| Publication information | 
| Source: Sioux City Journal Source type: newspaper Document type: editorial Document title: “Newspaper Yellowism” Author(s): anonymous City of publication: Sioux City, Iowa Date of publication: 11 September 1901 Volume number: none Issue number: none Pagination: 4 | 
| Citation | 
| “Newspaper Yellowism.” Sioux City Journal 11 Sept. 1901: p. 4. | 
| Transcription | 
| full text | 
| Keywords | 
| yellow journalism; McKinley assassination (public response); Chicago, IL (newspapers); McKinley assassination (news coverage: criticism). | 
| Named persons | 
| William Randolph Hearst; William McKinley. | 
| Document | 
  Newspaper Yellowism
     The characteristics of yellow journalism have 
  been conspicuous since the attempt was made last Friday on the life of the president. 
  These characteristics have been made conspicuous because every careful reader 
  of newspapers has been anxious to get at the truth in connection with that tragedy 
  and all matters bearing thereon or related thereto. Therefore newspaper yellowism 
  has been subjected to unusual analysis, and the result has tended to expand 
  and intensify the prejudice of intelligent people against the yellowism of newspapering.
       The weakness of yellowism has fastened itself 
  to some extent upon nearly all the metropolitan newspapers. In Chicago, for 
  instance, not one of the prominent newspapers is free of it. The yellow tendency 
  in Chicago is more noticeable since Hearst established a branch office there. 
  The other newspapers do not go to the extreme of the American, but they show 
  that they have been inoculated and that the poison is working.
       Yellowism in newspapering is an innovation of 
  recent time. It is a result, in considerable part, of cheapness. The bone of 
  contention among publishers is circulation, not for the profit of circulation, 
  but because business men [sic] place orders for advertising on the basis of 
  circulation. Therefore the publishers reach out in every possible way for circulation. 
  The character of it is not a controlling consideration. The temptation is constant 
  to go after the multitude, and it must be confessed that the multitude in the 
  great cities is not of high average in point of intelligence. The temptation 
  is to arrest the eye and not the judgment. Many of these yellow newspapers are 
  made up, from one end to the other of their news columns, on the unmixed theory 
  that few people bother themselves to read and fewer still to think. Big type, 
  setting forth sensational sentences, is employed on every page. Pictures, imaginary 
  in character, are pushed in everywhere, labeled as representing this or that, 
  when in truth they represent nothing except glaring falsehood. The purpose is 
  to excite the senses. The plan is on the theory that a lie is more acceptable 
  than the truth, if the truth is tame and the lie exciting.
       The shooting of McKinley was sensational enough 
  for yellowism, but instantly attempt was made to answer all demands for details, 
  views of every possible scene and person connected in any way with the tragedy, 
  the words of the victim, the bearing of his wife—everything that anxiety could 
  suggest and that morbidity and idle and vulgar curiosity might respond to. To 
  meet this demand the imagination of writers and of artists was put to work. 
  Consistency in the stories told and of likeness in the pictures drawn, according 
  to the daily custom of yellowism, was wholly secondary. The “scoop” fever runs 
  riot in yellow newspaper offices. An exclusive story is regarded as a triumph 
  in journalism. The truth of the story is not the question; but the question 
  is whether it is sufficiently plausible to be sensational. The story being untrue 
  is many times turned to advantage, for in a subsequent issue the falsity of 
  it can be disclosed with scathing animadversions on individuals said to be responsible 
  for such gross deception, together with some examination of motive, and with 
  such indignant protest over the general depravity of people who would deceive 
  the public in the advancement of purposes of their own as practice in yellowism 
  may render possible.
       Men detailed to write stories for yellow newspapers 
  go about their work as a mechanic might proceed to build a hog house. What sort 
  of a house is wanted? The correspondent will supply any sort of a story the 
  management may suggest. The management understands that there are different 
  classes of readers. There are those who want the direst possibilities. Therefore 
  there must be a story for these. There are those who want the brightest and 
  most hopeful side. Therefore there must be a story for these. There are those 
  who want to see the assassin. Therefore a picture with his name underneath must 
  be made for the next issue. There are those who want to see the house in which 
  the patient is struggling for life. Therefore the house, or a house, is displayed. 
  There are those who want to see the family of the criminal. Therefore the family 
  is presented. Whatever anyone wants to read or wants to see the yellow newspaper 
  will present in the next issue. It is only a question of knowing what is wanted.
       There has been intense desire on the part of all 
  classes of people for the news in connection with the frightful crime at Buffalo. 
  In consequence of this desire there has been unusual scrutiny of newspapers 
  with a view of getting at the truth. The result is that attention has been strongly 
  directed to the sin of yellow journalism.
       The difficulty of reading newspapers has increased 
  with the most discriminating and intelligent people. Even a yellow of the yellow 
  can be read in a way to get at least a suspicion of the real news. But the habit 
  is growing with the best people to question the reliability of newspaper reports. 
  Yellowism is so insidious that it creeps in everywhere. It is impossible for 
  the most carefully edited newspaper to trace the origin and thereby weigh the 
  value of all reports.
       Yellowism should be choked off. It is vitiating 
  in its influence, corrupting in its tendency, and disgraceful to a profession 
  entitled to be reckoned as honorable.
       People who think a Police Gazette is the highest 
  type of publication will continue to have opportunity to place their subscriptions 
  to their liking. People who think that advertising in the vilest yellowism is 
  the most profitable will doubtless continue to have opportunity to waste their 
  money. But newspaper patrons who have different ideas ought to unite in making 
  the best possible market for real newspapers.