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  • A labourer reads a copy of Britain's tabloid Sun Newspaper. The worker holds a coffee and wears a working mans' cap with a pencil in his right ear as he sits in sunshine during a lunch break. Page Three (or Page 3) is a tabloid newspaper photograph consisting of a topless female glamour model, usually printed on the paper's third page. Women who model regularly for the feature are known as Page Three girls. "Page Three" and "Page 3" are registered trademarks of the Sun tabloid, where the feature originated in 1970. In the context of the News International media scandals of 2011, the (daily) Sun is a sister paper to the now defunct (Sunday) News of The World, closed down by proprietor Rupert Murdoch in the light of public outrage over phone hacking.
    tabloid_workman1-20-July-2011.jpg
  • A labourer reads a copy of Britain's tabloid Sun Newspaper. The worker holds a coffee and wears a working mans' cap with a pencil in his right ear as he sits in sunshine during a lunch break. In the context of the News International media scandals of 2011, the (daily) Sun is a sister paper to the now defunct (Sunday) News of The World, closed down by proprietor Rupert Murdoch in the light of public outrage over phone hacking. The Sun's own headline refers to the previous day when Murdoch sat before a Parliamentary Select Committee to answer questions about the nature of phone hacking into private voicemails of victims and their grieving families. Murdoch's overall message was the committee grilling was his most humble day.
    tabloid_workman4-20-July-2011.jpg
  • A labourer reads a copy of Britain's tabloid Sun Newspaper. The worker holds a coffee and wears a working mans' cap with a pencil in his right ear as he sits in sunshine during a lunch break. In the context of the News International media scandals of 2011, the (daily) Sun is a sister paper to the now defunct (Sunday) News of The World, closed down by proprietor Rupert Murdoch in the light of public outrage over phone hacking. The Sun's own headline refers to the previous day when Murdoch sat before a Parliamentary Select Committee to answer questions about the nature of phone hacking into private voicemails of victims and their grieving families. Murdoch's overall message was the committee grilling was his most humble day.
    tabloid_workman2-20-July-2011.jpg
  • An elderly woman reads a copy of a tabloid newspaper, on 16th June 1989, in London, England.
    newspaper_woman-16-06-1989.jpg
  • Three dads are looking their respective children of varying ages - from a baby to an infant and 8-year old. In the foreground a father reads his tabloid newspaper as his toddler sleeps contentedly in its pushchair, a dummy in the mouth and a blanket scross its body to keep out a chilly breeze. Further back another man stands waiting for his partner with a baby, also asleep in the buggy. And thirdly, a male pushes his daughter in pink up a small slope on a bicycle that uses stablizers. It is a busy scene on Paignton seafront on the Devon coast. Elsewhere children and adults of all ages walk along the esplanade enjoying an overcast and windy day on holiday. This theatrical scene is about the ideal father and the family unit.
    england_beach06-15-12-2007.jpg
  • A wife gives an tight, affectionate hug to her husband on the Promenade at North Bay, Scarborough, North Yorkshire. There is no such showing of reciprocated love from the man who continues to read a cricket report in the sports page of his tabloid newspaper. She is wearing a floral summer top and he is topless. In the background we see a bustling sea front. People are walking along the Prom, enjoying the sun and warmth of this usually chilly area of Britain.
    RB-0114.jpg
  • A Londoner dashes homeward over London Bridge in the rain as the day darkens in the City of London, the heart of the capital's financial district. She uses her tabloid Sun newspaper to shield her from the face full of rain lashing herself in the open distance to London Bridge station.
    city_people04-20-03-1993.jpg
  • Copies of the free daily tabloid Metro newspaper carefully placed on upper deck of seats on a London bus.
    metro_bus02-16-04-2012.jpg
  • An elderly couple sit in peace on a quiet beach in the seaside resort of Great Yarmouth, Norfolk. In a classic English beach holiday scene, the husband and wife relax, reclining in a pair of deckchairs at a kiosk that dispenses these quaintly British beach chairs. A sign telling other holidaymakers to collect and pay for their time in them appears on the freshly-painted clap-board wall. As the lazy completes word puzzles in her magazine, the gentleman reads his regular copy of the Daily Mirror tabloid newspaper. He is tanned, perhaps spent his summer tending his garden back home but here on holiday, they both have the chance to spend some time together away from home, in a resort known for its beaches and coastal adventures.
