Toronto Sun
The Sun cover from June 27, 2010.
Cover from June 27, 2010.
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Type | Daily newspaper |
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Owner(s) | Postmedia |
Editor-in-chief | Adrienne Batra |
Founded | 1971 |
Political alignment | Conservative[1] |
Headquarters | 365 Bloor Street East 3rd Floor Toronto, Ontario M4W 3L4 |
Circulation | 119,048 weekdays 111,515 Saturdays 142,376 Sundays in 2015[2] |
ISSN | 0837-3175 |
OCLC number | 66653673 |
Website | torontosun |
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The Toronto Sun is an English-language tabloid[3] newspaper published daily in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. In 1988, The Washington Post described it as an example of tabloid journalism.[4]
Contents
History
The Sun was first published on November 1, 1971, the Monday after the demise of the Toronto Telegram, a conservative broadsheet.[3] As there was no publishing gap between the two papers and many of the Tely's writers and employees moved to the new paper, it is today generally[who?] considered as a direct continuation of the Telegram. The Sun is the holder of the Telegram archives.
Publisher Doug Chreighton was originally going to name the new newspaper the Toronto News but Andy Donato, who was asked to design the paper's first front page and decided to call the paper the Toronto Sun instead. Creighton decided it was too late to change it and renamed the paper.[5]
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 Postmedia following the 2015 purchase of Sun Media from 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, which was renamed SUN TV and later was transformed into the Sun News Network until its demise in 2015. By the mid-2000s, the word "The" was dropped from the paper's name and the newspaper adopted its current logo.
The Toronto Sun's first editor was Peter Worthington. He assumed the title "editor-in-chief" in 1976, resigned in 1982 to protest the newspaper's takeover by Maclean-Hunter but remained a columnist for the paper until his death in 2013. He was succeeded by Barbara Amiel who, in turn, was succeeded by John Downing (as editor). Other senior editors have included Lorrie Goldstein (city editor, editorial page editor), Linda Williamson (senior associate editor), Rob Granatstein (editorial page editor), and as editors-in-chief: Peter O'Sullivan, Mike Strobel, Jim Jennings, Glenn Garnett (2006–2007), Lou Clancy (2007–2009), James Wallace (2008–2013) and Wendy Metcalfe (2013-2015). The current editor-in-chief is Adrienne Batra.
The Toronto Sun was originally published out of leased space at the Eclipse White Wear Company Building at 322 King Street West. In 1975, the newspaper moved into the Toronto Sun Building at 333 King Street East which was eventually expanded to six storeys to house all of the newspaper's operations. In 2010, the building was sold to property development company First Gulf, the Sun consolidated its operations onto the second floor and remained in the building until 2016.
Following the acquisition of the Sun newspaper chain by PostMedia in 2015, it was announced that the Toronto Sun staff and operations will move to 365 Bloor Street East, the same building that houses the National Post, but that the two newspapers will maintain separate newsrooms. The move occurred in March 2016.[6]
Editorial position
Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Editorially, the paper frequently follows the positions of traditional Canadian/British conservatism and neo-conservatism in the United States on economic issues. Editorials typically promote individualism, self-reliance, the police, and a strong military and support for troops. Editorials typically condemn high taxes and, most of all, perceived government waste.
Sportsperson of the Year award
In 2004, the Sun began its annual George Gross/Toronto Sun Sportsperson of the Year award.[7]
Circulation
The Toronto Sun has seen—like most Canadian daily newspapers—a decline in circulation. Its total circulation dropped by 36 percent to 121,304 copies daily from 2009 to 2015.[8]
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Sister papers
The Toronto Sun's format has given rise to sister Sun newspapers in major markets across Canada, namely the Edmonton Sun, the Calgary Sun and the Ottawa Sun. 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 a broadsheet and was never a Sun Media newspaper. Due to the acquisition of Sun Media by the Postmedia Network, the Vancouver Sun now shares the same owner as the other Sun newspapers; The Province, also owned by Postmedia Network, Inc, is Vancouver's traditional daily paper.
Editors-in-chief
The Toronto Sun originally had several editors with various responsibilities, none with the title "editor-in-chief"; however, from 1971 to 1976, Peter Worthington was listed on the newspaper's masthead immediately under the publisher, Doug Creighton.
- Peter Worthington (1976–1982)
- Barbara Amiel (1983–1985)
- John Downing editor (1985–1997), no editor-in-chief until 1995
- Peter O'Sullivan (1995–1999)
- Mike Strobel (1999–2001)
- Mike Therien (2001–2004)
- Jim Jennings (2004–2006)
- Glenn Garnett (2007)
- Lou Clancy (2007–2009)
- James Wallace (2009–2013)
- Wendy Metcalfe (2013-2015)
- Adrienne Batra (2015–present)
Notable current staff, columnists, and writers
- Adrienne Batra, editor-in-chief, former comment editor and municipal affairs columnist
- Mark Bonokoski, columnist, editorial writer
- Andy Donato, editorial cartoonist
- Tarek Fatah, columnist
- Brian Lilley, provincial, national affairs columnist
- Steve Simmons, sports columnist
- Rita DeMontis, Lifestyle and food editor
Former Sun staff
- Charles Adler, QMI columnist
- David Akin, columnist
- Barbara Amiel, editor and columnist
- Joan Barfoot, reporter
- Christie Blatchford, columnist (deceased)
- Mark Bourrie, reporter
- Jim Brown, manager (deceased)
- Dalton Camp, columnist (deceased)
- Gordon Chong, columnist (deceased)
- Sheila Copps, columnist
- Michael Coren, QMI columnist
- Danielle Crittenden, reporter, columnist
- John Downing, city hall columnist, editor-in-chief
- Mike Filey, Toronto history columnist
- Doug Fisher, Parliament Hill columnist (deceased)
- Allan Fotheringham, national affairs columnist (deceased)
- David Frum, columnist
- W. Gifford-Jones, M.D. (pseudonym for Ken Walker), medical columnist[10]
- Edward Greenspan, lawyer, columnist (deceased)
- George Gross, Corporate Sports Editor, columnist (deceased)
- Max Haines, "Crime Flashback" feature (deceased)
- Paul Hellyer, columnist and founding investor (deceased)
- Jim Hunt, sports writer (deceased)
- Ajit Jain, columnist
- George Jonas, columnist (deceased)
- Warren Kinsella, political columnist
- Linda Leatherdale, business editor, columnist
- Ezra Levant, QMI columnist
- Sue-Ann Levy, political columnist, former municipal affairs columnist
- Bob MacDonald, columnist (deceased)
- Heather Mallick, columnist
- Salim Mansur, columnist
- Eric Margolis, international affairs columnist, contributing editor
- Rachel Marsden, columnist
- Lois Maxwell (Moneypenney), columnist (deceased)
- Judi McLeod, education reporter
- Ben Mulroney, columnist
- Ted Reeve, sports columnist (deceased)
- Sid Ryan, columnist
- Paul Rimstead, columnist (deceased)
- Laura Sabia, columnist (deceased)
- Morton Shulman, columnist (deceased)
- Joey Slinger, columnist
- Walter Stewart, columnist (deceased)
- John Tory, mayor of Toronto, former Rogers executive
- Garth Turner, business editor
- Sherri Wood, columnist (deceased)
- Peter Worthington, columnist, former editor (deceased)
- Lubor J. Zink, columnist (deceased)
See also
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References
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- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Numbers are based on the total circulation (print plus digital editions).
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- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Figures refer to the total circulation (print and digital combined) which includes paid and unpaid copies.
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External links
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