Info logo
Encyclopedia

  

The Onion

Home :: Up
Google
www.fastload.org

The Onion

The Onion is a parody newspaper and website, originally published in Madison, Wisconsin (and now in New York, New York).

The articles comment both on current events and non-existant stories (example headline: "All Americans Issued Life Jacket for Some Reason"). The paper often reports on extremly minor events in a overly sensationalistic manner ("Area Man Confounded by Buffet Procedure") parodying traditional newspaper features and styles. Regular features are an illustrated "statshot" box, parodying USA Today, Point / Counterpoint editorials, horoscopes, and a "person on the street" feature that always surveys the same six people. The Onion claims to be "America's Finest News Source".

Just after the 2000 U.S. Presidential election, when the future President remained undetermined, the Onion published a clever story titled "Bush or Gore: 'A New Era Dawns'" which parodied the similarities between the two politicians. [1] (http://www.theonion.com/onion3640/bush_or_gore.html) The noteworthiness of this story was largely a matter of luck: the paper went to press election night, at a time when the uncertainty was not yet noteworthy.

The staff of the Onion have produced numerous books, including Our Dumb Century and Dispatches from the Tenth Circle.

On June 7, 2002, Reuters reported that the Beijing Evening News republished, in the international news page of its June 3 edition, translated portions of a story from The Onion. The story discusses the U.S. Congress's threats to skip town for Memphis, Tennessee or Charlotte, North Carolina unless Washington, DC built them a new Capitol building with a retractable dome. [2] (http://www.theonion.com/onion3820/congress_threatens.html) It is a parody of several U.S. sports franchises' threats to leave their city unless new stadiums are built for them. The Evening News is Beijing's most popular newspaper, claiming a circulation of 1.25 million.

Books

See Also

External links


Try putting this code snipplet on your page

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
You may copy and modify it as long as the entire work (including additions) remains under this license.
To view or edit this article at Wikipedia, follow this link.