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/exposed-the-fake-world-of-real-television-news/#item1229</guid>
            <pubDate>Thu, 09 Feb 2012 18:00:13 +0000</pubDate>
            <source url="http://www.thepunch.com.au/rss/tags/dan-brown/">The call from the picture editor on The Australian came early on a Tuesday. Not unusual, but the pictorial brief was to photograph inside the Freemasons&#8217; Grand Lodge in the centre of Sydney, drawing back the veil of secrecy around the organisation which features in Dan Brown&#8217;s new book, The Lost Symbol.



I&#8217;m not a fan of Dan Brown, nor do I profess to be Freemansony. I knew very little about the subject when I walked into the lift at the Freemasons United Grand Lodge..

I knew that with Freemasons there were handshakes, secret passwords, aprons and something to do with architecture.</source>
        </item>
        
        <item>
            <title>Poker&#45;faced Pope plays high stakes against science</title>
            <link>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/god-may-not-play-dice-with-the-universe-but-the-pope-is-gambling/</link>
            <description>You have to hand it to the Pope. He&#8217;s got ticker. This week he asserted science had provided proof of a key plank of the story of the Catholic Church &#45; a test on bones from a Roman tomb &#8220;seems to confirm&#8221; they belonged to St Paul the Apostle.



Calling on scientific evidence to prove Church teaching is grounded in historical fact is a staggeringly high&#45;stakes game for the Pope to play. As technology advances, archaeologists will only build an ever&#45;clearer picture of the past. As in the case of St Paul &#45; who along with St Peter was instrumental in founding the modern Church &#45; there may be evidence along the way that suggests certain people lived and died precisely as the Church says.

But what happens when the science calls it into question? What happens if scientists produce convincing evidence that certain things didn&#8217;t happen, or someone didn&#8217;t exist? 

What if that someone was, say, Jesus?</description>
            <author>piotrowskid@newsltd.com.au (Daniel Piotrowski)</author>
            <category>Article</category>
            <comments>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/god-may-not-play-dice-with-the-universe-but-the-pope-is-gambling/#comments</comments>
                        <guid>http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/god-may-not-play-dice-with-the-universe-but-the-pope-is-gambling/#item493</guid>
            <pubDate>Thu, 09 Feb 2012 18:00:13 +0000</pubDate>
            <source url="http://www.thepunch.com.au/rss/tags/dan-brown/">The call from the picture editor on The Australian came early on a Tuesday. Not unusual, but the pictorial brief was to photograph inside the Freemasons&#8217; Grand Lodge in the centre of Sydney, drawing back the veil of secrecy around the organisation which features in Dan Brown&#8217;s new book, The Lost Symbol.



I&#8217;m not a fan of Dan Brown, nor do I profess to be Freemansony. I knew very little about the subject when I walked into the lift at the Freemasons United Grand Lodge..

I knew that with Freemasons there were handshakes, secret passwords, aprons and something to do with architecture.</source>
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