Welcome to SportsJournalists.com, a friendly forum for discussing all things sports and journalism.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register for a free account to get access to the following site features:We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!
From a journalism standpoint, I'd like to know what people think of the front page of The New York Times from May 24, listing the names of those who died in the U.S. from the coronavirus.
Did you break your hip hiking up your leg to shirt on a pretty poignant journalistic effort?Except one of the names is actually a murder victim, and another has an incorrect hometown -- which calls the accuracy of the entire project into question.
Also, the online version lists all the local papers from whose features The Times cribbed... but those aren't named accurately. There are quite a few given a "The" where it doesn't belong. (That seemed to be the default!) I'm hoping all the links are correct, but I also noticed they just go to the homepage -- not the individual memorial story.
The Trump golfing replies all over social media fix the obvious design flaws, which W_n_lw_y doesn't care about.Hot mess. Besides the accuracy questions raised above, its too gray, breaks most rules. Was clearly designed to win an award or win Twitter over serving a reader.
Then again those rules were designed to sell papers. No one buys papers anymore. Winning Twitter is the new way to create buzz over a good photo or layout that directs the eyes to various stories; so maybe those old rules don't apply
Hot mess. Besides the accuracy questions raised above, its too gray, breaks most rules. Was clearly designed to win an award or win Twitter over serving a reader.
Then again those rules were designed to sell papers. No one buys papers anymore. Winning Twitter is the new way to create buzz over a good photo or layout that directs the eyes to various stories; so maybe those old rules don't apply