
A tabloid is an industry term which refers to a smaller newspaper format per spread; to a weekly or semi-weekly alternative newspaper that focuses on local-interest stories and entertainment, often distributed free of charge (often in a smaller, tabloid-sized newspaper format); or to a newspaper that tends to emphasize sensational crime stories, gossip columns repeating scandalous innuendos about the personal lives of celebrities and sports stars, and other so-called "junk food news" (often in a smaller, tabloid-sized newspaper format). As the term "tabloid" has become synonymous with down-market newspapers in some areas, some small-format papers which claim a higher standard of journalism refer to themselves as "compact" newspapers instead.
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Tabloids Blog ng Bayan
Showbiz Tabloids links for 02-13-08 blogadeur.com: The ... Tabloids Blog ng Bayan is proudly powered by WordPress. Entries (RSS) and Comments (RSS) ...tabloids.blogadeur.com/Tabloids — Blogs, Pictures, and more on WordPress
NewsGush - Russell Resigns, Tabloids Triumph — 263 comments ... emmacdo wrote 3 weeks ago: The Sun Or a short piece on tabloids...wordpress.com/tag/tabloids/The tabloids they are a' bloggin' / Jossip
We're going to skip the Us Weekly blog, it's just like us! ... No related posts found. Tagged: Blogs, Celebs, Tabloids, Us Weekly. Scroll Posts ...www.jossip.com/the-tabloids-they-are-a-bloggin-20060308/Blog Posts Tagged: tabloids - New York Magazine
New York Magazine's daily coverage of Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, Staten Island, ... Fug Girls: Even the Tabloids Are Giving Up ...nymag.com/tags/tabloidsTundra Tabloids.: Finnish Blogger Gets Fined And Shut Down by Finnish ...
The influential Tundra Tabloids blog on Islamist radicalism in Scandinavia ... The Tundra Tabloids, a Scandinavian blog that publishes the funniest cartoons ...tundratabloid.blogspot.com/2008/01/finnish-blogger-gets-fine...
A tabloid is an industry term which refers to a smaller newspaper format per spread; to a weekly or semi-weekly alternative newspaper that focuses on local-interest stories and entertainment, often distributed free of charge (often in a smaller, tabloid-sized newspaper format); or to a newspaper that tends to emphasize sensational crime stories, gossip columns repeating scandalous innuendos about the personal lives of celebrities and sports stars, and other so-called "junk food news" (often in a smaller, tabloid-sized newspaper format). As the term "tabloid" has become synonymous with down-market newspapers in some areas, some small-format papers which claim a higher standard of journalism refer to themselves as "compact" newspapers instead.
The tabloid newspaper format is particularly popular in the United Kingdom where its page dimensions are roughly 17 by 11 inches (430 mm × 280 mm). Larger newspapers, traditionally associated with 'higher-quality' journalism, are called broadsheets though several British 'quality' papers have recently adopted the tabloid format. Another UK newspaper format is the Berliner, which is sized between the tabloid and the broadsheet and has been adopted by The Guardian and its sister paper The Observer.
History
The word "Tabloid" comes from the name given by the London based pharmaceutical company Burroughs Wellcome & Co. to the compressed tablets they marketed as "Tabloid" pills in the late 1880s Henry Wellcome the Sailesman from www.wellcome.ac.uk. Prior to compressed tablets medicine was usually taken in bulkier powder form. While Burroughs Wellcome & Co. were not the first to derive the technology to make compressed tablets, they were the most successful at marketing them, hence the popularity of the term 'tabloid' in popular culture. The connotation of tabloid was soon applied to other small items and to the "compressed" journalism that condensed stories into a simplified, easily-absorbed format. The label of "tabloid journalism" (1901) preceded the smaller sheet newspapers that contained it (1918).
An early pioneer of tabloid journalism was Alfred Harmsworth (1865–1922), who amassed a large publishing empire of halfpenny papers by rescuing failing stolid papers and transforming them to reflect the popular taste, which yielded him enormous profits. Harmsworth used his tabloids to influence public opinion, for example, by bringing down the wartime government of Prime Minister Herbert Henry Asquith in the Shell Crisis of 1915.
International use
Merge: date=November 2007
United States
This style of journalism and newspaper publishing has been exported to various other countries, including the United States. "A photographer's photographer" quote by First Lady Mrs. Warren G. Harding who stated the Edward Jackson's photograph of her was "the best photo ever taken." The photo ran on the entire front page of the February 5, 1921 New York Daily News.























