Search:      
E & P Web
  America's Oldest Journal Covering the Newspaper Industry Tuesday, February 9, 2010  
 

Remembering Subscribers in Mill Valley -- By Painting Stripes in Front of Their Houses
'Times-Picayune' Presses Still Spinning for Super Bowl Victory Edition
Media General Also Paying High Price To Spread Out Debt
Missouri's Only Gay Newspaper Comes Back From Dead, But as Magazine
Minneapolis 'Star Tribune' Achieves Record Web Month
Union, Management Set Tuesday Meeting on 'Newsday' Financial Status
'N.Y. Times' Ombudsman: I'd Transfer Jerusalem Bureau Chief With Son in Israeli Army
Tribune Co. D.C. Deputy Named 'Wall St. Journal' National Politics Editor
Thomson Reuters 'Illegally' Imposing Pay Cuts on U.S. Journos, Guild Charges
Arbitrator Tosses Wendy McCaw's Lawsuit Against 'Santa Barbara News-Press' Ex-Editor, Orders Big Legal Fees Paid

| This week's top stories

    Share on LinkedIn
Study: 35,000 News Stories on Pope's Death Worldwide



Published: April 05, 2005 9:35 AM ET

NEW YORK (AP) Major news media around the world devoted 10 times as many stories to Pope John Paul II's death as they did to the re-election of President Bush, according to an analysis released Monday.

The Global Language Monitor, which scans the Internet for the use of specific words or phrases using Roman characters, found 35,000 new stories on the pope in the 24 hours after his death Saturday.

That compares with about 3,500 new stories on Bush within a day of his re-election and 1,000 new stories on former President Reagan within a day of his death last year.

The count includes stories at news Web sites as well as printed stories and transcripts of broadcasts found in electronic repositories such as LexisNexis. About 3,000 newspapers and 1,000 broadcasters around the world were tracked.

Paul J.J. Payack, president of Global Language, said the jump reflected the Roman Catholic pontiff's influence.

"He was tied in history, probably more than any pope in contemporary time," Payack said. "Because of his extensive travels, he's well known in many more countries."


Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Back to Advanced Search




Ads by Google