2023
April
03
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

April 03, 2023
Loading the player...

What’s in a headline?

For those of us in the news business, a lot. A story that’s smartly reported, written, and edited can slide right by a reader if the headline doesn’t do its job. The demands are high: Be clear, be accurate. Don’t mislead or editorialize. Offer significance. Be clever and delightful when called for. Don’t understate, don’t overpromise.

It’s a big demand for a few words that have a nanosecond to grab your attention. So Monitor staffers were delighted to learn that their work recently won top honors from ACES: The Society for Editing, for the best headline portfolio among national publications in 2022. Second place went to The Washington Post, and third place to The Triton News.

Headlines face particular pressure in an era of news overload and “news avoiders” – the 38% of people in 2022 who sometimes or often stayed away from news, up from 29% in 2017, according to a Reuters Institute report. Factors behind that rise include a sense of being overwhelmed by stories that “darken their mood” and seem disconnected from society’s needs.

Monitor editors take countering that disconnect seriously with stories that plumb the outlooks and values driving news events – and with headlines that telegraph that added depth. Our stylebook entry on “headline guidance” is 15 paragraphs long. Every day, editors, who write most of our headlines, toss several options for their story into a “headline rodeo” for colleagues to critique.

We hope you’ll tell us when you like a particular headline, or find it wanting. In the meantime, here are the headlines that ACES said aced the job.

Moral math: Does 1 WNBA star = 1 arms dealer?

Welcome to the office, Gen Z. You’re the only one here.

What’s booming in wartime Odesa? Laughter.

‘Democrats woke a sleeping giant’: Why parents say they’ve had enough

I needed a fence builder. He turned out to be a rock star.

On Broadway: This musician is in the pits, but far from blue 

‘Beacon of freedom’ or ‘Loudocracy’? How Florida became culture war central.

Daisies and daggers: In Saudi mountains, garlands crown the brave

To fish is to live just a moment in the future

One country, two histories: What does it mean to be an American?


You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.

Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Hundreds of billions of taxpayer dollars were stolen during the pandemic, as Congress rushed to aid small businesses and individuals. Now the U.S. is trying to claw some money back – and fix vulnerabilities in the system. 

SOURCE:

U.S. Department of Labor, U.S. Government Accountability Office

|
Jacob Turcotte/Staff
Scott Peterson/Getty Images/The Christian Science Monitor
Ukrainian soldiers practice piloting a commercial drone in Kramatorsk, Ukraine, Feb. 20, 2023. Drones are just one of the many pieces of equipment in the war effort being supplied by public crowdfunding.

Citizen crowdfunding quickly became a trademark of the war in Ukraine. That solidarity has given noncombatants a way to serve the nation and those fighting reassurance that they are supported.

When an important path to higher education and job training is under strain, what happens to the students who rely on it? Over the next month, the Monitor, in collaboration with six other newsrooms, will examine the challenges facing U.S. community colleges – and potential solutions – in a series called Saving the College Dream

Fifty years ago, the idea of calling someone on a phone in your pocket was unthinkable – until it wasn't. Since the first cellphone call on April 3, 1973, the technology has continued to transform how people connect.

In Pictures

Guy Peterson
Skiffs line the shore in the shadow of a landmark octagonal lighthouse in Mogadishu, Somalia. The capital city's beaches have become a point of pride for residents, who gather weekly to pick up trash, benefiting bathers and fishers alike.

Life in Somalia can be hard, and that view is often reinforced by the media. But on a sandy shoreline, our reporting team found an abundance of joy, camaraderie, and local pride.


The Monitor's View

Reuters/file
Migrants wash dishes after a free meal distributed by L'Autre Cantine association in Nantes, France.

There are 295 million people worldwide living outside the country of their birth – most of them economic migrants and refugees, according to the World Bank. Some countries, like Canada, see this human flow as an economic boost for their aging populations. For others, immigration raises questions about security and national identity.

A new study of the migrant experience in France, however, shows that the most difficult challenge may be managing perceptions. Immigration has been a persistent political fault line from one French election to the next. Yet new insights from the National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies show that immigration is steadily deepening bonds of unity and affection. As demographer François Héran told Le Monde last week, immigration “is not a massive intrusion, but a lasting infusion.”

The evidence is not immediately clear. The French national police reported 12,600 racist, xenophobic, and anti-religious offenses in 2022. A modest dip from the previous year, those incidents likely reflect only a fraction of the real total. Officials estimate that most go unreported. At the same time, however, the French National Consultative Commission on Human Rights found in its latest index of social harmony that “tolerance has never been so high.”

The National Institute reports 1 in 10 people in France is an immigrant – consistent with the average across Western Europe. Those immigrants have an average standard of living that is 22% lower than the national average. But their experience shows that, starting from the earliest school years, inclusive education is resulting in more economic equality, secularization, and shared identity. One-third of the children of immigrants attain management-level or middle-class jobs. Two-thirds form multiracial life partnerships.

“The great replacement of the French population is a myth,” wrote a collection of 400 French intellectuals in an open letter last week calling for a citizen convention on migration to promote accurate public dialogue and unity. Year by year, they noted, “prejudices are losing ground in France [and] tolerance of others is increasing.”

Daily social contact has served as an important buffer against hate. Even after two French-born Muslim brothers attacked the offices of the satirical publication Charlie Hebdo in Paris in 2015, killing 12 and injuring 11, a Pew public opinion survey found an across-the-spectrum rejection of anti-Muslim hatred.

Nowadays, French traditionalists have a different way of measuring their gratitude for how foreigners are enriching and preserving their cultural heritage. Since 1970, France has been losing 400 artisanal bakeries a year as industrial bakers have overtaken markets, according to UNESCO. But in recent years, the baguette has found a new line of defense – a batch of young bakers with names like Mahmoud M’Seddi and Makram Akrout, who have become the bread makers of French presidents.

“I’m French,” Mr. M’Seddi, the son of a Tunisian immigrant, told The New York Times. “This is my home.” Yet it is a home defined by both France’s past and the country’s welcoming of future citizens.


A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

Each weekday, the Monitor includes one clearly labeled religious article offering spiritual insight on contemporary issues, including the news. The publication – in its various forms – is produced for anyone who cares about the progress of the human endeavor around the world and seeks news reported with compassion, intelligence, and an essentially constructive lens. For many, that caring has religious roots. For many, it does not. The Monitor has always embraced both audiences. The Monitor is owned by a church – The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston – whose founder was concerned with both the state of the world and the quality of available news.

Easter’s promise of a higher, healing view of existence – based on Christ Jesus’ powerful example – is for everyone and for all time.


Viewfinder

Darron Cummings/AP
Jasmine Carson (left) and Angel Reese (right) share an exuberant hug as Louisiana State University’s Tigers celebrate a last-second shot during the first half of the NCAA Women’s Final Four championship basketball game against Iowa Sunday, April 2, 2023, in Dallas. LSU defeated Iowa, 102-85. Carson scored 21 points in the first half, establishing the Tigers’ dominance. Reese was named the Final Four’s Most Outstanding Player.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for starting your week with us. Tomorrow, we’ll be looking at the dynamics around former President Trump’s arraignment in New York. Hope to see you back here then.

More issues

2023
April
03
Monday

Give us your feedback

We want to hear, did we miss an angle we should have covered? Should we come back to this topic? Or just give us a rating for this story. We want to hear from you.