Generated by GPT-5-mini| Daily News | |
|---|---|
| Name | Daily News |
| Type | Daily newspaper |
| Format | Broadsheet/tabloid |
| Founded | 19th century |
| Owners | Media conglomerate |
| Publisher | Publishing company |
| Editor | Editor-in-chief |
| Headquarters | Major city |
| Language | English |
Daily News Daily News is a widely circulated English-language newspaper with roots in 19th-century print journalism, comparable in influence to publications such as The New York Times, The Guardian, Le Monde, The Washington Post, and The Times (London). Over decades the title has intersected with events like the Watergate scandal, the Great Depression, the Cold War, the First World War, and the Second World War, shaping coverage practices parallel to outlets such as Chicago Tribune, Los Angeles Times, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, El País, and Asahi Shimbun. Its institutional links extend to press associations including the American Society of News Editors, the International Press Institute, the European Newspaper Publishers' Association, and awards like the Pulitzer Prize, the British Press Awards, and the Edinburgh International Book Festival prizes.
The newspaper's origins trace to mergers and competitive rivalries among publishers in the era of Joseph Pulitzer and William Randolph Hearst, influenced by technological advances such as the rotary press, the linotype, and the expansion of telegraph networks like Western Union. Early proprietors negotiated with financiers from firms like J.P. Morgan and Barings Bank while recruiting editors with backgrounds at Harper's Weekly, Punch (magazine), and The Spectator. During the interwar period it covered crises involving the League of Nations and the Spanish Civil War and reported on diplomatic conferences including Treaty of Versailles discussions and the Munich Agreement. Postwar decades saw interactions with media conglomerates including News Corporation and Gannett Company, editorial shifts following the influence of broadcasters such as BBC, CBS News, and NBC News, and adaptation to regulatory frameworks modeled on the First Amendment to the United States Constitution and press codes debated at the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization.
Physical production historically relied on partnerships with print unions like the National Union of Journalists and transport networks such as British Rail and Amtrak for distribution. The paper established regional bureaus in cities including New York City, London, Paris, Tokyo, Mumbai, Sydney, and Johannesburg while contracting with syndicates like Associated Press, Reuters, and Agence France-Presse for international dispatches. Circulation strategies echoed models used by USA Today, Metro (British newspaper), Bild, Corriere della Sera, and Süddeutsche Zeitung including street vending, subscriptions through companies like Experian and Royal Mail, and retail partnerships with chains such as Walmart and WHSmith.
Editorial leadership typically includes an editor-in-chief, managing editors, bureau chiefs, and section editors with career paths through outlets like The Atlantic, The Economist, Time (magazine), Newsweek, and Forbes. Sections commonly mirror formats used by Financial Times and Bloomberg News featuring politics with coverage of Parliament of the United Kingdom, United States Congress, and European Commission; business reporting tied to companies like Apple Inc., Tesla, Inc., ExxonMobil, and Goldman Sachs; culture desks reviewing works from William Shakespeare, James Joyce, Pablo Picasso, and Beyoncé Knowles; sports bureaus covering events such as the FIFA World Cup, the Olympic Games, the Wimbledon Championships, and the Super Bowl; and opinion pages showcasing columnists influenced by figures like Walter Lippmann and Anna Politkovskaya. Investigative projects have paralleled exposés by The Washington Post on Watergate scandal-style reporting and collaborations with non-profits such as ProPublica and International Consortium of Investigative Journalists.
The outlet's digital pivot involved partnerships with platforms like Google, Facebook, Twitter, Apple News, and YouTube, adopting content management systems resembling those at WordPress VIP and Drupal and integrating analytics from Chartbeat and Comscore. Online initiatives included multimedia storytelling akin to projects by The New Yorker, podcast series in the manner of Serial (podcast), interactive graphics inspired by The New York Times's Snow Fall feature, and subscription strategies comparable to The New York Times Company's paywall and The Washington Post's Arc Publishing deployment. Cybersecurity responses referenced incidents similar to breaches at Sony Pictures Entertainment and countermeasures advocated by agencies like National Cyber Security Centre (UK) and Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency.
Audience demographics overlap with readership profiles studied by firms such as Nielsen (company), Pew Research Center, Ipsos, and Kantar Media, showing engagement across age cohorts frequenting markets in Manhattan, Westminster, La Défense, Shinjuku, Nariman Point, and Surry Hills. Circulation figures have been benchmarked against competitors including The Wall Street Journal, Daily Telegraph, Hindustan Times, Globe and Mail, and Toronto Star, with subscription revenue, advertising deals with agencies like WPP, Omnicom Group, and Publicis Groupe, and sponsored content partnerships modeled on arrangements with brands such as Nike, Coca-Cola, and Samsung.
Controversies have echoed disputes seen at News of the World over phone hacking scandal-style allegations, editorial endorsements comparable to debates over New York Post endorsements, libel cases like those involving Hustler Magazine and Rolling Stone, and regulatory scrutiny by bodies such as the Federal Communications Commission and the Press Complaints Commission. Criticism has emerged from journalists linked to unions like National Union of Journalists and watchdogs including Reporters Without Borders, Committee to Protect Journalists, FactCheck.org, and Media Matters for America regarding bias, sourcing practices, and transparency in sponsored content. Legal challenges have referenced precedents set in cases like New York Times Co. v. Sullivan and Associated Press v. All Headline News Corp..
Category:Newspapers