Toronto Sun

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Toronto Sun
Type Daily newspaper
Format Tabloid

Owner Sun Media
Publisher Kin-Man Lee
Founded 1971
Political allegiance Populist, Conservative[1]
Headquarters Toronto Sun Building,
333 King Street East, Toronto, Ontario
Circulation 179,004 Daily
311,689 Sunday[2]
ISSN 0837-3175

Website: torontosun.com

The Toronto Sun is an English language daily newspaper published in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is published as a tabloid and is known for its daily "Sunshine Girl" feature and for its populist conservative editorial stance.

Contents

[edit] History

The Sun was first published on November 1, 1971, the Monday after the demise of the Toronto Telegram, a conservative broadsheet. As there was no publishing gap between the two papers and many writers and employees moved to the new paper, it is today generally considered as a direct continuation of the Telegram, and the Sun is the holder of the Telegram archives.

The Toronto Sun is modeled on British tabloid journalism, even borrowing the name of The Sun newspaper published in London, and some of the features, including the typically bikini-clad Sunshine Girl, who was on the same page as the British paper. (The Toronto paper, however, has never had a "topless" Sunshine Girl, unlike its British counterpart.) News stories in the tabloid style tend to be much shorter than those in other newspapers, and the language Sun journalists use tends to be simpler and more conversational than language used in other newspapers.

As of the end of 2007, the Sun had a Monday through Saturday circulation of approximately 180,000 papers and Sunday circulation of 310,000.

The Sun is owned by Sun Media, a subsidiary of Quebecor. Torstar, the parent company of the Toronto Star, once attempted to purchase the Sun. The paper, which boasts the slogan "Toronto's Other Voice" (also once called "The Little Paper that Grew") acquired a television station from Craig Media in 2005. SUN TV is the new face of Toronto 1.

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, Lorrie Goldstein and Linda Williamson. The Editorial page editor today is Rob Granatstein, Lou Clancy is Editor-in-chief and Mike Burke-Gaffney is the Managing Editor. The publisher and CEO is Kin-Man Lee.

[edit] Editorial position

Editorially, the paper has a populist stance and sees itself as siding with the average/ordinary person in government and taxation topics. It generally follows the positions of neo-conservatism in the United States on economic issues and traditional Canadian/British conservatism. Editorials promote individualism, self-reliance, the police, and a strong military and support for troops. For instance, cartoonist Andy Donato drew a cartoon comparing David Miller to Adolf Hitler after he refused to allow a debate on Chief Julian Fantino's contract renewal. (Senior Associate Editor Lorrie Goldstein apologized after Miller and the Canadian Jewish Congress condemned the cartoon.)[3] The Sun also criticized Miller's flip-flopping on the issue of whether to renew the yellow ribbon decals on emergency vehicles (proponents argued that the decals showed support for the troops, while opponents claimed that it was an endorsement for the war in Afghanistan). Miller initially said that he supported the troops but refused to intervene to extend the campaign beyond September; after the deaths of several soldiers he changed his position and voted for the decals.[1][2]. Editorials condemn high taxes, high gas prices, and perceived government waste.

Despite its conservatism, the Sun has had both a prominent Liberal columnist, Sheila Copps and a left-wing columnist Sid Ryan. Copps, however, resigned from her weekly Sun column in 2008, and Ryan writes for the paper infrequently. During the 2006 election, the Sun was strongly critical of a poster that attempted to link Ryan to the IRA terrorist group.

The Sun strongly criticized the Liberal Party of Canada over the Sponsorship scandal, which involved the misuse and misdirection of public funds intended for government advertising in Quebec. The paper's headings have been controversial. The day following a federal election call by Canadian Prime Minister Paul Martin of the on May 24, 2004, the Sun ran a front-page picture of Mr. Martin along with the headline "Throw the Bums Out!", as the Liberals supposedly wanted a renewed mandate before the results of the Gomery Inquiry became public and as this would not give the Conservatives time to consolidate. Several weeks prior to that headline, when former Progressive Conservative Party leader Joe Clark insinuated he would support the Liberals despite being implicated in the scandal, 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".

During the era when Pierre Eliott Trudeau was Prime Minister, and Joe Clark was leader of the official opposition, cartoonist Andy Donato lampooned both of them extensively. Joe Clark for years was drawn wearing children's mittens (attached to his suit with string), a reference to the time his luggage went missing on a trip to Israel. The final cartoon of the series came when Trudeau's airplane was hit by a bus, and pictured a puzzled Trudeau staring at the bus while one of his aids held up Clark's mittens and said, "We don't know who the driver was, but we found his mittens."

[edit] 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, 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.

[edit] Current Sun writers

  • Christina Blizzard, Queen's Park columnist
  • Mark Bonokoski, columnist
  • Thane Burnett, columnist
  • Michael Coren, columnist
  • Nicholas Davis, columnist
  • Andy Donato, editorial cartoonist
  • Lorrie Goldstein, Senior Associate Editor, columnist
  • Rob Granatstein, Editorial Page Editor, columnist
  • Eddie Greenspan, lawyer, columnist
  • Ajit Jain, columnist
  • Linda Leatherdale, Money Editor, columnist
  • Sue-Ann Levy, municipal affairs columnist
  • Moira MacDonald, columnist
  • Innocent Madawo, columnist
  • Michele Mandel, columnist
  • Salim Mansur, columnist
  • Angelo Persichilli, columnist
  • Father Thomas Rosica, columnist
  • Sid Ryan, columnist
  • Rachel Sa, columnist
  • Alan Shanoff, former Sun in-house lawyer, columnist
  • Steve Simmons, sports columnist
  • Jim Slotek, film critic
  • Mike Strobel, columnist
  • James Wallace, columnist, deputy editor
  • Greg Weston, columnist
  • Marianne Meed Ward, columnist
  • Joe Warmington, columinst
  • Connie Woodcock, columnist
  • Glen Woodcock, auto writer, former associate editor
  • Peter Worthington, columnist, former editor
  • Eric Margolis, international affairs columnist, contributing editor
  • Mike Zeisberger, Hockey writer
  • Jack Boland, Reporter/photographer/videographer

[edit] Sun alumni

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

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


[edit] References

  1. ^ World Newspapers and Magazines: Canada. Worldpress.org (2007). Retrieved on 2007-11-02.
  2. ^ 2007 Canadian Circulation Data (2008-03-12). Retrieved on 2008-03-12.
  3. ^ Katherine Harding, "Hitler cartoon is ‘despicable,' Miller says", Globe and Mail, 24 July 2004, A9.

[edit] External links

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