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Newspapers: Media Language (for 2025 examination) Typeit
Target Level
4-5
Running Total
0
0%
Attempt
1 of 3
Type the correct answers into the spaces. Fill all the spaces before clicking ‘Check Answers!’
The Daily Mirror’s
is located in the top left corner of the front page for every
publication sold. The format and colour tell audiences this is a -top
paper, one that is bound to have political biases, {3|sensationalist |
sensational | dramatic | emotive | provocative} language and a focus on certain
types of stories. Other examples of this kind of British paper include The Sun, the Daily Star, and the now
defunct News of the .
The Times
is located at the top of the front page for every publication sold. The format
and colour tell audiences this is a -top paper, one that is likely
to explore news stories in more and show less obvious
political . Other examples of this kind of British paper include The Guardian, the Independent, and the Financial .
Like most Daily Mirror issues,
the ‘Back of the Net?' occupies a significant amount
(approximately a third) of the front page’s space. The headline is likely to
appeal to a traditional tabloid audience as the it focuses on a story about a
popular football personality and uses a footballing term. Tabloid readers
typically like their news to be entertaining and for any information to be
expressed in terms so it is easily digestible. The
image shows Lineker in casual clothing that audiences in the paper’s C2/D/E
class bracket may with.
Unusually for The Times, the Gary Lineker story is the
story on the front page. The headline is less {15|emotive |emotional
|biased} than The Mirror’s, mentioning both the BBC as well as
Lineker. By including both sides of the dispute in the headline, The Times gives
and appearance of .