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during this time. Proponents of signed articles believed that the signature made the journalist more careful and more honest; publishers thought it made papers sell better.
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Bylines were rare before the late 19th century. Before then, the most similar practice was the occasional "signed" or "signature" article. The word
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Articles that originate from press agency journalists are sometimes incorrectly attributed to newspaper staff. Dominic
Ponsford of the
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Ponsford also highlights cases in which newspapers byline fictional authors for pieces that attack other newspapers: for example, the
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One of the earliest consistent uses of the idea was for battlefield reporting during the
American Civil War. In 1863, Union General
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Since the 1970s, most modern newspapers and magazines have attributed almost all but their shortest articles and their own
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defines a byline as "a printed line of text accompanying a news story, article, or the like, giving the author's name".
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to sign their articles so that he would know which journalist to blame for any errors or security violations.
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wire services story with a byline appeared in 1925, and the practice became commonplace shortly afterwards.
138:, based on this article. He is returning to the region this summer to gather material for a follow-up essay.
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explains this practice as being traditional and reflective of the collaborative nature of their reporting.
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became more powerful and popular figures. Bylines were used to promote or create celebrities among some
77:) place bylines at the bottom of the page to leave more room for graphical elements around the headline.
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often include biographical information on their subjects. A typical biographical byline on a piece of
474:"National press byline bandits: When the first line of a story is a lie, how can we trust the rest?"
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However, the increasing use of bylines was resisted by others, including the publisher–owner of
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Penning a concise description of a long piece has never been as easy as often appears, as
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A byline can also include a brief article summary that introduces the author by name:
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itself first appeared in print in 1926, in a scene set in a newspaper office in
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the former newspaper carried four bylines, none of which credited Ellery.
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The practice became more popular at the end of the 19th century, as
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and the text of the article, although some magazines (notably
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Andrew
Buckwell's exclusive on a paternity issue involving
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Ben Ellery's interview with the boyfriend of murdered
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298:Acknowledgment (creative arts and sciences)
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59:article gives the name of the
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398:Shafer, Jack (July 6, 2012).
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100:New Boston Post Reporter
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34:Byline (disambiguation)
313:Credit (creative arts)
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532:Newspaper terminology
436:. September 5, 2013.
168:battlefield reporters
159:by Ernest Hemingway.
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32:For other uses, see
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187:The New York Times
179:yellow journalists
156:The Sun Also Rises
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233:False attribution
16:(Redirected from
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482:. Retrieved
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454:December 11,
452:. Retrieved
447:the original
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366:. Retrieved
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368:October 31,
323:Lower third
223:anonymously
192:Adolph Ochs
175:journalists
521:Categories
511:Journalism
346:References
273:Daily Mail
254:Daily Mail
197:The first
145:Prevalence
116:John Smith
484:April 18,
442:0013-0613
339:Strapline
249:Jo Yeates
206:editorial
166:required
96:Tom Joyce
53:newspaper
329:Pen name
318:Dateline
292:See also
87:Examples
69:headline
57:magazine
404:Reuters
65:article
63:of the
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18:Bylines
497:Portal
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151:byline
61:writer
41:byline
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486:2011
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438:ISSN
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370:2015
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39:The
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