Paul Berton, editor-in-chief of the London Free Press, has devoted a full column to what readers can expect when picking up tomorrow's redesigned newspaper.
The first revamping of the Sun Media paper since 2001 will include cosmetic and content changes, but word is it won't be a new tabloid format. Advertisers apparently nixed the tab idea months ago.
"The headline fonts have changed, but the print you're reading now is exactly the same as it will be in Monday's paper," says Berton. "The same size, the same type, the same space between the letters and the lines."
The news pages will be moved up front, new features will be introduced etc.
The first revamping of the Sun Media paper since 2001 will include cosmetic and content changes, but word is it won't be a new tabloid format. Advertisers apparently nixed the tab idea months ago.
"The headline fonts have changed, but the print you're reading now is exactly the same as it will be in Monday's paper," says Berton. "The same size, the same type, the same space between the letters and the lines."
The news pages will be moved up front, new features will be introduced etc.
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