    seaside_pensioners02-27-05-1992.jpg
  • Using a tabloid newspaper, a father seeks shelter from sunshine while sitting in a council deck chair. On the front page of the paper is a headline saying "Butchered' showing a picture of an unfortunate young 3 year-old boy murdered by a maniac axeman. Close-by is the man's own son who is digging a hole furiously in the sand. He looks uncannily like a slightly older version of the murdered boy. This coincidence is heightened because of the body-language of the digging lad, seemingly about to chop an unseen object with his red spade. Both man and boy are on holiday at the northern English seaside resort of Scarborough, North Yorkshire and they are otherwise having a great time on South Beach, near the Grand Hotel building, high up on the cliff.
    england_beach03-15-12-2007 .jpg
  • Sitting among others in long grass a middle-class lady reads the high-circulation Daily Mail newspaper during a lunchtime break at the Chelsea Flower Show, in London England. The front page headline reads 'Icy Blast from the Kremlin' in an echo from the darkest days of the Cold War, when western media fuelled the insatiable appetite for propaganda. But this scene is from May 1989 before the fall of the Berlin Wall and when the eastern states of the Warsaw Pact were still ruled by their Communist masters. Visitors to this annual horticultural event either sit in the cool shade or like this woman who appears comfortable cross-legged in sandals and a summer dress, stays under the hot mid-day sun with her tabloid format paper spread and with her possessions kept in a shoulder bag.
    chelsea_lady05-26-1989.jpg
  • Passers-by in London's Oxford Circus take in morning news of Barack Obama's historic election victory on newspaper headlines
    obama_election_night62-05-11-2008.jpg
  • The news that media tycoon Robert maxwell had drowned in the sea is reported in the Sun newspaper, on 6th November 1991, in London, England. In 1991, Maxwell's body was discovered floating in the Atlantic Ocean, having fallen overboard from his yacht.
    maxwell_dead-06-11-1991.jpg
  • Tired daytrip passengers laden with Duty Free purchases await transport after returning from their booze-cruise to Calais in France, on 21st June 1995, in Dover, Kent, England. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    dover_passengers-21-06-1995.jpg
  • A businessman reads a 1992 edition of the Daily Express whose headline announces that Prime Minister John Major is fighting the Pound Crisis, on a bench in the City of London (aka The Square Mile), the capital's financial centre, on 18th September 1992, in London, England. Black Wednesday occurred in the United Kingdom on 16 September 1992, when John Major's Conservative government was forced to withdraw the pound sterling from the European Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM) after it was unable to keep the pound above its agreed lower limit in the ERM. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    pound_crisis02-18-09-1992.jpg
  • Lingerie-clad models stage a protest by the animal rights organisation, Peta against the suffering of animals, on 17th Febriary 2017, in London, England, United Kingdom. The group stripped off into matching green underwear and crocodile masks before posing outside the show's main venue on the Strand in central London. Peta is campaigning against the use of exotic animal skins in the fashion industry. It follows an investigation of crocodile farms which found animals were confined to pits and sometimes still alive when their skin was torn off, Peta said. London Fashion Week is a clothing trade show held in London twice each year, in February and September. It is one of the "Big Four" fashion weeks, along with the New York, Milan and Paris. The fashion sector plays a significant role in the UK economy with London Fashion Week alone estimated to rake in £269 million each season. The six-day industry event allows designers to show their collections to buyers, journalists and celebrities and also maintains the city’s status as a top fashion capital.
    london_fashion_show-08-17-02-2017.jpg
  • Lingerie-clad models stage a protest by the animal rights organisation, Peta against the suffering of animals, on 17th Febriary 2017, in London, England, United Kingdom. The group stripped off into matching green underwear and crocodile masks before posing outside the show's main venue on the Strand in central London. Peta is campaigning against the use of exotic animal skins in the fashion industry. It follows an investigation of crocodile farms which found animals were confined to pits and sometimes still alive when their skin was torn off, Peta said. London Fashion Week is a clothing trade show held in London twice each year, in February and September. It is one of the "Big Four" fashion weeks, along with the New York, Milan and Paris. The fashion sector plays a significant role in the UK economy with London Fashion Week alone estimated to rake in £269 million each season. The six-day industry event allows designers to show their collections to buyers, journalists and celebrities and also maintains the city’s status as a top fashion capital.
