The Boston Globe (sometimes abbreviated as The Globe ) is an American-founded daily newspaper based in Boston, Massachusetts , since it was created by Charles H. Taylor in 1872. The newspaper has won a total of 26 Pulitzer Prizes per year by 2016, and with a total payment circulation of 245,824 from September 2015 to August 2016, this is the 25th most-read newspaper in United States of America. The Boston Globe is Boston's oldest and largest daily newspaper.
Founded in the 19th century, this paper is mainly controlled by Irish Catholic interests before being sold to Charles H. Taylor and his family. After being held personally until 1973, it was sold to The New York Times in 1993 for $ 1.1 billion, making it one of the most expensive print purchases in US history. Historically, newspapers have been noted as "one of the nation's most prestigious newspapers," and purchased in 2013 by the Boston Red Sox and Liverpool F.C. owner of John W. Henry for $ 70 million from The New York Times Company.
Newspaper coverage of the 2001-2003 Roman Catholic sex abuse scandal gained international media attention and became the basis of the 2015 American drama, Highlights . The film revolves around the Boston Globe Spotlight Team , an investigative reporting team tasked with uncovering the ins and outs of a single topic or story.
The main print rival The Boston Globe is Boston Herald , however, The Globe is more than twice the size of the Boston Herald . In 2013, The Globe prints and distributes the entire press run of its rivals. The editor-in-chief, otherwise known as the editor, of the paper is Brian McGrory who took over the helm in December 2012.
Video The Boston Globe
Histori
The Boston Globe was founded in 1872 by six Boston businessmen, including Charles H. Taylor and Eben Jordan, who together invested $ 150,000 ($ 3,064,167 today). The first edition was published on March 4, 1872, and it cost four cents. Early in the morning, it started the Sunday edition in 1877, which absorbed the Boston bwl rivals bundle in 1892. In 1878, The Boston Globe began afternoon edition called The Boston Evening Globe , which ceased publication in 1979. In the 1890s, The Boston Globe has become a bastion of defense , with editorial staff dominated by Irish Catholics.
In 1964, Tom Winship succeeded his father, Larry Winship, as editor. The younger Winship transforms the Globe from plain local paper into a regional paper of national distinctions. He served as editor until 1984, during which time the paper won a dozen Pulitzer Prizes, the first in the history of the newspaper.
The Boston Globe was a private company until 1973 when it went public with the name Affiliated Publications. It continues to be managed by the descendants of Charles H. Taylor. In 1993, The New York Times Company purchased a $ 1.1 billion Affiliate Publication, making The Boston Globe a wholly owned subsidiary of The New York Times > ' parent.
The Jordan and Taylor families received substantial New York Times Company shares, but the last Taylor family member has left management.
Boston.com, the online edition of The Boston Globe , was launched on the World Wide Web in 1995. Consistently ranked among the top ten American newspaper websites, has won numerous national awards and took two regional Emmy Awards in 2009 for his video work.
Under editor-in-chief Martin Baron and then Brian McGrory, The Globe shifted away from international news coverage supporting Boston's regional news. Globe reporter Michael Rezendes, Matt Carroll, Sacha Pfeiffer and Walter Robinson and editor of Ben Bradlee Jr. is an instrumental part of the disclosure of the Roman Catholic Church sex abuse scandal in 2001-2003, especially in relation to the Massachusetts churches.. They were awarded the Pulitzer Prize for their work, one of several papers received for their investigative journalism, and their work was dramatized in the 2015 Film Award winning film Highlight , named after the in-depth investigation division.
The Boston Globe is credited with allowing Peter Gammons to start the Note section in baseball, which has become a mainstay in all major national newspapers. In 2004, Gammons was voted the 56th recipient of the J. G. Taylor Spink Award for extraordinary baseball writing, awarded by BBWAA, and awarded at the Baseball Hall of Fame on July 31, 2005.
In 2007, Charlie Savage, whose report on the use of the signing statement of President Bush became national news, won the Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting.
The Boston Globe is consistently ranked first in American journalism. Time magazine enrolled it as one of the top ten best daily newspapers of the US in 1974 and 1984, and Globe tied for sixth in a national survey of editors who voted "America's Best" Letters news "in Columbia Journalism Review in 1999.
The Boston Globe has 28 blogs covering topics including Boston sports, local politics, and blogs composed of writings from newspaper opinion writers.
