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The New York Times posted (7/16/14) its first account of the Israeli strike that killed four young Palestinians on a beach in Gaza. The headline looked like this:
That headline appropriately conveys the horrors witnessed and documented by the Times reporters.
But at some point–around 9:00 pm, according to the website Newsdiffs–the headline was changed to the version that appears on the front page of the New York Times today: "Boys Drawn to Gaza Beach, and Into Center of Mideast Strife."
Headlines are one very prominent way that news stories are framed. In this case, it does a disservice to the reporting underneath.
There's a television equivalent to a headline–the information an anchor provides to introduce a piece. The NBC Nightly News last night (7/16/14) led with Gaza, and the segment by Richard Engel was vivid and powerful. But anchor Brian Williams' introduction included this comment:
When Hamas launches rockets from Gaza, Israel hits back.






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