Philo was born in Bexleyheath to Irene (née Campbell) who was a telephone operator and Thomas Philo a shipyard manager. He attended St Mary's Roman Catholic grammar school in Sidcup. Philo then went on to study sociology at Bradford University. There he co-founded the General Will theatre group. He graduated in 1970 and in 1972 then went to study at the University of Glasgow. In 1980 he became the GUMG research director and in 1990 was appointed professor and stayed there until his retirement in 2021.[1]
Career
The original goal of the GUMG project was to "record and analyse the daily news bulletins across the three main channels, empirically demonstrating the extent of bias and distortion in the reporting of economic and industrial news." Philo later became the leading spokesperson for the group in 1990 and started to develop the groups content analysis methods, further assisting in the sociological media research of subjects such as: The Falklands War and Media Power in The UK.[1]
After the group received funding from the Social Science Research Council (UK), the group started analysing TV news reporting using new video recording technology. The research was published as Bad News which stated that TV in the UK was not politically neutral, but rather reflected powerful groups in society.[2] The book was badly received by large news organisations such as The BBC, with many groups condemning it as a purely Marxist work. This was later overturned though with the BBC's John Wilson stating "it was necessary to be honest and admit that there was something in what the GUMG was saying"[2] at which point the BBC attempted to institute some changes that came from the study.
Philo, Greg; McLaughlin, Greg (1993). The British Media and the Gulf War. Glasgow University Media Group. ISBN978-0-952-16691-7.
Philo, Greg; Berry, Mike (2004). Bad News from Israel. London Sterling, Va: Pluto Press. ISBN978-0-7453-2062-5.[3]
Philo, Greg; Berry, Mike (2011). More Bad News from Israel. London: Pluto Press. ISBN978-0-7453-2978-9.
Philo, Greg; Happer, Catherine (2013). Communicating Climate Change and Energy Security: New Methods in Understanding Audiences. Routledge New Developments in Communication and Society Research. Hoboken: Taylor and Francis. ISBN978-1-135-04811-2.