Headshot of La Cieca

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  • A. Poggia Turra: A positive review of the Cosi: http://www.teleram a.fr/scenes/au-the atre-des-champs... 1:14 PM
  • Grand Inquisitor: Jonas Kaufmann is out of the new Covent Garden ‘TroyensR 17;: Trojan Hoarse:... 1:04 PM
  • A. Poggia Turra: The 1993 L’Italiana at the Grand Theatre de Geneve (I think it was a Jerome Savary... 12:59 PM
  • m. croche: Next season’s directors will have moved on to sub-basements and man-caves. Regarding the latter,... 12:41 PM
  • semira mide: There have been other “kitchen Rossini” – the guy DID love food, after all. The... 12:33 PM
  • operalover9001: Couldn’t fine the last intermission feature, so I’ll post this here: Kaufmann out of... 12:33 PM
  • zinka: httpv://www.youtub e.com/watch?v=sWh_ 2Iit3Ek Do we know any queens who are as good?????????????? ??????? 12:26 PM
  • Feldmarschallin: BTW Exposito is very cute….is he also on the bus? 12:16 PM

Typography as destiny

Don’t get La Cieca wrong: the whole “Opera and Technology” panel last Friday was fascinating. But probably the most interesting bit of information shared all night was done after the formalities were ended. Anne Midgette got to talking with JJ and a few others about the layout style of the New York Times Arts section, and La Cieca has to admit she never realized just how intricate the whole thing is.

Basically there are two kinds of pieces that run in the Arts section: reporting and opinion. “Opinion” includes both reviews and what back in my sob sister days we used to call “think” pieces. It turns out the Times style decrees a number of differences in how these two types of writing are set up.

“Reporting” pieces (like the one on the left, below) have a plain serif headline, a traditional byline directly below the hed, then a series of paragraphs with an even right margin. “Opinion” pieces (right) feature an italic headline, an inset byline without the word “by” and subhead “Music Review.” Paragraphs have a ragged right margin.

The meaning of all this? Maybe the Times is saying, “This review is only someone’s opinion, so it doesn’t need justification.”

4 comments

  • ChacoWhacko says:

    To steal a phrase, “that pun is so bad it gave me cancer!” :-)

  • Giorgio says:

    Perhaps I’m mistaken, but I thought the column formatting (jagged vs. justified) has been in use in the NYT for as long as I can remember. What’s probably new is the location of the byline of “reviews” and “thought” pieces, which is a very minor change.

  • squinted says:

    I don’t believe La Cieca said it had changed.

  • Chalkenteros says:

    Ok, sweetie, that made me smile.