Toronto Sun

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Image:Droegedead.jpg The Toronto Sun is a large English language daily newspaper published in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is published as a tabloid and is renowned for its daily Sunshine Girl feature, and for its populist conservative editorial stance.

The Sun was first published on November 1, 1971, the Monday after the demise of the Toronto Telegram, a conservative broadsheet newspaper. The Toronto Sun is modeled on British tabloid jouralism, even borrowing the name of the London Sun, and some of the features, including the Sunshine Girl, who was on the same page as the English paper (note that the Toronto paper has never had a "Topless" Sunshine Girl, unlike the London Sun).

As of 2003, the Sun reportedly had a Monday through Saturday circulation of 200,000 papers and Sunday circulation of 400,000.

The Sun is owned by Sun Media, a subsidiary of Quebecor.

The Toronto Sun's first editor was Peter Worthington who remains a columnist for the paper. He was succeeded by Barbara Amiel who, in turn, was succeeded by John Downing.

Contents

Controversy and use of sensationalism

Toronto Sun headlines are often blatantly editorialized and make heavy use of sensationalist and vernacular language. On September 12, 2001, the paper's front page featured only an image of the previous day's events and the headline, "BASTARDS!". The paper has frequently used such tactics when covering events in the political arena. For example, the day following a federal election call by Canadian Prime Minister Paul Martin of the Liberal Party of Canada on May 24, 2004, the Sun, which is arguably the staunchest and most vocal opponent of the Liberals of any media outlet in Canada, ran a front-page picture of Mr. Martin along with the headline "Throw the Bums Out!". Several weeks prior to that headline, when former Progressive Conservative Party leader Joe Clark insinuated he would support the Liberals, rather than the newly-minted Conservative Party of Canada, in an impending federal election, the headline in the Sun the following day read "Joe Blows".

The Sun has also at times come under fire for its envelope-pushing editorial content. For example, on July 23, 2004, editorial cartoonist Andy Donato provoked a signicant degree of public criticism for depicting Toronto Mayor David Miller as Adolf Hitler, after Mr. Miller invoked closure on a debate at city hall. After some initial resistance, Senior Associate Editor Lorrie Goldstein ultimately apologized for the cartoon. ^ 

Sister papers

The Toronto Sun's format has given rise to sister Sun tabloids in major markets across Canada, namely the Edmonton Sun, the Calgary Sun, the Ottawa Sun and most recently the Brampton Sun and York Sun, a weekend-only papers distributed as sections of the Toronto edition. The Winnipeg Sun was originally launched by independent interests, only later coming under common ownership to the Toronto Sun, which subsequently elicited a redesign in Sun Media style.

The Vancouver Sun is not owned by Sun Media, but by CanWest Global. The Vancouver Sun is a broadsheet, not a tabloid; the Vancouver Province, also owned by CanWest Global, is that market's traditional tabloid daily.

See also

Notes

  1. ^  Goldstein, Lorrie: “Why I'm apologizing to Mayor David Miller”, Toronto Sun, July 28, 2004.


External links

Quebecor Inc.

Corporate Directors: Françoise Bertrand | Alain Bouchard | Robert Dutton | Jean La Couture | Jean-Marc Eustache | Pierre Laurin | Brian Mulroney | Jean Neveu | Pierre Parent | Érik Péladeau | Pierre Karl Péladeau

TVA television network: CFCM | CFEM | CFER | CFTM | CHAU | CHEM | CHLT | CHOT | CIMT | CJPM
Sun Media: 24 Hours | Brockville Recorder and Times | Calgary Sun | Edmonton Sun | Fort McMurray Today | The Daily Herald Tribune (Grande Prairie) | Daily Miner and News (Kenora) | London Free Press | Le Journal de Montréal | Ontario Farmer | Ottawa Sun | The Times-Journal (St. Thomas) | Toronto Sun | Winnipeg Sun | CKXT
Other assets: Archambault | canoe.ca | JPL Production | Le SuperClub Vidéotron | Nurun | Quebecor Media | Quebecor World | TVA Films | TVA Publishing | Vidéotron

Annual Revenue: $10.8 billion CAN (Image:Green up.png5% FY 2004) | Employees: 47,400 | Stock Symbol: TSX: QBR | Website: www.quebecor.com



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