iStock – Daily News

Almost 315000 authentic newspaper stock videos are available to license in the iStock video library. Browse our easy-to-search collection for clips featuring reporters at press conferences and wide-angle videos of a busy newspaper office. You’ll also find close-ups of newspaper front pages and a wide range of news icons for your video production projects.

Daily News is a daily tabloid newspaper in New York City. Founded in 1919, it was the first successful American tabloid, attracting readers with sensational coverage of crime and scandal and lurid photographs, as well as cartoons and other entertainment features. It was the largest newspaper by circulation in the United States at one point and remains an important source of local information.

Each Daily News article includes a set of comprehension and critical thinking questions, as well as “Background” and “Resources” sections to help students understand the context and history of the story. Teachers can also sign up to receive a daily email containing the article and its questions.

The Daily News Sentiment Index is a high frequency measure of economic sentiment, based on lexical analysis of economics-related news articles. The index is constructed as a time series of trailing weighted averages, with the weights declining geometrically with the time since publication. More information about the methodology is available in Buckman, Shapiro, Sudhof, and Wilson (2020).

A man holding a French daily newspaper with a black cat in his lap, looking at the paper and smelling it. He is relaxing and calm while he reads the news and opinions section of the newspaper.

In a world where the death of local newspapers has become all too common, Andrew Conte takes an in-depth look at what happens when a small town loses its newspaper. Using McKeesport, Pennsylvania as a laboratory for the present and future of journalism, Conte delivers a thoughtful and illuminating book that explores how a community reacts to the loss of its newspaper—and what it might do to rebuild it.

A compelling case for why local news matters, and an argument that even in the most bleak of times, communities can build their own version of news. A must-read for anyone interested in the state of journalism.