User Contributed Dictionary
Pronunciation
Noun
newspapers- Plural of newspaper.
Verb
newspapers- third-person singular of newspaper
Extensive Definition
A newspaper is a written publication containing
news, information and
advertising, usually
printed on low-cost paper called newsprint. General-interest
newspapers often feature articles on political events,
crime, business, art/entertainment, society and sports. Most traditional papers
also feature an editorial page containing
columns
which express the personal opinions of writers. Supplementary
sections may contain advertising, comics, coupons, and other printed
media. Newspapers are most often published on a daily or weekly
basis, and they usually focus on one particular geographic area
where most of their readers live. Despite recent setbacks in
circulation and profits newspapers are still the most iconic outlet
for news and other types of written journalism. Features a
newspaper may include are:
- Weather news and forecasts
- An advice column
- Critic reviews of movies, plays, restaurants, etc.
- Editorial opinions
- A gossip column
- Comic strips and other entertainment, such as crosswords, sudoku and horoscopes
- A sports column or section
- A humor column or section
- A food column
- Classified ads are commonly seen in local or small newspapers.
History
There is some debate over which publication was
the first newspaper because the definition of a newspaper has been
flexible. In ancient Rome, Acta Diurna,
or government announcement bulletins, were made public by Julius
Caesar. They were carved on stone or metal and posted in public
places. In China, early government-produced news sheets, called
tipao, circulated among
court officials during the late Han dynasty
(second and third centuries AD). Between 713 and 734, the Kai Yuan
Za Bao of the Chinese Tang Dynasty
published government news; it was handwritten on silk and read by
government officials. In 1582 there was the first reference to
privately-published newssheets in Beijing, during the
late Ming
Dynasty; by 1638 the Beijing Gazette switched
from woodblock print to movable type
printing. In Boston
in 1690, Benjamin
Harris published
Publick Occurrences Both Forreign and Domestick. This is
considered the first newspaper in the American
colonies even though only one edition was published before the
paper was suppressed by the government. In 1704, the governor
allowed the Boston
News-Letter to be published and it became the first
“continuously published” newspaper in the colonies. Soon after,
weekly papers began publishing in New York and Philadelphia. These
early newspapers followed the British format and were usually four
pages long. They mostly carried news from Britain and content
depended on the editor’s interests. In 1783, the Pennsylvania
Evening Post became the first American daily. In 1751, John
Bushell’s Halifax
Gazette became the first Canadian newspaper. By the early 19th
century, many cities in Western and Eastern Europe, as well as
North and South America, published newspaper-type publications
though not all of them developed in the same way; content was
vastly shaped by regional and cultural preferences.
Advances in printing technology during the
Industrial
Revolution were responsible for turning the newspaper into a
widely circulated means of communication. In 1814, The Times of
London
acquired a printing press capable of making 1,100 impressions per
minute. Soon, it was adapted to print on both sides of a page at
once. This innovation made newspapers cheaper and thus available to
a larger part of the population. In 1833, Benjamin Day
printed the first penny press
newspaper,
The New York Sun. Penny press papers cost about one sixth the
price of other newspapers and appealed to a wider audience.
Recent developments on the Internet are, however,
posing major challenges to the business model of many newspapers.
Paid circulation is declining in most countries, and advertising
revenue, which makes up the bulk of most newspapers’ income, is
shifting from print to online, resulting in a general decline in
newspaper profits. This has led to some predictions that newspapers
will shrink or even disappear, although new media technologies such
as radio and television never supplanted print media.
Types
A daily newspaper is issued every day, sometimes with the exception of Sundays and some national holidays. Saturday and, where they exist, Sunday editions of daily newspapers tend to be larger, include more specialized sections and advertising inserts, and cost more. Typically, the majority of these newspapers’ staff work Monday to Friday, so the Sunday and Monday editions largely depend on content done in advance or content that is syndicated. Most daily newspapers are published in the morning. Afternoon or evening papers are aimed more at commuters and office workers.Weekly
newspapers are common and tend to be smaller than daily papers.
In some cases, there also are newspapers that are published twice
or three times a week. In the United States, such newspapers are
generally still classified as weeklies.
Most nations have at least one newspaper that
circulates throughout the whole country: a national newspaper, as
contrasted with a local newspaper serving a city or region. In the
United
Kingdom, there are numerous national newspapers, including
The
Independent, The Times,
The
Daily Telegraph, The
Guardian, The
Observer, The Daily
Mail, The
Sun, The Daily
Express and The Daily
Mirror. In the United
States and Canada, there are
few truly national newspapers, with the notable exceptions The
Wall Street Journal and USA Today in
the US and The
Globe and Mail and The National
Post in Canada. Large metropolitan newspapers with expanded
distribution networks such as The
New York Times and The
Washington Post can fill the role of de facto national
newspapers.
