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  1. Sep 15, 2015 · With reader numbers flagging, the once-popular Daily Herald newspaper was relaunched as The Sun on this day in 1964. "Good morning! Yes, it's time for a new newspaper", screamed the headline of ...

  2. The Sun is a British tabloid newspaper, published by the News Group Newspapers division of News UK, itself a wholly owned subsidiary of Lachlan Murdoch 's News Corp. [11] [12] It was founded as a broadsheet in 1964 as a successor to the Daily Herald, and became a tabloid in 1969 after it was purchased by its current owner. [13]

    • Early History: The Daily Herald Years
    • The Emergence of The Sun
    • Rupert Murdoch
    • The Sun Today
    • Political Stance
    • Reporting of The Hillsborough Disaster
    • Circulation of The Sun

    The forerunner of the Sun newspaper was the Daily Herald, launched on 25th January 1911. The Daily Herald was initially an independent left wing paper, printed periodically during strike periods to offer its unconditional support to the strikers. The Daily Herald was printed in Manchester daily between January and April in 1911 and then from 15th A...

    The first edition of the Sun was printed on 15th September 1964. This was the first time that a new daily paper had been published in the UK for 34 years. The newspaper was printed in broadsheet format with an orange logo, emerging during the rapidly changing world of the 1960s. Thus the front page announced: “The Sun is politically free. It will n...

    On 15th November 1969, the newspaper was acquired by Rupert Murdoch, following an unsuccessful bid by Robert Maxwell. Two days after purchasing the paper, Murdoch re-launched the Sun in tabloid format. He also installed the Sun as the sister paper to the News of the World, which was printed on Sundays. The two newspapers maintained their link up un...

    The Sun newspaper moved to full colour production for the first time on 28th January 2008 with the opening of three new printing plants. In 2012, the Sun began printing a Sunday newspaper which replaced the recently-closed News of the World newspaper.Some journalists who worked for the News of the World were employed to run the Sunday edition. Its ...

    The paper has a record of supporting the governing party in the UK, although traditionally it is generally considered to have a centre-right political allegiance. The Sun supported the centre-left Labour Party during Tony Blair’s last three General Election wins, changing allegiance to him on 18th March 1997. In 1978, the Sun switched allegiance to...

    The Sun has also been involved in many controversies, in particular its coverage of the 1989 Hillsborough football stadium disaster. Due to its claim that Liverpoolfans had pick-pocketed victims of the incident, many newsagents and readers in Liverpool boycotted the newspaper. This led to a 75% decrease in sales in the city, and the newspaper never...

    From 2000-2009, the Sun was the top circulating newspaper in the UK, but since 2010 has been taken over by the Metro. The newspaper reached peak circulation in 1987 and began steadily declining after this year, with a 1,027,863 drop between 2010 and 2015. Despite circulation numbers dropping, the Sun reached its largest-ever online audience in 2019...

  3. Feb 11, 2012 · Its life began on 15 September 1964, when the Daily Herald newspaper became the Sun, and it was initially printed in a broadsheet format. Then on 17 November 1969, its new owner Rupert Murdoch ...

  4. 1964: The Sun newspaper is born. The Sun newspaper is published today for the first time. It is replacing the Mirror Group's Daily Herald, which has been losing readers and advertising revenue for several years. The newest arrival on Fleet Street is promising to follow a "radical" and "independent" agenda - unlike its predecessor which had ...

  5. The 1964 Sun was a broadsheet with high aspirations and ideals, based on copious market research. It billed itself as "the newspaper born of the age we live in", and was designed to tap into the lifestyle changes of the 60s - the rise of the young and upwardly-mobile, including career-oriented women. Unashamedly downmarket.

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  7. Other articles where The Sun is discussed: United Kingdom: Newspapers: The Sun—long the United Kingdom’s biggest-selling newspaper, whose popularity since it was bought by Rupert Murdoch’s News International company in 1969 has stemmed from a diet of sensational personality-based news stories, show-business gossip, lively sports reporting, and pictures of scantily dressed young women ...

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