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At the dawn of the twentieth century, a new kind of journalism was born—one less interested in Parliament or policy than in people. Its headlines shouted rather than spoke, its photographs peered rather than illustrated, and its purpose was not to inform so much as to fascinate. The tabloid press changed the relationship between the public and the private. It invited readers to look inside other people’s lives and, in doing so, helped create one of the defining features of modern society: celebrity. This is the story of how gossip became news, how fame became a profession, and how mass…