As English
has become the international language of business and technology,
many newspapers formerly published only in non-English languages
have also developed English-language editions. In places as varied
as Jerusalem and
Bombay
(Mumbai),
newspapers are printed to a local and international
English-speaking public. The advent of the Internet has also
allowed the non-English newspapers to put out a scaled-down English
version to give their newspaper a global outreach.
There is also a small group of newspapers which
may be characterised as international newspapers. Some, such as
Christian
Science Monitor and The
International Herald Tribune, have always had that focus, while
others are repackaged national newspapers or “international
editions” of national-scale or large metropolitan newspapers. Often
these international editions are scaled down to remove articles
that might not interest the wider range of readers.
Job titles within the newspaper industry vary
greatly. In the United States, the overall manager of the newspaper
— sometimes also the owner — may be termed the publisher. This usage is less
common outside the U.S., but throughout the English-speaking world
the person responsible for content is usually referred to as the
editor. Variations on
this title such as editor-in-chief, executive editor, and so on,
are common.
While most newspapers are aimed at a broad
spectrum of readers, usually geographically defined, some focus on
groups of readers defined more by their interests than their
location: for example, there are daily and weekly business
newspapers and sports newspapers. More specialist still are some
weekly newspapers, usually free and distributed within limited
areas; these may serve communities as specific as certain immigrant
populations, or the local gay community.
Newspapers often refine distribution of ads and
news through zoning and editioning. Zoning occurs when advertising
and editorial content change to reflect the location to which the
product is delivered. The editorial content often may change merely
to reflect changes in advertising — the quantity and layout of
which affects the space available for editorial — or may contain
region-specific news. In rare instances, the advertising may not
change from one zone to another, but there will be different
region-specific editorial content. As the content can vary widely,
zoned editions are often produced in parallel.
Editioning occurs in the main sections as news is
updated throughout the night. The advertising is usually the same
in each edition (with the exception of zoned regionals, in which it
is often the ‘B’ section of local news that undergoes advertising
changes). As each edition represents the latest news available for
the next press run, these editions are produced linearly, with one
completed edition being copied and updated for the next edition.
The previous edition is always copied to maintain a Newspaper of
Record and to fall back on if a quick correction is needed for the
press. For example, both the New York
Times and Wall
Street Journal offer a regional edition, printed through a
local contractor, and featuring locale specific content. The
Journal’s global advertising rate card
provides a good example of editioning.http://advertising.wsj.com/rates/index.html
Format
Most modern newspapers are in one of three sizes:
- Broadsheets: 600 mm by 380 mm (23½ by 15 inches), generally associated with more intellectual newspapers, although a trend towards “compact” newspapers is changing this.
- Tabloids: half the size of broadsheets at 380 mm by 300 mm (15 by 11¾ inches), and often perceived as sensationalist in contrast to broadsheets. Examples: The Sun, The National Enquirer, The National Ledger, The Star Magazine, New York Post, The Globe.
- Berliner or Midi: 470 mm by 315 mm (18½ by 12¼ inches) used by European papers such as Le Monde in France, La Stampa in Italy, El Pais in Spain and, since 12 September 2005, The Guardian in the United Kingdom.
Newspapers are usually printed on inexpensive,
off-white paper known as newsprint. Since the 1980s, the newspaper
industry has largely moved away from lower-quality letterpress
printing to higher-quality, four-color
process, offset
printing. In addition, desktop
computers, word
processing software, graphics
software, digital
cameras and digital prepress and typesetting technologies
have revolutionized the newspaper production process. These
technologies have enabled newspapers to publish color photographs
and graphics, as well as innovative layouts and better design.
To help their titles stand out on newsstands,
some newspapers are printed on coloured newsprint. For example, the
Financial
Times is printed on a distinctive salmon pink paper, and the
Italian sports newspaper La
Gazzetta dello Sport is printed on pink paper. Sheffield’s
weekly sports publication derives its name, the “Green ’Un”, from
the traditional colour of its paper, while L'Équipe
(formerly L’Auto) is printed on yellow paper. Both the latter
promoted major cycling
races and their newsprint colours were reflected in the colours of
the jerseys used to denote the race leader; thus, the leader in the
Giro
d'Italia wears a pink jersey.
