The British Press
The British Press
The British
press consists of several kinds of newspapers.
The national
papers are the ones sold all over the country, with a large circulation, giving
general news.
There are two
main types of national paper - the "popular" papers and the
"quality" papers. The popular papers are smaller in size (they are
tabloid size), with lots of pictures, big headlines and short articles. They
are easy to read and often contain little real information. They give much
space to opinions. They usually have "human interest" stories -
stories about ordinary people and events. Examples of this type of newspapers
are "The Daily Mail". "The Sun", etc.
"Quality" papers appeal to the more serious reader, who
wants to read about politics and foreign affairs. These papers such as
"The Daily Telegraph", "The Guardian" are bigger in size
(they are called "broad-sheets"), with longer articles and a wider
coverage of events. They have different pages for home news, foreign affairs,
features articles, fashion, business, sport and so on.
People in
Britain buy more papers on Sunday than on weekdays. The Sunday papers have a
higher circulation than the dailies. As with the dailies, there are both popular
and quality Sunday newspapers. The quality ones have different sections and a
colour magazine (usually full of advertisements)
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