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  1. The Boston Globe, also known locally as the Globe, is an American daily newspaper founded and based in Boston, Massachusetts. The newspaper has won a total of 27 Pulitzer Prizes. [4] Its reported daily circulation had fallen to under 69,000 copies per day as of June 2022. [5] It reported 300,000 print and digital subscribers in 2017.

  2. The word tabloid comes from the name given by the London -based pharmaceutical company Burroughs Wellcome & Co. to the compressed tablets they marketed as "Tabloid" pills in the late 1880s. [1] The connotation of tabloid was soon applied to other small compressed items. A 1902 item in London's Westminster Gazette noted, "The proprietor intends ...

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › BigfootBigfoot - Wikipedia

    Bigfoot. Frame 352 of the 1967 Patterson–Gimlin film, alleged by the filmmakers to depict a female Bigfoot. [1] Bigfoot, also commonly referred to as Sasquatch, is a large and hairy human-like mythical creature alleged by some to inhabit forests in North America, particularly in the Pacific Northwest.

  4. Tabloid television. Tabloid television, also known as teletabloid, [1] is a form of tabloid journalism. Tabloid television news broadcasting usually incorporate flashy graphics and sensationalized stories. Often, there is a heavy emphasis on crime and celebrity news. [2]

  5. The Sun was a New York newspaper published from 1833 until 1950. It was considered a serious paper, [2] like the city's two more successful broadsheets, The New York Times and the New York Herald Tribune. The Sun was the first successful penny daily newspaper in the United States, and was for a time, the most successful newspaper in America.

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › TabloidTabloid - Wikipedia

    Chinese tabloid. Tabloid (paper size), a North American paper size. Sopwith Tabloid, a biplane aircraft. Tabloid (film), a 2010 documentary by Errol Morris. Tabloid (TV series), a Canadian television series. Tioguanine, a chemotherapy drug branded as Tabloid. Young tabloid, used in representation theory.

  7. The Cold Six Thousand is a 2001 crime fiction novel by James Ellroy. It is the first sequel to American Tabloid in the Underworld USA Trilogy and continues many of the earlier novel's characters and plotlines. Specifically, it follows three rogue American law-enforcement officials and their involvement in the turmoil of the 1960s.

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