EXTRA! EXTRA!Aiming at Younger Audiences
New tabloid breed is more than screaming headlines but could they be blueprint to the future?Aiming at Younger Audiences
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Principal Newsmaker Age Group--All Stories
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Youth-Tabloids
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The Examiner
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Broad-sheets
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Total
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| Child (Under 18) |
2%
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3%
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5%
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3%
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| Young Adult (18-35) |
16
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15
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10
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14
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| Middle Age (36-60) |
19
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15
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18
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17
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| Elderly (61 or older) |
7
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7
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6
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7
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| Don't Know |
5
|
3
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3
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4
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| None |
52
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57
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58
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55
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Broadsheets even went a little younger. They were more likely to write a story around a child under 18—5% versus 2% for the newspaper tabloids—such as the Boston Globe’s story on local mid-teens who spend their summer evenings on the streets watching neighborhood drug addicts rather than taking part in organized programs.
Beyond just highlighting youth in the news, we looked at the extent to which the papers also tried to make some explicit connection about why the story might matter to 18-35 year old readers. Here the free tabloids and the broadsheets were similar, with neither offering much direct connection at all. Just 8% of these tabloids and 9% of broadsheet stories clearly tied the story to youth.
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Youth Impact
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Youth-Tabloids
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The Examiner
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Broad-sheets
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Total
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| Youth Impact Explicit |
8%
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2%
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9%
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7%
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| Youth Impact Implied |
7
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7
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5
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6
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| No Youth Impact |
85
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92
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85
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87
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In other words, despite the birth of the new commuter tabloids as a way to make readers out of the young, the content, at least of the papers in Boston, Washington, DC and Dallas, suggests the differences may be more in design than in the way the news itself is covered. There is little effort to explain what various news events—be it a Supreme Court nomination, the local education bill or even technology advancements—mean for young people.
This may have other implications. Since the tabloids appear to be staffed largely by editors who are taking wire copy and trimming it down, they may be in a limited position to explore other ways to attract new readers. They may not have the capacity to experiment with what other kinds of news the traditional sources are not covering; to expand the type of sources referenced in stories; to assign, and craft stories in a way that explores the implications of the news on younger readers. In short, they may be doing less than they might otherwise to experiment with ways in which narrative structure, language or other narrative elements might attract younger readers.
This may explain the Scarborough findings that rather than attract new readers or especially young ones, the commuter tabloids are adding something to the experience of existing readers.
(7) “Carnegie Reporter,” Carnegie Corporation of New York, Volume 3/No. 2, Spring 2005)
(8) Pew Research Center for The People & The Press, “Pew Research Biennial News Consumption Survey,” June 8, 2004
(9) “A Bright Future for Newspapers,” Paul Farhi, American Journalism Review, June/July 2005.