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'''Giles Coren''' (born [[1969]] in [[Paddington]], [[London]]) is a [[British]] journalist and broadcaster. He is host of "Movie Lounge" on Britain's [[Channel 5]], and restaurant critic for the British newspaper ''[[The Times]]'', winning the title "Food And Drink Writer of the Year" in [[2005]]. |
'''Giles Coren''' (born [[1969]] in [[Paddington]], [[London]]) is a [[British]] journalist and broadcaster. He is host of "Movie Lounge" on Britain's [[Channel 5]], and restaurant critic for the British newspaper ''[[The Times]]'', winning the title "Food And Drink Writer of the Year" in [[2005]]. |
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He is the son of the British writer and humourist [[Alan Coren]], and the brother of journalist [[Victoria Coren]]. Giles is mentioned in his father's work as being a particularly 'evil child', as Alan Coren describes him trying to kill a cat. He was educated at [[Westminster School]] before going on to [[Keble College, Oxford]], where he |
He is the son of the British writer and humourist [[Alan Coren]], and the brother of journalist [[Victoria Coren]]. Giles is mentioned in his father's work as being a particularly 'evil child', as Alan Coren describes him trying to kill a cat. He was educated at [[Westminster School]] before going on to [[Keble College, Oxford]], where he achieved a first in English. |
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He also contributes an irregular and irreverent column to ''The Times'', ranging from curious events in his personal life to political satire. Under the pseudonym Professor Gideon Carter he writes ''The Intellectual's Guide to Fashion'' in ''[[The Sunday Times]]'', satirizing the pretensions of modern critical theory and cultural commentary. He ghost-wrote the autobiography of [[James Dyson]], inventor of the famous vacuum cleaner, and has recently sold his first [[novel]], [[Winkler]]. |
He also contributes an irregular and irreverent column to ''The Times'', ranging from curious events in his personal life to political satire. Under the pseudonym Professor Gideon Carter he writes ''The Intellectual's Guide to Fashion'' in ''[[The Sunday Times]]'', satirizing the pretensions of modern critical theory and cultural commentary. He ghost-wrote the autobiography of [[James Dyson]], inventor of the famous vacuum cleaner, and has recently sold his first [[novel]], [[Winkler]]. |
Revision as of 21:05, 4 July 2006
Giles Coren (born 1969 in Paddington, London) is a British journalist and broadcaster. He is host of "Movie Lounge" on Britain's Channel 5, and restaurant critic for the British newspaper The Times, winning the title "Food And Drink Writer of the Year" in 2005.
He is the son of the British writer and humourist Alan Coren, and the brother of journalist Victoria Coren. Giles is mentioned in his father's work as being a particularly 'evil child', as Alan Coren describes him trying to kill a cat. He was educated at Westminster School before going on to Keble College, Oxford, where he achieved a first in English.
He also contributes an irregular and irreverent column to The Times, ranging from curious events in his personal life to political satire. Under the pseudonym Professor Gideon Carter he writes The Intellectual's Guide to Fashion in The Sunday Times, satirizing the pretensions of modern critical theory and cultural commentary. He ghost-wrote the autobiography of James Dyson, inventor of the famous vacuum cleaner, and has recently sold his first novel, Winkler.
Coren writes unorthodox reviews that are sometimes surprising in a paper owned by the conservative Rupert Murdoch: 'Food: 0; Just bloody being there: 7'. When asked. 'In your opinion, who is the most influential chef of our time?', Coren replied, 'Ronald McDonald, the poisonous criminal bastard.'
In the autumn of 2005, Coren appeared as a regular correspondent on Gordon Ramsay's The F-Word. In 2005, Coren's novel "Winkler" won the Bad Sex in Fiction Award for the most inappropriate description of sex. The passage he was awarded for ended with the sentence fragment "Like Zorro" which seems to be gaining a status as an internet meme. He is the host of the program Film Review on Channel 4.
On the 6th of June, 2006, he presented a programme on the digital channel More4, entitled Tax the Fat, a semi-serious look at the cost of clinical obesity and the cost it presents to the NHS.