On April 2, 2009, The New York Times Company threatened to close the paper if its union does not approve a cost savings of $ 20,000,000. Some cost savings include reducing union employees 'salaries by 5%, terminating pension contributions, terminating certain employees' tenure. The Boston Globe removes the equivalent of fifty full-time jobs; in between buy-outs and layoffs, it wiped out most of the part-time employees in the editorial section. However, on the morning of May 5, 2009, the New York Times Company announced it had reached a tentative agreement with the Boston Newspaper Guild, which represented most of the editorial staff 'Editorial Globe'/span> range, to get the concession he requested. Three other major guilds of the newspaper had approved a concession on May 3, 2009, after The New York Times Company threatened to give a 60-day notice to the government that it was intended to close the paper. Although the deductions helped "significantly" improve its financial performance in October of that year, the Globe holding company indicated that it was considering strategic alternatives to the paper, but did not plan to sell it. In September 2011, The Boston Globe launched a special subscription-based website at bostonglobe.com.
In February 2013, The New York Times Company announced that it would sell New England Media Group, which includes Globe Ã,; bids received by six parties, including John Gormally (owner of WGGB-TV in Springfield, Massachusetts), other groups including former Globe publisher members, the Taylor family, and the Boston Red Sox. the main proprietor John W. Henry, who bid paper through the New England Sports Network (majority owned by Fenway Sports Group with Boston Bruins). However, after the NESN group stopped running to buy the paper, Henry made a separate offer to buy the The Globe in July 2013. On October 24, 2013, it took ownership of The Globe purchase price of $ 70 million. On January 30, 2014, Henry named himself a publisher and named Mike Sheehan, a former prominent Boston advertising executive, to become CEO. In January 2017, Doug Franklin replaced Mike Sheehan as CEO, then Franklin resigned after six months in that position, in July 2017, as a result of a strategic conflict with the owner Henry.
In July 2016, the 815,000-square-foot headquarters located in Dorchester was sold to unknown buyers at an undisclosed price. The Globe moved its operations in June 2017 to Myles Standish Industrial Park in Taunton, Massachusetts. Also in June 2017, Globe moved its headquarters to Exchange Place in the Financial District of Boston.
Maps The Boston Globe
Editorial page
At The Boston Globe , as is common in the news industry, editorial pages are separate from news operations. The editorial represents the official view of The Boston Globe as a community institution. The publisher has the right to veto editorial and usually determine political support for high office. Ellen Clegg, an old Globe journalist and former chief spokesperson for the newspaper, named editor of the Editorial Page in 2015.
Describing the Boston Globe's political position in 2001, former editor of the editorial page Renà © à © e Loth told the Boston University alumni magazine:
The Globe has a long tradition as a progressive institution, and especially on social issues. We are a pro-choice; we oppose the death penalty; us for gay rights. But if people read us carefully, they will find that in all other sets of problems, we are not jolting. We are for charter schools; us for a number of business-supported tax breaks. We are much more nuanced and subtle than a fair liberal stereotype against him.
Magazine
Appears in the Sunday newspaper almost every week is The Boston Globe Magazine . By 2018, Veronica Chao is the editor.
On October 23, 2006, The Boston Globe announced the publication of the New England Design: Home Magazine and Splendid Park . This large magazine is published six times per year.
Contributors
- Robin Abrahams writes "Miss Conduct" (see below)
- Veronica Chao , Editor
- Neil Swidey , author staff
- Tina Sutton , writing "The Clothes We Wear"
- Adam Ried , write food related articles and recipes
- Meredith Goldstein , write a Love Letter suggestion column â â¬
- Melissa Schorr editing Dinner with Cupid matchmaking column
Regular features
- Editor's Note : notes related to one feature in the week's magazine
- Mail : reader correspondence
- Q/A : mini-interview with local people
- Large Deals : recent transaction profiles
- Stories From The City â ⬠: a moving story from Boston and elsewhere
- Clothes We Wear : style columns
- Miss Behavior : a suggestion column that focuses primarily on good behavior and propriety.
- The Globe Puzzle : crossword
- Coupling : essays on social chemistry, usually related to one's love life The
- Sunday Idea section displays reporting and commenting on ideas, people, books, and trends that shake the intellectual world.
Bostonian of the Year
Every year in December since 2004, the magazine chose Bostonian of the Year . Previous winners include Red Sox general manager Theo Epstein (2004), retired judge and Big Dig Edward Ginsburg (2005), governor Deval Patrick (2006), founder and CEO of American Environmental Assistance Foundation Bruce Marks (2007), NBA champion Paul Pierce (2008), professor Elizabeth Warren (2009), Republican politician Scott Brown (2010), US attorney Carmen Ortiz and executive director ArtsEmerson Robert Orchard (2011), Olympic gold medalist Aly Raisman and Kayla Harrison (2012), three people near Boston Marathon bombings, Dan Marshall, Natalie Stavas, and Larry Hittinger (2013), Market Basket Employees (2014), and neuropathologist Ann McKee (2017).
