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Today (UK newspaper)

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Type Daily newspaper
Format Tabloid
Owner Eddy Shah/Lonrho/News International
Founded 4 March 1986
Ceased publication 17 November 1995
Headquarters Wapping, London

Today was a national newspaper in the United Kingdom, which existed for less than a decade (1986-95).

Contents

[edit] History

Today, with the American newspaper USA Today as inspiration, launched on Tuesday, 4 March 1986 with the front page headline, "Second Spy Inside GCHQ". At 18 pence, it was a middle-market tabloid, a rival to the long-established Daily Mail and Daily Express. It pioneered computer photosetting and full-colour offset printing at a time when national newspapers were still using Linotype machines and letterpress. The colour was initially crude, produced on equipment which had no facility for colour proofing, so the first view of the colour was on the finished product. However, it forced the conversion of all UK national newspapers to electronic production and colour printing. The newspaper's motto, hung in the newsroom, was "propa truth, not propaganda".

Launched by regional newspaper entrepreneur Eddy Shah, it was bought by Tiny Rowland's Lonrho within four months. (Shah would launch the short-lived, unsuccessful national tabloid The Post in 1988). Alastair Campbell was political editor and his partner, Fiona Millar was news editor. The newspaper began a sponsorship of the English Football League at the start of 1986-87, but withdrew after a season.Today was sold to Rupert Murdoch's News International in 1987.

Today ceased on Friday, 17 November 1995, the first long-running national newspaper title to fail since the Daily Sketch in 1971. The last edition's headline was "Goodbye. It's been great to know you", the editorial saying "... Now we are forced into silence by the granite and unforgiving face of the balance sheet...". Its offices are now used by one of News International's other papers, The Sun.

Richard Stott was editor when Today ceased publication; he died in July 2007. Other journalists at the close included Peter Prendergast (city editor), Anne Robinson (columnist), David McMaster (managing editor), Tony Banks (football correspondent)

[edit] Controversies

One of the newspaper's early controversial front page photographs was in 1988, when it portrayed Nigel Lawson as a terminator, accompanied by the headline Nigel the Great Tax Terminator.

Closure came shortly after a front page of the Oklahoma City bombing showed a fireman carrying the body of a young girl accompanied by the headline "IN THE NAME OF ALLAH", which proved embarrassing when it soon became clear the bombing had nothing to do with Muslim militants but with American extremists.[citation needed]

In 1996, Hugh Grant won damages from News (UK) Ltd over what his lawyers called a "highly defamatory" article in January 1995. The newspaper had falsely claimed that Grant verbally abused a young extra with a "foul-mouthed tongue lashing" on the set of The Englishman Who Went Up a Hill But Came Down a Mountain.[1]

[edit] Editors

1986: Brian MacArthur
1986: Dennis Hackett
1987: David Montgomery
1991: Martin Dunn
1993: Richard Stott

[edit] References

  1. ^ Howard, Stephen (1996-06-04). "Actor Hugh wins substantial libel award". Press Association. 
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