Online-only
With the introduction of the Internet, web-based 'newspapers' have also started to be produced as online-only publications, like the Southport Reporter. To be a Web-Only newspaper they must be web published only and must not be part of or have any connection to hard-copy formats. To be classed as an Online Only Newspaper, the paper must also be regularly updated at a regular time and keep to a fixed news format, like a hardcopy newspaper. They must also be only published by professional media companies and regarded under the national/international press rules and regulations unlike blog sites and other news websites, it is run as a newspaper and is recognized by media groups in the UK, like the NUJ and/or the IFJ. Also they fall under the UK’s PCC rules.Electronic paper
In 2006, the Flemish
daily De
Tijd of Antwerp field
tested a version of the publication using electronic
paper - in which text can be changed, like an online site, but
is portable and show on a paper-like substrate - to a few hundred
selected subscribers.http://buziaulane.blogspot.com/2006/12/iliad-and-de-tijd-enewspaper-close.html
Circulation and readership
The number of copies distributed, either on an average day or on particular days (typically Sunday), is called the newspaper’s circulation and is one of the principal factors used to set advertising rates. Circulation is not necessarily the same as copies sold, since some copies or newspapers are distributed without cost. Readership figures may be higher than circulation figures because many copies are read by more than one person, although this is offset by the number of copies distributed but not read (especially for those distributed free).According to the Guinness
Book of Records, the daily circulation of the Soviet newspaper
Trud
exceeded 21,500,000 in 1990, while the Soviet weekly Argumenty
i fakty boasted the circulation of 33,500,000 in 1991.
According to United
Nations data from 1995 Japan has three daily
papers —the Asahi
Shimbun, Mainichi
Shimbun and Yomiuri
Shimbun— with circulations well above 4 million. Germany’s Bild, with a
circulation of 4.5 million, was the only other paper in that
category.
In the United
Kingdom, The
Sun is the top seller, with around 3.2 million copies
distributed daily (late-2004).
In India, The Times of
India is the largest English newspaper, with 2.14 million
copies daily. According to the 2006 National Readership Study, the
Dainik Jagran is the most-read, local-language (Hindi) newspaper,
with 21.2 million readers http://www.hinduonnet.com/thehindu/holnus/001200608291820.htm.
In the U.S., USA Today has a
daily circulation of approximately 2 million, making it the most
widely distributed paper in the country.
A common measure of a newspaper’s health is
market penetration, expressed as a percentage of households that
receive a copy of the newspaper against the total number of
households in the paper’s market area. In the 1920s, on a national
basis in the U.S., daily newspapers achieved market penetration of
130 percent (meaning the average U.S. household received 1.3
newspapers). As other media began to compete with newspapers, and
as printing became easier and less expensive giving rise to a
greater diversity of publications, market penetration began to
decline. It wasn’t until the early 1970s, however, that market
penetration dipped below 100 percent. By 2000, it was 53 percent
1.
Many paid-for newspapers offer a variety of
subscription plans. For example, someone might want only a Sunday
paper, or perhaps only Sunday and Saturday, or maybe only a
workweek subscription,
or perhaps a daily subscription.
Some newspapers provide some or all of their
content on the Internet, either at no cost or for a fee. In some
cases, free access is available only for a matter of days or weeks,
after which readers must register and provide personal data. In
other cases, free archives are provided.
Advertising
Most newspapers make a majority of their income from advertising; the income from the customer’s payment at the news-stand is small in comparison. The portion of the newspaper that is not advertising is called editorial content, editorial matter, or simply editorial, although the last term is also used to refer specifically to those articles in which the newspaper and its guest writers express their opinions.Newspapers have been hurt by the decline of many
traditional advertisers. Department stores and supermarkets could
be relied upon in the past to buy pages of newspaper
advertisements, but due to industry consolidation are much less
likely to do so now.http://www.wallstreetcosmos.com/newspaper_iindustry_report.html
In recent years, the advertorial emerged.
Advertorials are most commonly recognized as an opposite-editorial
which third-parties pay a fee to have included in the paper.
Advertorials
commonly advertise new
products or techniques, such as a new design for golf equipment, a
new form of laser surgery, or weight-loss drugs. The tone is
usually closer to that of a press
release than of an objective news
story.
Journalism
Since newspapers began as a journal (record of current events), the profession involved in the making of newspapers began to be called journalism.In the yellow
journalism era of the 19th century, many newspapers in the
United States relied on sensational stories that were meant to
anger or excite the public, rather than to inform. The restrained
style of reporting that relies on fact checking and accuracy
regained popularity around World War II.
Criticism of journalism is varied and sometimes
vehement. Credibility is questioned because of anonymous sources;
errors in facts, spelling, and grammar; real or perceived
bias; and scandals
involving plagiarism
and fabrication.
In the past, newspapers have often been owned by
so-called press barons,
and were used either as a rich man’s toy, or a political tool. More recently
in the United States, a number of newspapers (and all of the
largest ones) are being run by large media corporations such as
Gannett,
The
McClatchy Company, Hearst
Corporation, Cox, LandMark, Morris
Corporation, The Tribune
Company, Hollinger
International, News
Corporation, etc.
Newspapers have, in the modern world, played an
important role in the exercise of freedom of expression.