Pulitzer Prizes
Publisher
Contributors
Attend
Past
Controversy
In 1998, columnist Patricia Smith was forced to resign after it was discovered that he had composed people and quotes in several of his columns. In August of that year, columnist Mike Barnicle was found to have copied the material for columns from George Carlin's book, Brain Droppings . He is suspended for this offense, and his past columns are reviewed. The Boston Globe editor found that Barnicle had composed a story about two cancer patients, and the Barnicle was forced to resign.
In 2004, the Globe apologized for printing graphic images represented by articles as showing US soldiers raping Iraqi women during the Iraq war. The photos have been found by other news organizations to come from internet pornography sites.
In the spring of 2005, The Boston Globe recalled a story depicting a seal hunting event near Halifax, Nova Scotia which took place on April 12, 2005. Written by freelancer Barbara Stewart, a former Staff New York Times, the article describes the specific number of boats involved in the hunt and graphically depicts the killing of seals and the accompanying protests. In fact, the weather delayed the hunt, which had not started on the day the story was filed, proving that the details were made.
Website
The Boston Globe manages two distinct main websites: BostonGlobe.com is a customer-supported site with paywall and printable content; and Boston.com, one of the first regional news portals, is supported by advertising. Between September 2011 and March 2014, Globe gradually recalled the story written by Globe journalist from Boston.com, making the site increasingly separate. BostonGlobe.com is designed to emphasize a content-focused premium experience and mimic the visual appearance of The Boston Globe's newspaper; this site is one of the first major websites to use responsive design that automatically adjusts its layout to the screen size of the device. Boston.com follows in 2014. Both sites are intended for different readers; while Boston.com became the target of "casual" readers and local content, the newly targeted Boston Globe website to the audiences themselves.
In 2012, the Society for News Design chose BostonGlobe.com as the best designed news site in the world.
Boston Globe Media Partners, which owns Globe , operates a number of websites covering specific subjects. Sites share many resources, such as office space, with Globe , but are often stamped separately from newspapers:
Boston.com
Boston.com is a regional website that offers news and information about the Boston, Massachusetts area.
Love Letter â ⬠<â â¬
Loveletters.boston.com is a love suggestion column run by Meredith Goldstein, columnist advice and entertainment reporter for The Boston Globe.
Real Estate
Realestate.boston.com is a regional website that offers advice on buying, selling, home improvement and design with expert advice, insider knowledge, the latest list to buy or rent, and windows in the world of luxury.
Crux
Crux was launched in September 2014. It includes the Catholic Church and many subjects concerning life as a Catholic in the United States, including a suggestion column. Crux features in-depth coverage of the Holy See and employs a Vatican correspondent in his six-person editorial staff. His editor-in-chief is John L. Allen Jr., a long-standing and well-known Vatican observer. At the end of March 2016, The Globe terminated its relationship with Crux , transferred ownership of the website to Crux staff. With Allen as the new editor, Crux receives sponsorship from Knights of Columbus and some Catholic dioceses.
BetaBoston
BetaBoston, launched in 2014, includes local technology industries in Boston, the suburbs and New England as a whole.
Stat
Stat, launched in 2015, covers healthcare, medicine and life sciences, with a particular focus on the biotechnology industry based in and around Boston. Stat employs journalists in Boston, Washington, D.C., New York City and San Francisco.
Globe Grant (charity)
The Boston Globe starts GRANT ( G lobe R eaders A nd N on - profit T ogether) in 2013 as a way to give back to the New England community. All Boston Globe customers receive GRANT vouchers during February, from $ 25 to $ 125 from GRANT dollars. The amount depends on the length of service as a customer; the longer a person has subscribed to Globe , the more GRANT funds are received. Anyone wishing to participate in the program can enter their respective customer IDs online and vote for their favorite New England non-profit. The GRANT dollars earned by any nonprofit can be redeemed for free ad space on The Boston Globe . Organizations typically use this ad space to promote events, raise funds, or just advertise. Every year, more and more nonprofits are recognized and given the opportunity to get free advertising space. In just three years, The Boston Globe donated more than $ 3 million ad space.
The top five nonprofit donations (2016)
- Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Inc./Jimmy Fund - $ 56,455
- Mass Audubon Society, Inc. - $ 44,020
- Planned Parenthood League of Mass, Inc. - $ 32,895
- Place Rosie, Inc. - $ 28930
- Greater Boston Food Bank, Inc. - $ 28005
See also
- The Boston Evening Transcript
- Boston Daily Advertiser
- Boston Herald
- Boston Journal
- The Boston Post
- Boston record
- WLVI, a Globe television station owned a half-ownership from 1966 to 1974
Notes and references
External links
- Official website
- Official website
- The Boston Globe archive (1872 to now)
- The Boston Globe in iTunes Preview
Source of the article : Wikipedia