What Is a Newspaper?

Daily News

A newspaper is a publication issued daily or at other regular intervals and containing news, articles, features, and advertisements of interest to the public. The paper is usually printed on newspaper stock, but may also be published electronically. Forerunners of modern newspapers appeared as early as ancient Rome, and more or less regular publications using movable type were produced in Europe by the end of the 17th century.

In the United States, the term newspaper often refers to a major metropolitan daily newspaper with a large circulation. Traditionally, the newspaper business has been highly profitable, but competition from other media sources has caused advertising revenue to decline and market penetration to fall. The decline in market penetration has led to many newspapers closing, and others have been merged or acquired by larger media conglomerates.

The New York City edition of the Daily News has been an important source of information about the city and the world for generations. The newspaper has won numerous awards for its journalism, and its staff has included notable writers, columnists, and editorial writers. The paper is known for its large and prominent photographs, intense city news coverage, celebrity gossip, classified ads, comics, and a sports section. The New York City edition of the Daily News is one of the most widely circulated newspapers in the United States, and it has been named newspaper of the year several times.

In addition to national and local news, the New York Daily News includes a large sports department with live coverage of major events. The paper also covers politics, arts and entertainment, lifestyle, and the city’s neighborhoods. The newspaper has a strong focus on local news, and is particularly known for its extensive coverage of crime in the city.

In recent years, the New York Daily News has been in financial trouble. Its owner, Mortimer B. Zuckerman, sold the newspaper to Tribune Publishing (later Tronc) for $1 in 2017. The sale allowed the newspaper to avoid bankruptcy. The New York Daily News won the Pulitzer Prize for Public Service in 2015, along with ProPublica, for exposing the police abuse of eviction rules. The newspaper’s downtown Manhattan headquarters, at 220 East 42nd Street near Second Avenue, is an architectural landmark designed by John Mead Howells and Raymond Hood. The building was used as the model for the Daily Planet building in the first two Superman films. A wooden bench in the lobby of the building is a popular place for former Daily News staffers to sit. The newspaper relocated to a new building on West 33rd Street in 1995.