1. My favorite newspaper front page is probably "The outlet," because its a really good photo with the girl gearing up to swing a golf club. The photo caught her in her action, and it just makes the whole cover look nice.
2. The first paper that immediately grabbed my attention was the "twitter takes over" newspaper. This grabbed my attention because it has to do with social media, which is a big interest in my generation. The title makes us want to open and rad that article because Twitter interests us.
3. The headline that caught my attention was "FHS Twitter accounts have crossed the line" because this was what brought me to look inside the newspaper and so i immediately would want to read the article about it
4. On my favorite, there are 4 stories on the front page.
5. On most of the front pages, i noticed that there is one dominant photo and a few tiny ones. There is usually a lot of text, explaining some story or sort of like a table or contents, or talking about a person or group.
6. Some things that vary on the front pages on some of the newspapers is the size of the dominant photo, where the text is placed, and how many columns of writing there is.
7. Yes they were similar as they had a dominant photo, and a lot of text. But those newspapers were different because of where the texts and photos were placed.
Broadsheets Examples:
The Herald
The Highlander
Altitude
Tabloid:
Lakota East Park
The Roar
The Lance
NewsMagazine:
The Royal News
CR Washington
Westsidestory
Words:
Headline: words at he beginning of a passage meant to categorize and introduce
Subheadlines: smaller words after headline mean to elaborate on it
Lines: eye lines and lines are lines that draw the readers eye to the photos in the newspaper
Boxes: type that is framed in a border to give it prominence
Photos: pictures taken to insert into a newspaper based upon a theme
Teaser: a short note or item referring and promoting a news article
Flag: the printed title of a newspaper at the beginning of page
Folios: the name, date, and page # that appear at top of each page
Captions: text or headline with a picture or illustration
Stories: passages of text that usually accompany a photo explaining a theme
Bylines: authors name, which is printed at the beginning of an article
Jumps:continuing unfinished from one page to another
Story dividers:
Screens: used as a page break in the middle of a story
Infographics: visual image like a diagram used to represent data or information
Masthead/staff box: a listing of executives, circulation data, and staff and the nameplate title of the beginning of the first page
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