Francais | English | Espanõl

Evening Standard

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
<tr><td colspan="2" style="text-align: center;"> Image:EveningStandardFrontPage.gif
</td></tr> <tr><th>Editor</th><td>Veronica Wadley</td></tr> <tr><th>Political allegiance</th><td>Right-Wing</td></tr><tr><th>Price</th><td>£0.50</td></tr> <tr><th>Circulation</th><td>289,254 (Sep 2006)<ref>Evening Standard Standard Certificate of Circulation, 28-Aug-2006 to 01-Oct-2006 Audit Bureau of Circulations</ref></td></tr>
Image:EveningStandardLogo.gif
TypeDaily newspaper
FormatTabloid

OwnerDaily Mail and General Trust
Founded1827
HeadquartersNorthcliffe House, Derry Street, Kensington

Website: http://www.thisislondon.co.uk

The Evening Standard is a British tabloid newspaper published and sold in London and surrounding areas of southeast England. It is technically a 'local' or regional paper, although it carries considerable influence, owing to London's size and importance. It is dominant as a London daily paper, with a strong city emphasis as well as carrying national and international news.

Contents

[edit] History

The paper was launched as the Standard on May 21, 1827, and for a short period, during the 1990s, it reverted to its original name (some other local newspapers in the UK have also been named Evening Standard).

In the beginning of the twentieth century the paper was owned by Canadian tycoon Lord Beaverbrook, who also owned the Daily Express. At this time there were fourteen evening newspapers in London, but one by one they merged until there were three left. The Star merged with the Evening News in 1960, and the two remaining papers were great rivals until they shared ownership in the 1980s. In 1980, the Evening News was incorporated into the Evening Standard, leaving London with one single evening paper. The Evening News name still appears on the Standard's masthead.

[edit] Today

The paper is currently published by Associated Newspapers Ltd., a division of Daily Mail and General Trust. Associated Newspapers also publishes the national papers Daily Mail, The Mail on Sunday, and Metro, a free morning paper distributed at stations. Associated Newspapers is based at Northcliffe House, Derry Street, Kensington.

Max Hastings was editor from 1996 until his retirement in 2002. Veronica Wadley (formerly with the Daily Mail) is the current editor. Although the Standard (as it is commonly referred to) shares the same Editor in Chief, Paul Dacre, as the Daily Mail it has a quite different style from the latter's "middle England" outlook, having to appeal to a cosmopolitan readership. The Standard has a circulation of around 425,000 (c.f The Times national circulation of 640,000) and the Mail around 2,300,000.

The Evening Standard covers national and international news, with an emphasis on London-centred news (especially in its features pages), covering building developments, property prices, traffic schemes, politics, the congestion charge and, in the Londoner's Diary page, gossip on the social scene. It also occasionally runs campaigns centred around local issues that larger national newspapers do not cover in long detail.

It has a tradition of providing quality arts coverage, and is noted for its visual art critic, Brian Sewell, more recently also a television personality, who is renowned for his outspoken dismissal of Britart and the Turner Prize. This accords with the general readership, but was so unpopular with leading figures in the art world that they signed a letter demanding his dismissal (he is still there).

Its headline writers have been accused of having a "doom-and-gloom" agenda [1], and it is quick to boldly announce possible tube and train strikes, which in the event often do not happen as settlement is reached beforehand (which provides the opportunity for another headline). However, it shows every sign of being emotionally attuned to its readership.

It publishes four editions each day, from Monday to Friday excluding Bank holidays. The first of these is officially timed for 8 a.m. and is available around 11 a.m. in shops in London and its more outlying circulation areas (such as Tonbridge, Kent). A second edition is available in the central area, and the third, "West End Edition", circulated more widely to include the suburbs, available from around 3 p.m. The last edition "West End Final" is timed to catch the commuter market, and obviously carries the latest news. This edition is available from 5 p.m. in the central area and around 7 p.m. outside the central area. There is often considerable variation between the editions, particularly with the front page lead and following few pages, including the Londoner's Diary (which now appears on page 15), though features and reviews stay the same.

The Evening Standard has sponsored the annual Evening Standard Theatre Awards since the 1950s. The newspaper has also awarded the annual Evening Standard Pub of the Year and the Evening Standard British Film Awards since the 1970s.

The paper is currently priced at 50p.

[edit] Freesheet and supplements

On 14 December 2004 Associated Newspapers launched a freesheet edition of the Evening Standard called London Lite to help boost circulation. This has 48 pages, compared to approximately eighty in the main paper, which also has a supplement on most days. It is designed to be especially attractive to younger female readers, and features a wide range of lifestyle articles but less news and business news than the main paper. It is only available between 11.30 a.m. and 2.30 p.m. at Evening Standard vendors and in the central area.

On Fridays, the Evening Standard includeds a free glossy lifestyle magazine, ES. This has moved from more general articles to concentrate on glamour, with features on the rich, powerful and famous.

An entertainment guide supplement Metro Life (previously called Hot Tickets) was launched in September 2002 was a what's on guide with listings of cinemas and theatres in and around London was given away on Thursdays. This was discontinued (without notice) on 1 September 2005.

A separate property paper with articles on related subjects, as well as estate agents advertisements, is given away on Wednesdays.

The paper also supplies the occasional CDs and DVDs for promotions. It is also known to give Londoners a chance to win exclusive tickets to film premieres and sports tournament tickets, such as the Wimbledon Ladies Singles Final.

[edit] Websites

The newspaper's website run, thisislondon.co.uk, carries some (but by no means all) of the stories from the Evening Standard as well as promotions, reviews and competitions. This contrasts with the four daily UK "broadsheets" whose websites mirror the print content. A recent innovation is the inclusion of a number of blogs on this site by Evening Standard writers such as restaurant critic Charles Campion, theatre critic Kieron Quirke and music critic Richard Godwin.

A separate website contains images of each page of the print edition (two versions) and supplements. It requires registration to view.

[edit] Trivia

For many British people the plaintive Cockney cry of the newspaper's street sellers represents an essential part of the London fabric - "Eenin Stannad". This was the subject of a Morecambe and Wise sketch in which Ernie Wise, with some difficulty, managed to get Eric Morecambe to say (the fictional) "Morning Standard" instead of "Morny Stannit", only to find that the paper was in fact called the Morny Stannit.

[edit] External links

[edit] References

<references/>

es:Evening Standard

fr:Evening Standard

Personal tools