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'The cover is like a piece of art in itself': 32 years of Guardian Weekend magazine | Magazines

'The cover is like a piece of art in itself': 32 years of Guardian Weekend magazine | Magazines
theguardian.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from theguardian.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

United-kingdom , Italy , Berkshire , United-kingdom-general- , United-states , New-zealand , France , America , British , David-bailey , Rebecca-atkinson , Gordon-burn

The changing art of the subeditor: 'You had to read the type upside down' | Newspapers

The changing art of the subeditor: 'You had to read the type upside down' | Newspapers
theguardian.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from theguardian.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

New-york , United-states , Sydney , New-south-wales , Australia , United-kingdom , Manchester , London , City-of , Yevgeny-yevtushenko , Jay-sivell , Peter-preston

British media baron could take the Daily Mail private

British media baron could take the Daily Mail private
kitv.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from kitv.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

New-york , United-states , United-kingdom , Washington , London , City-of , Britain , Paul-zwillenberg , Peter-preston , Hanna-ziady , Jeff-bezos , Paul-dacre

Rothermere family could take the Daily Mail private

Rothermere family could take the Daily Mail private
cnn.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from cnn.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

New-york , United-states , United-kingdom , Washington , London , City-of , Britain , Paul-zwillenberg , Peter-preston , Jeff-bezos , Paul-dacre , Jonathan-harmsworth

British media baron could take the Daily Mail private

British media baron could take the Daily Mail private
ktvz.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from ktvz.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

New-york , United-states , United-kingdom , Washington , London , City-of , Britain , Paul-zwillenberg , Peter-preston , Hanna-ziady , Jeff-bezos , Paul-dacre

Harold Jackson obituary

Chief foreign correspondent of the Guardian in the 1960s, features editor and chief systems editor of the paper in the 80s

Vietnam , Republic-of , Otterden , Kent , United-kingdom , Germany , Cairo , Al-qahirah , Egypt , United-states , Washington , Lebanon

In defence of Peter Preston's handling of the Sarah Tisdall case | Letters


In defence of Peter Preston’s handling of the Sarah Tisdall case
The editor’s decision to return the leaked documents was made after agonised deliberations and much consultation with staff, writes the Guardian’s former deputy editor
David McKie
Sarah Tisdall, a clerical officer at the Foreign Office, was jailed in 1984 for breaching the Official Secrets Act after leaking government documents to the Guardian. Photograph: Graham Turner/The Guardian
Sarah Tisdall, a clerical officer at the Foreign Office, was jailed in 1984 for breaching the Official Secrets Act after leaking government documents to the Guardian. Photograph: Graham Turner/The Guardian

Sarah-tisdall , Peter-preston , Scott-trust , பீட்டர்-ப்ரெஸ்டந் , ஸ்காட்-நம்பிக்கை ,

200 years of newsroom style: what journalists wear to work


Composite: Guardian Design/The Guardian
Guardian journalists on the role of their outfits in their reporting, and the importance of pockets
Sat 8 May 2021 03.00 EDT
What do you imagine journalists wear to work? Three-piece vanilla silk suits, like Tom Wolfe? Robert Redford’s Wasp-y needlecord in All the President’s Men? Or something uniquely earth-tone like Paddy Considine’s “Guardian” reporter in The Bourne Ultimatum?
The late journalist Betty Jerman, who joined the paper in 1951 and worked simultaneously as secretary and columnist, once said of her “rather shabby” male colleagues: “You had the feeling they weren’t terribly interested in looking smart. They were more interested in what they were writing.”

Afghanistan , Iraq , Hungary , United-kingdom , Moldova , Kosovo , Greece , Edinburgh , City-of , Moldovan , Duncan-campbell , Caroline-davies

'It was exhilarating': how the Guardian went digital – and global

A crystal ball was – at least at the outset – not required. A trip to the US in 1993 to “see the internet” left me in no doubt: the days of the daily printed newspaper were numbered. Once people learned about this thing they were calling the “world wide web”, there would be no going back. It might take 10 years, it might take 50, but it was clear that the future was digital. If that much seemed obvious, everything else was a mist of...

Colorado , United-states , New-york , Boulder , Australia , United-kingdom , Manchester , London , City-of , Angela-merkel , Nick-clegg , King-cross

From slavery to BLM: the ups and downs of 200 years of Guardian race reporting


Last modified on Thu 6 May 2021 03.37 EDT
Fifty years ago, as the Guardian marked its 150th birthday, the then editor, Alastair Hetherington, reflected on the changes he had seen since he joined the paper 21 years earlier. Intriguingly, he singled out social forces striving to upset “racial harmony”, and promised resistance.
But in the same 1971 edition, a gallery of images of the senior staff showed how far the paper had to go. All men. All white. In its first 150 years, the number of journalists of colour employed by the paper could be counted on the fingers of one hand.
Unsurprisingly for a 200-year-old institution, the Guardian has not always got it right in terms of race coverage. An early article from 1823 regretted the “cruelty and injustice of negro slavery”, but also noted that “amongst all the obvious disadvantages of slave labour, there is none more striking than its tendency to deteriorate the soil”. That set the tone for decades of coverage that often failed to empathise: during the US civil war, the Manchester Guardian was so concerned about the cotton trade that underpinned it that it sided with the slave-owning south.

Notting-hill , Kensington-and-chelsea , United-kingdom , Australia , Windrush , Gloucestershire , Yemen , New-cross , Lewisham , London , City-of , Sri-lanka