News and Modern Media
Boomers Millennials
Boomers and News
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Millennials and News
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News Habits
Fill- Access news to pass the time when moving from one place to another.
Fix- Access news constantly, prompted by a general need and state of distraction.
Indulge- Make time to enjoy the news as a break from everything else in the day.
Invest- Read the news regularly to get an in-depth perspective on stories.
Track-Access news to pass the time when moving from one place to another.
Fix- Access news constantly, prompted by a general need and state of distraction.
Indulge- Make time to enjoy the news as a break from everything else in the day.
Invest- Read the news regularly to get an in-depth perspective on stories.
Track-Access news to pass the time when moving from one place to another.
Common Craft
How do newspapers use semantic codes to attract a reader?
- Masthead – Title panel of newspaper
- Caption – Brief text underneath image describing it.
- Headline – Phrase that summarises the main point of the article.
- Pull Quote – Quote taken from main article and used to engage readers at a glance.
- Classified Ad – Advertising that uses text and graphics exclusively.
- Skyline – An information panel on the front page that tells the reader about other stories in the newspaper.
- Stand First – Block of text that introduces the story, usually written in a different font size/style.
- Byline – The line above the story that gives author’s name, job, location, date etc.
- Body Text – Text that makes up the main content of the article.
- Standalone – Picture story that can stand alone on the front page or lead to an article inside.
- Anchorage – applying meaning to an image through the use of text.
- House Style – Established style of newspaper company.
Tabloid VS Broadsheet
- Masthead – Title panel of newspaper
- Caption – Brief text underneath image describing it.
- Headline – Phrase that summarises the main point of the article.
- Pull Quote – Quote taken from main article and used to engage readers at a glance.
- Classified Ad – Advertising that uses text and graphics exclusively.
- Skyline – An information panel on the front page that tells the reader about other stories in the newspaper.
- Stand First – Block of text that introduces the story, usually written in a different font size/style.
- Byline – The line above the story that gives author’s name, job, location, date etc.
- Body Text – Text that makes up the main content of the article.
- Standalone – Picture story that can stand alone on the front page or lead to an article inside.
- Anchorage – applying meaning to an image through the use of text.
- House Style – Established style of newspaper company.
Broadsheet newspaper (e.g. The Times):
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Tabloid newspaper (e.g. Daily Mirror):
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