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Baby names: the new top 10

Sydney Morning Herald - Found Jul. 2, 2009
... with the traditional names sharing the top 10. Top 10 Boys: Jack, William, Lachlan, Joshua, Riley, Thomas, Cooper, Oliver, James and Ethan.
Jack and Mia top names lists - Sydney Morning Herald
Australian parents play it safe with baby names - LiveNews
Baby names: what hot, what's not - LiveNews
Jack and Mia top Aussie names - ONE News
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Illawarra Mercury

Posted on July 2, 2009, 12:35 pm

Banned driver Oliver James Chappell hid in bushes

Yorkshire Evening Press - Found Jun. 15, 2009
Oliver James Chappell, 20, took his mother?s car without her knowledge for a spin in the early hours of April 17 after a binge drinking...

Posted on June 15, 2009, 1:27 pm

Jack and Mia top names lists

The Age - Found Jul. 2, 2009
... names sharing the top 10. The top 10 list for boys in 2008 was Jack, William, Lachlan, Joshua, Riley, Thomas, Cooper, Oliver, James and Ethan.
Favourite kids' names: How do you spell that? - Herald Sun
Celebrities inspire our top baby names - NEWS.com.au
Jack and Mia top names lists - The West Online
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Posted on July 2, 2009, 5:49 am

Beatles legend joins Neil Young on stage

NME - Found Jun. 28, 2009
The Beatles legend Paul McCartney surprised thousands of gig-goers tonight (June 27) by joining headliner Neil Young for an impromptu duet at
Paul McCartney Joins Neil Young Onstage In London - Gigwise
BOB DYLAN AND PAUL MCCARTNEY RUMOURS ARE 'UNFOUNDED' SAYS BEATLE - Uncut
Neil Young - review and pictures - Q Online
PAUL MCCARTNEY AND NEIL YOUNG PERFORM BEATLES SONG TOGETHER IN HYDE ... - Uncut
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NME

Posted on June 28, 2009, 6:04 am

Fleet Foxes 'terrified' by huge Glastonbury Festival crowds

NME - Found Jun. 26, 2009
'Oliver James', meanwhile, had the majority of the crowd clapping along, much to the pleasure of the band themselves.

Posted on June 26, 2009, 12:13 pm

50 free music tracks

Telegraph - Found Jun. 12, 2009
Know Why 7. Heard Them Stirring 8. Your Protector 9. Meadowlarks 10. Blue Ridge Mountains 11. Oliver James Alice Klein reviews folk-rockers...

Posted on June 12, 2009, 4:16 am

Women's brains ...'>are different from men's and here's scientific proof">Women's brains ...

The Independent - Found Jun. 10, 2009
Oliver James, Psychologist It does not prove anything about the role of genes or environment. It is pure speculation.

Posted on June 10, 2009, 8:10 am

Mars & Venus: What the perfect husband needs to understand about ...

The Independent - Found Jun. 7, 2009
The sum of all the parts Good listening face Perfect husbands have good listening faces, like the psychologist Oliver James.

Posted on June 7, 2009, 11:19 am

Robin Williams leaves no doubt as he fires home winner for Inch ...

The Scotsman - Found Jun. 10, 2009
Brown, James McKenzie, Mark Wilkins, Dean Clements, Jamie Hunter, Ross Martin, Stuart Thomas, Aaran Thomas, Steven Cross, Shane Oliver, James...

Posted on June 10, 2009, 5:38 am

Lucy Porter at The Grey Lady in Tunbridge Wells

This is Kent - Found Jun. 18, 2009
... on questions about the nature of human needs and wants, tracing a line from recent works such as Oliver James' Affluenza back to Robert Burton...

Posted on June 18, 2009, 12:23 pm

Oliver James Biography

Oliver James
extracted from Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia, distributed under the GNU Free Documentation License

Oliver James (born 1953) is a clinical psychologist, writer and television documentary producer. He also frequently broadcasts on radio and acts as a pundit on television.

Contents

Life

Oliver James was educated at Eton College followed by a degree in Social Anthropology at Cambridge University (1973-6) followed by a psychology degree and Child Clinical Psychology training at Nottingham University (1977-9). He worked as a Research Fellow at Brunel University (1979-82) before joining the staff of the Cassel Hospital in Richmond as a clinical psychologist (1982-7). He published several academic papers about the organization of therapeutic communities.

In 1982 he made his first TV series, for Granada for the ITV network, about childcare (Under Fives). He did two further educational series, one for Channel 4 (Sex With Paula, 1987), one for the ITV network (Men On Violence, 1988, for LWT). He originated, and was Associate Producer of, the ITV First Tuesday documentary about The Man Who Shot John Lennon.

He was the interviewer and producer of the 44 interviews in Room 113 for the two series of the BAFTA-award winning Network 7 youth programme on Channel 4. Audience research revealed Room 113 was the most popular slot in the programme and the interviews were described by Chris Dunckley in the Financial Times as 'The most frank since John Freeman's Face-to-Face in the Fifties`.

In 1990 he produced a documentary for Channel 4 about the Mail on Sunday and in 1992 he contributed three films, two as Producer and one as Producer-Presenter, to the BBC2 Crime and Punishment season. Rape, for 40 Minutes, recorded the meeting of a rapist and a rape victim. Prisoner XYY/334422, also for 40 Minutes, plumbed the psychology of an imprisoned psychopath. Wot U looking at?, for the science strand Horizon, explained why the poor are more violent than the rich and why violence has been rocketing since 1987 in the UK.

In 1995 he produced, directed and presented a forty minute Late Show documentary for BBC2, Prozac Diary, in which artists took the drug to see how it affected their work. In 1997, he produced and presented The Chair, a 7-part interview series for BBC2, including one in which Peter Mandelson MP famously shed a tear.

In 1998 he was the presenter of a 2-part series about his book, New Britain on the Couch, for channel 4, followed in 2000 by presenting a one-off documentary about infidelity, Affairs of the Heart. In each of 2004, 2005 and 2006 he has presented a series of programmes about childcare for This Morning, titled Through The Eyes of the Child.

He has published six books: Juvenile Violence in a Winner-Loser Culture (FAB, 1995), Britain on the Couch – why we’re unhappier compared with 1950 despite being richer (Arrow, 1997), the bestselling They F*** You Up – How to survive family life (Bloomsbury, 2002), Affluenza – How to be successful and stay sane (Vermilion, 2007), The Selfish Capitalist - Origins of Affluenza (Vermilion, 2008, a scientific companion to Affluenza) and Contented Dementia: 24 hour Wraparound Care for Lifetime Wellbeing (Vermilion, 2008).

He currently does a column every saturday in the Family section of The Guardian. He has written columns for The Sun, the Sunday Telegraph, the Sunday Express, The Independent and most recently, The Observer magazine. He has also written for several magazines, including Options, Family Circle, Adbusters and Business Life (British Airways). He is a regular contributor to Psychologies Magazine. He also contributes regularly to the Comment page of The Guardian, as well as occasional articles for the other broadsheets, daily and Sunday. He has contributed articles to scientific journals including the Journal of Epidemiology, Community Health and The Psychologist.

Books

  • James, Oliver (2002). They F*** You Up: How to Survive Family Life. Bloomsbury. ISBN 0747584788. 
  • James, Oliver (1998). Britain on the Couch - Why We're Unhappier Compared with 1950 Despite Being Richer. Arrow Books. ISBN 0099244020. 

References

External links