Whistle-blowers, and those who “leak” stories of corruption in
political circles often choose to inform newspapers before other
mediums of communication, relying on the perceived willingness of
newspaper editors to expose the secrets and lies of those who would
rather cover them. However, there have been many circumstances of
the political autonomy of newspapers being curtailed.
Opinions of other writers and readers are
expressed in the op-ed (“opposite the
editorial page”) and letters
to the editors sections of the paper.
Some ways newspapers have tried to improve their
credibility are: appointing ombudsmen, developing ethics
policies and training, using more stringent corrections policies,
communicating their processes and rationale with readers, and
asking sources to review articles after publication.
Future
The future of newspapers is cloudy, with overall readership slowly declining in most developed countries due to increasing competition from television and the Internet. The 57th annual World Newspaper Congress, held in Istanbul in June 2004, reported circulation increases in only 35 of 208 countries studied. Most of the increases came in developing countries, notably China and India.A report at the gathering said circulation
declined by an average of 2.2 percent across 13 of the 15 countries
that made up the European
Union. One growth area is the distribution of free
daily newspapers, which are not reflected in the above
circulation data. Led by the Metro chain of newspapers, they grew
16 percent in 2003.
Newspapers also face increased competition from
internet sites such as Craigslist for
classified
ads, especially for jobs, real estate, and cars, the
advertising of which has long been key sources of newspaper revenue
as well as from online only newspapers. Already in the UK a
newspaper called Southport
Reporter started out in 2000 and remains online as a recognized
newspaper, but only published online and others now exist through
out the world. This opens the debate as to what constitutes a
newspaper. see Online
Newspapers
See also
- List of newspapers (by country)
- List of online newspaper archives
- List of newspapers in the world by circulation
- Above the fold
- Alternative weekly
- List of fictional newspapers
- Freedom of the press
- Free daily newspaper
- Graphic design
- Gazette
- Gazetteer
- History of British newspapers
- History of American newspapers
- International Freedom of Expression Exchange
- Journalism
- List of journalism topics
- Magazine
- Mass media
- Muckraker
- Newspaper National Network LP
- Newspaper Association of America
- Newseum
- News design
- Newspaper circulation
- Newspaper of record
- Newspapers on demand
- Photojournalism
- Printing
- Propaganda model
- Student newspaper
- Telephone newspaper
- Underground press
- Weekly newspaper
- Yellow journalism
- World Association of Newspapers
References
External links
newspapers in Afrikaans: Koerant
newspapers in Arabic: صحيفة
newspapers in Belarusian: Газета
newspapers in Belarusian (Tarashkevitsa):
Газэта
newspapers in Bavarian: Zeidung
newspapers in Bulgarian: Вестник
newspapers in Catalan: Premsa
newspapers in Chuvash: Хаçат
newspapers in Czech: Noviny
newspapers in Welsh: Papur newydd
newspapers in Danish: Avis
newspapers in Pennsylvania German: Zeiding
newspapers in German: Zeitung
newspapers in Estonian: Ajaleht
newspapers in Spanish: Prensa escrita
newspapers in Esperanto: Gazeto
newspapers in Basque: Egunkari
newspapers in Persian: روزنامه
newspapers in French: Presse écrite
newspapers in Galician: Prensa escrita
newspapers in Korean: 신문
newspapers in Hindi: समाचारपत्र
newspapers in Croatian: Novine
newspapers in Indonesian: Koran
newspapers in Ossetian: Газет
newspapers in Icelandic: Dagblað
newspapers in Italian: Giornale (editoria)
newspapers in Hebrew: עיתון
newspapers in Kurdish: Rojname
newspapers in Latin: Diarium
newspapers in Lithuanian: Laikraštis
newspapers in Limburgan: Gezèt
newspapers in Malay (macrolanguage):
Akhbar
newspapers in Dutch: Krant
newspapers in Dutch Low Saxon: Krante
newspapers in Japanese: 新聞
newspapers in Norwegian: Avis
newspapers in Norwegian Nynorsk: Avis
newspapers in Narom: Gâzette
newspapers in Uzbek: Gazeta
newspapers in Polish: Gazeta
newspapers in Portuguese: Jornal
newspapers in Romanian: Ziar
newspapers in Quechua: Willay p'anqa
newspapers in Russian: Газета
newspapers in Albanian: Gazeta
newspapers in Simple English: Newspaper
newspapers in Slovak: Denník
(žurnalistika)
newspapers in Slovenian: Časopis
newspapers in Finnish: Sanomalehti
newspapers in Swedish: Tidning
newspapers in Tamil: நாளிதழ்
newspapers in Thai: หนังสือพิมพ์
newspapers in Turkish: Gazete
newspapers in Ukrainian: Газета
newspapers in Walloon: Gazete
newspapers in Vlaams: Gazette
newspapers in Contenese: 報紙
newspapers in Chinese: 報紙