2. THE GUARDIAN
The guardian's website has a
clear header to display the logo,
categories and other
information like signing in.
Underneath it displays a main
story which is eye catching by
using a large picture, then to the
right of the main article similar
stories are displayed with tags
creating a rabbit hole of
information
3. THE GUARDIAN
Underneath the main stories other
categories are made such as
headlines, spotlight, sport and
opinion. These are all like the main
stories' layout with large pictures
and similar stories in that category.
Short titles are used and made red
to stand out individually, any live
reporting has a red background
and white text.
4. THE
GUARDIAN
The story is written in the
centre column with the
left hand-side having the
category and the right
having an advertisement.
At the end of the piece
there is a 'more on this
story' section with similar
articles to look at.
Blue and red are the main
colours shown throughout
the website
5. DAILY MAIL
For the Daily mail, the header is more
packed with information. Using the
title, weather, sign ins and categories.
The Daily Mail also uses more
advertisements than the Guardian
surrounding the header.
Underneath it displays a large advert
and then displays one main story, this
story is more nationalistic focused on
remembrance day which is in
convention for the daily mail.
6. DAILY MAIL
Underneath the main story are more
stories relating to the main story
and celebrity news in two column
displaying images as well.
Titles are in blue and a clickable link
with a standfirst underneath.
The Daily Mail's political standpoints
are displayed in the titles of the
articles, showing the nationalism
and right leaning views they hold.
7. DAILY MAIL
The story is in one large column with
images and videos throughout the
article.
Different to the guardian, tags for
similar stories or articles in general
are down the right-hand side for the
entire articles, and at the end of an
article is a section to comment.
Adverts are also shown throughout the
articles mixed in with the tags.
8. INEWS
inews has a less obvious header
and its logo is to the side of the
page instead of on top. The header
is still packed with sign ins,
categories and a subscription area.
To the right of the main i are the
main stories this time the top story
is enlarged, and small categories
surround it. This creates a broad
spectrum of information for people
to find interesting meaning they
are more likely to click on a story.
9. INEWS
Underneath the main stories are
categories with colours such as
iweekend, culture, opinion and
politics. These categories are
sections with different colours and
stories of their own in each
section.
inews also use red for titles to
make them pop off the white
background.
The I stays with page and moves
as the page is scrolled down.
inews political views can be seen
in the wording of titles and
descriptive words in the political
10. INEWS
To read an article on inews you
must subscribe, however the
layout is very similar to The Daily
Mail, creating one large column for
the article using pictures and, on
the right, having links to other
articles constantly as you scroll.
At the bottom of the article there
are also more links to articles
which aren't necessarily similar.