Unless you have a disconnect in the third dimension, you'll be able to see where the fold is, in these two photos:
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhxTEqIb6R8MA6Efc2_2weg4O_WahopfA4OFwa6azQ2MG2tefM3R6eJqFYbXP0hm6PMcWzTooKcEeqHJ_RAmD6pgkEhDv25UWfTOymDWojcsNj_siiOZ_QbZTLed570MqTr1D22XoezioQa/s400/face.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiKYO3ST3cQ2iBhN7MlvHXqvFxAENO2BXCJ7lDziTp7TxI8V0eBuIKJGudr4s3JVirW_anHKIdW-xkXKRbl1B8pX5OGPozrIdPssfnrte-KS18ybgh01kRrL3K0uDbSTNP3B_5R7zlr_cRK/s400/hands.jpg)
1. The article above the fold sells the paper
2. The most important article should have the largest headline
And for all intents and purposes, both 1 and 2 should reference the same item.
Admittedly, my last Journalism class was thirty-four years ago, but print Journalism was all there was then. So unless I'm missing some underlying style guide, what the
No comments:
Post a Comment