The Daily Mail has long had something of the status of a national joke. It is by no means just on Gransnet.
This extract is from this link
www.realnews247.com/daily_mail_circulation.htm
"Criticism"
The Daily Mail is a target of satire and criticism by centrist and left-of centre media and individuals as well as certain satirical magazines. As a target of satire the stereotypical Daily Mail reader is characterised as a borderline-racist, homophobic, aspiring middle-class conservative who lacks the intelligence to read the broadsheet equivalent the Daily Telegraph.
In fact, in recent years the phrase 'Daily Mail reader' has become increasingly used in general parlance (not just in the media) as shorthand for any person with such attitudes.
Due to its stance on moral issues - for instance, its continuing condemnation of already-punished criminals such as Myra Hindley and Maxine Carr, and its editorial outrage at television programmes such as Jerry Springer - The Opera or Brass Eye - some left-wingers refer to the paper with nicknames such as the "Daily Wail" and the "Daily Hate".
The latter is in part because - according to Polly Toynbee in The Guardian [3]
www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,3604,1178434,00.html -
The Mail's founder, Lord Northcliffe, said his winning formula was to give his readers "a daily hate".
The Mail is often ridiculed for its supposed obsession with the property market. This has led to Private Eye mock-headlines such as Influx of asylum seekers cause house values to plummet and Property prices fall as asteroid prepares to wipe out life on Earth.
Another aspect of the Mail that draws controversy is its alleged promotion of pseudoscience. Astrology is often the subject of articles, and the newspaper runs a profitable telephone astrology service (http://www.randi.org/jr/040204orange.html) through its association with Jonathan Cainer.
Regular features are also run on Alien abduction, the Bible code, and other such paranormal subjects.
In the same vein, the Mail's opposition to the "single-jab" MMR vaccine was condemned by medical practitioners. It is, however, inconsistent in such areas, and marked the 250th anniversary of the birth of homeopathy's founder with an article calling it "Undiluted Tosh!".