    london_fashion_show-07-17-02-2017.jpg
  • Lingerie-clad models stage a protest by the animal rights organisation, Peta against the suffering of animals, on 17th Febriary 2017, in London, England, United Kingdom. The group stripped off into matching green underwear and crocodile masks before posing outside the show's main venue on the Strand in central London. Peta is campaigning against the use of exotic animal skins in the fashion industry. It follows an investigation of crocodile farms which found animals were confined to pits and sometimes still alive when their skin was torn off, Peta said. London Fashion Week is a clothing trade show held in London twice each year, in February and September. It is one of the "Big Four" fashion weeks, along with the New York, Milan and Paris. The fashion sector plays a significant role in the UK economy with London Fashion Week alone estimated to rake in £269 million each season. The six-day industry event allows designers to show their collections to buyers, journalists and celebrities and also maintains the city’s status as a top fashion capital. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    london_fashion_show-06-17-02-2017.jpg
  • Spectator reads a tablid story written by Kamacain sprinter Eusain Bolt as a cyclist passes by before racers arrive on the first day of competition of the London 2012 Olympic 250km mens' road race. Starting from central London and passing the capital's famous landmarks before heading out into rural England to the gruelling Box Hill in the county of Surrey. Local southwest Londoners lined the route hoping for British favourite Mark Cavendish to win Team GB first medal but were eventually disappointed when Kazakhstan's Alexandre Vinokourov eventually won gold.
    olympic_cycling06-28-07-2012.jpg
  • Young black man reads a newspaper on a seat in the Olympic district of Stratford, east London.
    olympic_stratford52-22-05-2012.jpg
  • A London taxi driver takes a break with the free newspaper Metro in the capital's West End.
    taxi_rest1-12-09-2011.jpg
  • Looter and rioting headlines from the Sun newspaper in Clarence Road, Hackney. After the riots of London and other UK cities, Sri Lankan-born Sivaharan (Siva) Kandiah's looted shop 'Clarence Convenience Store' in Clarence Road, Hackney.
    clarenceRd_newspapers2-12-August-201...jpg
  • Days after the September 11th 2001 attacks in New York and Washington DC, the US government had identified Osama Bin Laden as the head culprit of the terrorist action on America. Here, a businessman wearing a smart dark suit and polished loafers bends down to buy the latest copy of the New York Daily News from an African American vendor near Wall Street in the heart of New York's financial district. Bin Laden's demonic face is spread across the front page and the words "Wanted: Dead or Alive" tells Americans that their al-Qaeda evil-doer will be caught eventually, like a baddie rounded up by the Sheriff by the last scene of a Hollywood western.  .
    binladen_america004-19-09-2001.jpg
  • A man from behind reads a newspaper and smokes a cigarette whilst seated on the pavement outside a street cafe.
    reading_newspaper01-17-02-2011.jpg
  • Pilot of the 'Red Arrows', Britain's Royal Air Force aerobatic team relaxes by reading newspaper before air show display.
    Red_Arrows504_RBA.jpg
  • Passers-by in London's Oxford Circus take in morning news of Barack Obama's historic election victory on newspaper headlines
    obama_election_night63-05-11-2008.jpg
  • Lingerie-clad models stage a protest by the animal rights organisation, Peta against the suffering of animals, on 17th Febriary 2017, in London, England, United Kingdom. The group stripped off into matching green underwear and crocodile masks before posing outside the show's main venue on the Strand in central London. Peta is campaigning against the use of exotic animal skins in the fashion industry. It follows an investigation of crocodile farms which found animals were confined to pits and sometimes still alive when their skin was torn off, Peta said. London Fashion Week is a clothing trade show held in London twice each year, in February and September. It is one of the "Big Four" fashion weeks, along with the New York, Milan and Paris. The fashion sector plays a significant role in the UK economy with London Fashion Week alone estimated to rake in £269 million each season. The six-day industry event allows designers to show their collections to buyers, journalists and celebrities and also maintains the city’s status as a top fashion capital. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    london_fashion_show-09-17-02-2017.jpg
  • A German tourist reads the back sports page in his Bild newspaper, whilst on holiday in south Tyrol, northern italy.
