Nick Denton of Gawker wonders if the A-hed — the famously quirky front-page story in The Wall Street Journal for the past six decades — is headed for the exit door.
Denton wrote, “This is the front-page feature, once found in the fourth column, now at the base of the third; a home for stories about cooking tips for roadkill or the disappearing holes in Swiss cheese; and the most prized slot in the business newspaper, giving ‘free rein to our reporters’ imagination.’ The Journal’s writers had better save it for the weekend.
“This isn’t wholly surprising. The News Corporation boss has already indicated he wants to take on the New York Times in national news. And some sharp-eyed observers such as Ben Compaine had noted how heavily the Journal covered the news surrounding assassination of Benazir Bhutto, a story it might have left to other less detached newspapers in the past.”
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The story became known as the A-hed because of the shape of the headline. The first A-hed appeared on Dec. 17, 1941, and it discussed an unforeseen result of the country’s entry into World War II — a shortage of American flags.
Former editor Barney Kilgore created an editing staff for the front page of The Journal whose job it was to make everything that the reader saw first that day appealing. Bill Kerby, who had been put in charge of the front page by Kilgore, said his boss called it ‘our showcase.’
Kerby wanted sharp, clever writing that enticed the reader into the story. So stories began with lead sentences such as, ‘Do you like potato juice? You’ll learn to love it in the days ahead.’ The story was about an impending ban on alcoholic beverages with grain due to a World War II shortage.
The A-hed article provided a break between the two hard news stories, although it often dealt with serious issues. Once, the A-hed featured a story about efforts to save a sea otter smeared with oil in the wake of the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill off the Alaska coast.
Another discussed the personal problems that faced Boston Red Sox first baseman Bill Buckner, whose error in the 1986 World Series was blamed for the team losing the sporting event.
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