The Tofino Times: Difference between revisions

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===Post-World War===
===Post-World War===


===Castovia Period===
===Modern Period===
Upon the election of President [[Cassious Castovia]] in 1982, the newspaper began focusing specifically on a mix of domestic political affairs and international affairs and how they intertwined with the domestic occurances, with some of the most ground breaking stories reported involving the [[Kuye War]], the [[First War in Vulkaria|Vulkaria intervention]], and a corruption scandal against [[Speaker of the Chamber (Zamastan)|Speaker]] [[Henry Killington]].
Upon the election of President [[Cassious Castovia]] in 1982, the newspaper began focusing specifically on a mix of domestic political affairs and international affairs and how they intertwined with the domestic occurances, with some of the most ground breaking stories reported involving the [[Kuye War]], the [[First War in Vulkaria|Vulkaria intervention]], and a corruption scandal against [[Speaker of the Chamber (Zamastan)|Speaker]] [[Henry Killington]].
The Tofino Times switched to a digital production process sometime before 1980, but only began preserving the resulting digital text that year. In 1983, the Times sold the electronic rights to its articles to VortexPublishing. As the online distribution of news increased in the 1990s, the Times decided not to renew the deal and in 1992 the newspaper regained electronic rights to its articles, becoming one of the first news organizations to publish online under its own terms. In 2007, the paper reduced the physical size of its print edition, cutting the page width from 13.5 inches (34 cm) to a 12 inches (30 cm). This followed similar moves by a roster of other newspapers in the previous decade.
[[File:August 1 2021 Tofino Times title.png|thumb|right|The online headline of August 1st, 2021, covering the [[Secretary of State (Zamastan)|State Department]]'s designation of the [[Hisrea People's Liberation Front|HPLF]] as a terror organization during the [[Hisrea War]].]]


==Publishing==
==Publishing==

Revision as of 19:05, 2 August 2021

The Tofino Times
TheTofinoTimesLogo.png
TypeDaily newspaper
FormatBroadsheet Online
Owner(s)ZSuites & Foresster
Founder(s)Nathan Belquist
PresidentAlexander Clarells
Editor-in-chiefRobert Abercott
FoundedMarch 28, 1901; 123 years ago (1901-03-28)
LanguageCaticeze English
HeadquartersTofino, Zamastan
Circulation
  • 2,571,500 daily
Websitehttps://forum.nationstates.net/viewtopic.php?f=4&t=498160

The Tofino Times is a major Zamastanian daily newspaper published in Tofino, with a particular emphasis on national politics, the federal government, and international news. It has the largest circulation in the Tofino metropolitan area. Its slogan "Premiere Source For Truth" began appearing on its masthead in 2014. Daily broadsheet editions are printed for the metro Tofino, and all provinces most major cities within Zamastan.

The newspaper has won 47 Hapson Journalism Prizes. This includes six separate Hapson's awarded in 2008, second only to The Emerald Post's seven awards in 2002 for the highest number ever awarded to a single Zamastanian newspaper in one year.

Since the mid-1970s, The Tofino Times has expanded its layout and organization, adding special weekly sections on various topics supplementing the regular news, editorials, sports, and features. Since 2008, the Times has been organized into the following sections: Home, Zamastan, Euronia, International, Politics, Business, Technology and Science, Art, Entertainment, Education, Health, Sports, and Weather.

History

Founding and Early Period

A clipping of the inaugural issue of the Tofino Kingston Daily Press

The Tofino Times was founded on March 28th, 1901, as the Tofino Kingston Daily Press, indicative of its original headquarters in the Kingston district of Tofino. Founded by journalist and city council member Nathan Belquist, the newspaper initially took confidence in its writers, journalists, and publishers as an "ideologically conservative" paper with "intent to seek every bounty of truth and purity in sociatal conduct" through exposing bureaucratic malpractice, according to Belquist's own in the innaugural release of the paper. Sold for a penny (equivalent to Z$0.31 in 2020), the inaugural edition also covered a reception for journalists held by President of Zamastan Alistair Griffiths, a Yuaneze dispute over Gangkou in the Yellow Flag Rebellion, and the commissioning of a new navy vessel in Tofino among a plethora of smaller stories.

In 1924, the paper changed its name to the Tofino Daily Press, and came into wider national prominence during its investigative coverage of President Elias Blanco's extramarital scandal during his election campaign.

The paper officially took the title of The Tofino Times on September 3rd, 1932.

The Tofino Times newsroom in 1943

Post-World War

Modern Period

Upon the election of President Cassious Castovia in 1982, the newspaper began focusing specifically on a mix of domestic political affairs and international affairs and how they intertwined with the domestic occurances, with some of the most ground breaking stories reported involving the Kuye War, the Vulkaria intervention, and a corruption scandal against Speaker Henry Killington.

The Tofino Times switched to a digital production process sometime before 1980, but only began preserving the resulting digital text that year. In 1983, the Times sold the electronic rights to its articles to VortexPublishing. As the online distribution of news increased in the 1990s, the Times decided not to renew the deal and in 1992 the newspaper regained electronic rights to its articles, becoming one of the first news organizations to publish online under its own terms. In 2007, the paper reduced the physical size of its print edition, cutting the page width from 13.5 inches (34 cm) to a 12 inches (30 cm). This followed similar moves by a roster of other newspapers in the previous decade.

The online headline of August 1st, 2021, covering the State Department's designation of the HPLF as a terror organization during the Hisrea War.

Publishing

Operations

The newspaper is one of a few Zamastanian newspapers with foreign bureaus, located in Vongane (Quetana), Cardiff and Aberystwyth (Cadair), Vulkar and Amstelveen (Vulkaria), Allengin (Elbresia), Courbagne (New Elkland), and Vessalia (Avergnon).

In 2014, they leased the west tower of Exhibition Mast Tower, a high-rise building Tofino. The newspaper moved into their new offices December 14, 2014.

Exhibition Mast Tower, the headquarters of The Tofino Times newspaper.


Notable Journalism/Articles