    klausen_italy16-15-07-2015.jpg
  • The four tabloid titles of Mirror Group Newspapers at a time when its pension fund was found to have been stolen by its tycoon owner, Robert Maxwell from former employees, on 9th June 1992, in London, England.
    tabloid_newspapers-14-05-1991.jpg
  • A businessman reads a 1992 edition of the Daily Express whose headline announces that Prime Minister John Major is fighting the Pound Crisis, on a bench in the City of London (aka The Square Mile), the capital's financial centre, on 18th September 1992, in London, England. Black Wednesday occurred in the United Kingdom on 16 September 1992, when John Major's Conservative government was forced to withdraw the pound sterling from the European Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM) after it was unable to keep the pound above its agreed lower limit in the ERM. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    pound_crisis-18-09-1992.jpg
  • Piles of newspapers dumped on a London rooftop on the Embankment.
    newspaper_litter01-20-01-2011.jpg
  • Liberal Democrat leader Paddy Ashdown and wife Jane on the steps of their Kennington home, on 6th february 1992, in London England. Following the press becoming aware of a stolen document relating to a divorce case, he disclosed a five-month affair with his secretary, Patricia Howard, five years earlier. He and his marriage weathered the political and tabloid storm, with his wife of 30 years forgiving him. The revelation of his affair sparked the front page headline "It's Paddy Pantsdown" from The Sun newspaper.
    paddy_ashdown01-06-02-1992.jpg
  • Liberal Democrat leader Paddy Ashdown and wife Jane on the steps of their Kennington home, on 6th february 1992, in London England. Following the press becoming aware of a stolen document relating to a divorce case, he disclosed a five-month affair with his secretary, Patricia Howard, five years earlier. He and his marriage weathered the political and tabloid storm, with his wife of 30 years forgiving him. The revelation of his affair sparked the front page headline "It's Paddy Pantsdown" from The Sun newspaper.
    paddy_ashdown02-06-02-1992.jpg
  • A businessman reads The Times newspaper in the early 90s when the News International title was a broadsheet - before it went to a tabloid format. The headline refers to a British Rail axing of 5,000 jobs, dated Friday 20th November 1992 when it cost just 45 pence. The Times is a British daily national newspaper, first published in London in 1785 under the title The Daily Universal Register (it became The Times on 1 January 1788). The Times and its sister paper The Sunday Times (founded in 1821) are published by Times Newspapers, since 1981 a subsidiary of News International, itself wholly owned by the News Corporation group headed by Rupert Murdoch.
    times_newspaper02-20-11-1992.jpg
  • A Newspaper seller displays copies of the London tabloid aimed at commuters The Evening Standard, on sale here at Monument underground station. On this day, the headline is about the tube and rail strike that inconvenienced thousands of Londoners on 21st June 1989. Passengers who might have descended into the subterranean tunnels of this Victorian transport system, purchase their favoured paper containing all the news of the industrial action.
    strike_newspapers01-21-06-1989.jpg
  • Businessmen associates together read The Times newspaper in the early 90s when the News International title was a broadsheet - before it went to a tabloid format. The headline refers to a British Rail axing of 5,000 jobs. The Times is a British daily national newspaper, first published in London in 1785 under the title The Daily Universal Register (it became The Times on 1 January 1788). The Times and its sister paper The Sunday Times (founded in 1821) are published by Times Newspapers, since 1981 a subsidiary of News International, itself wholly owned by the News Corporation group headed by Rupert Murdoch.
    times_newspaper01-20-11-1992.jpg
  • A Newspaper seller displays copies of the London tabloid aimed at commuters The Evening Standard, on sale here at Monument underground station. On this day, the headline is about the tube and rail strike that inconvenienced thousands of Londoners on 21st June 1989. Passengers who might have descended into the subterranean tunnels of this Victorian transport system, purchase their favoured paper containing all the news of the industrial action.
    strike_newspapers02-21-06-1989.jpg
  • Patriotic Americana - After 9/11. Cowboy.com ad and patriotic threat, Maryland. In the week after the September 11th attacks, America sought to express their anger and patriotic unity. An internet company?s cowboy advert which sits comfortably above warmongering rhetoric is plainly seen alongside Highway 27 in Townsville, Maryland. "Wanted Dead or Alive!" - Headline from the New York Daily News tabloid newspaper.
    These Colors Don't Run5 RBA.jpg
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