Copies of the Financial Times newspaper sit in a rack at a newsstand in London, Britain July 23, 2015. British publisher Pearson has decided to sell the Financial Times to a "global, digital news company" after owning the business newspaper for nearly 60 years, a person familiar with the deal said on Thursday. Pearson, which has become the world's leading education provider, later confirmed that it was in advanced discussions regarding a potential disposal of FT group, which includes the pink-paged paper, its website and its share in the Economist, but declined to provide further details. REUTERS/Peter Nicholls
Copies of the Financial Times newspaper sit in a rack at a newsstand in London, Britain July 23, 2015. British publisher Pearson has decided to sell the Financial Times to a "global, digital news company" after owning the business newspaper for nearly 60 years, a person familiar with the deal said on Thursday. Pearson, which has become the world's leading education provider, later confirmed that it was in advanced discussions regarding a potential disposal of FT group, which includes the pink-paged paper, its website and its share in the Economist, but declined to provide further details. REUTERS/Peter Nicholls

Newspaper headline Faux Pas – Why print mustn’t die

It's one of the many advantages online has over print, but it's what makes the small mistakes so special. The ability to change something that goes out in error.
Published on

It's one of the many advantages online has over print, but it highlights the small mistakes , which makes it so special. The ability to change something after it has gone out in error – the faux pas of newspaper headlines. The picture gallery shows a collection of them but if you are in the Johannesburg region make your way to The Radium Beer Hall, there is a bunch there that'll have you in stitches. Highlighting the power of punctuation. – Stuart Lowman

Related Stories

No stories found.
BizNews
www.biznews.com