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Image:HughFerris1.jpg Daily News Building, John Mead Howells and Raymond Hood, architects, rendering by Hugh Ferriss. The New York landmark, still standing, housed the paper until the mid-1990s. The Daily News of New York City is the sixth largest daily newspaper in the United States with a circulation of 693,382, as of October 31, 2006. The paper, the first U.S. daily printed in tabloid form, first rolled off the printing presses in 1919. It is owned and run by Mortimer Zuckerman. The paper has won nine Pulitzer Prizes.
History
Prominent sports cartoonists have included Bill Gallo and Ed Murawinski. Columnists have included Walter Kaner. Editorial cartoonists have included C. D. Batchelor. The newspaper was founded by Joseph Medill Patterson, a member of the family that published the Chicago Tribune; from its founding until 1991 was owned by the Tribune. The News later established WPIX (Channel 11 in New York City) and WPIX-FM. At one point in the early 1990s, the Daily News almost went out of business. However, millionaire Robert Maxwell offered financial assistance to The News to help it stay in business. When Maxwell died shortly thereafter, The News seceded from his publishing empire, which eventually splintered under allegations about whether he had the financial backing to sustain it. Mort Zuckerman bought the paper in 1993. Headquarters
Editorial opinionThe Daily News is generally seen as politically midway between the two other major New York City dailies, the more liberal New York Times, and the more conservative New York Post, though tending more in the direction of liberalism. Typically, its editorial page espouses a liberal position on social issues like abortion, while advocating more conservative positions on crime and foreign policy, including pro-Israel and anti-Castro editorials and columns. This was not always the case, as the Daily News, during its partnership with the Chicago Tribune, usually shared the Tribune's staunch conservative viewpoint, while the Post was considered a liberal newspaper. The two papers had reversed their ideologies by the late 1970s, largely due to changing city demographics and the purchase of the Post by Rupert Murdoch. Style and reputationThough its competition with the Post has occasionally led the Daily News to engage in some of the more sensationalist tactics of its competitor, it is still respected in the industry for the quality of its contributors (which past and present have included Jimmy Breslin, Pete Hamill, William Reel, David Hinckley, Mike Lupica, Juan Gonzalez, Ronan Keenan, John Melia, and Chris Allbritton), its solid coverage of the city, and its photos. Its Voice of the People letters section (which often allows letter writers, called Voicers, to respond to other letter writers) is seen as a good way to read the pulse of the city. Notable front pagesImage:Nydailynews newt.jpg The CRY BABY cover in 1995 illustrated by Ed Murawinski. Image:Ford to City.PNG The Drop Dead cover in 1975 The News' is known for its often colorful and blunt front page headlines, several of which have achieved iconic status. Famous headlines from the Daily News include:
Daily PlanetImage:2006 12 26 and 27 Connecticut and New York 020.jpg Looking west down 42nd street, the Daily News building is on the left. When Superman makes his public debut, the Planet carries the headline, "CAPED WONDER STUNS CITY," while Planet editor Perry White compares it to the other papers in Metropolis, which also seem to mirror the New York papers:
See also
References
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