Newspaper The First Medium Lesson 1
Newspaper The First Medium Lesson 1
Newspaper The First Medium Lesson 1
Newspapers, more than books, serve as the chronicle of daily life in our society, providing
regular coverage of events, both historic and mundane, and allowing us to learn about current
events outside of our community and country. While radio, television, and online news serve
that function for most people now, newspapers were the first mass medium to collect and
disseminate such information. The first regularly (weekly) published newspaper emerged in
Paris in 1631, and others popped up in Florence, Rome, and Madrid over the next few decades.
The first daily newspaper was published in Leipzig, Germany, in 1660. In just a little over a
hundred years, in the late 1700s, large European cities like London and Paris had around two
hundred newspapers, some published daily, some weekly, and some at other intervals. Not
surprisingly, literacy rates also increased during this time (Poe, 2011). Also around 1700,
newspapers were published in the colonies that would later become the United States. The
following timeline marks some of the historical developments in newspaper publishing from
colonial times to the Internet age.
Timeline of Events in Newspaper Publishing (Breig, 2012; Campbell, Martin, & Fabos, 2007)
1690. First newspaper in North America is published in Boston. Due to its anti-British
tone, it is banned after the first issue is printed.
1704. The Boston News-Letter is the first newspaper in the colonies to be published
regularly. Its content is not timely, since its focus on European events means the information is
weeks to months old by the time it is published.
1721. James Franklin, Benjamin Franklin’s older brother, publishes the New England
Courant in Boston, which caters to business and political leaders.
1729. Benjamin Franklin runs the Pennsylvania Gazette, which is well respected for the
quality of its contents and also generates revenue through advertisements.
1784. The first daily newspaper is published in the United States—The Pennsylvania
Packet and Daily Advertiser.[2]
1833. Benjamin Day, founder of the New York Sun, changes the pricing, distribution, and
content of newspapers by cutting the cost of the paper to one penny per issue and selling them
individually on the streets and through vendors rather than through subscriptions, which are cost
prohibitive for many people. The Sun focuses more on “human-interest stories,” which attracts
readers and begins a surge of other competing “penny papers” using a similar model.
1848. The Associated Press is formed when six New York City papers agree to share
incoming information from dispatched reporters and other news sources far away. The news is
transmitted through telegraph and other cable/wire services—the label “wire service” or “news
wire” is still used today.
Late 1800s. Many newspapers practice “yellow journalism” to be competitive, meaning
they publish sensational news items like scandals and tragedies and use attention-getting (in
terms of size and wording) headlines to attract customers. The New York Times begins to
distance itself from yellow journalism and helps to usher in a period of more factual and rigorous
reporting and a split between objective and tabloid publications that begins in the early 1900s
and continues today.
1955. The Village Voice is published in Greenwich Village, New York, which marks the
beginning of the rise of underground and alternative newspapers.
1980. The Columbus Dispatch is the first newspaper to publish content online.
1982.USA Today is launched, which challenges long-standing newspaper publishing
norms and adopts a more visual style. The size, layout, use of color and images, and content is
designed to attract a new newspaper audience, one used to watching television news.
1998. The Drudge Report, an online gossip and news aggregation site, gains national
attention when it breaks a story about Newsweek magazine delaying the publication of a story
about then-president Clinton’s affair with intern Monica Lewinsky (Rogers, 2012). Although
online news sites have been around for years, this marks the beginning of the rise of Internet-
based news gathering and reporting by people with little to no training in or experience with
journalism. Traditional journalists criticize this practice, but such news outlets attract millions of
readers and begin to change the way we think about how news is gathered and reported and
how we get our news.
Newspapers have faced many challenges in recent decades—namely, the increase of Internet-
based news, leading to a major decline in revenue and readers. In recent years major papers
like the Rocky Mountain News have gone out of business completely, and others like the Seattle
Post Intelligencer have switched to online-only formats. Additionally, major newspapers like
the Chicago Sun Times and the Minneapolis Star Tribune have declared bankruptcy due to
heavy debt burdens (Grabowicz, 2012). To deal with these financial issues, papers have laid off
employees, cut resources for reporters, closed international bureaus, eliminated rural or distant
delivery, reduced frequency of publication, and contracted out or partnered on content. This last
strategy received national attention recently when it was found out that hundreds of newspapers
were using the services of a company called Journatic to create hyperlocal content for them to
publish (Sheffield, 2012). Hyperlocal content includes information like real-estate transactions,
obituaries, school lunch menus, high school sports team statistics, and police activities, which
are a considerable drain on already strained newsrooms. However, readers and media critics
were surprised to learn that Journatic was paying people in the Philippines to write this content
and then publish it under fake names. After news of this spread, many papers announced that
they would go back to generating this content using their own resources (Folkenflik, 2012).