Hundreds of billions of taxpayer dollars were stolen during the pandemic, as Congress rushed to aid small businesses and individuals. Now the U.S. is trying to claw some money back 鈥 and fix vulnerabilities in the system.听
What鈥檚 in a headline?
For those of us in the news business, a lot. A story that鈥檚 smartly reported, written, and edited can slide right by a reader if the headline聽doesn鈥檛 do its job. The demands are high: Be clear, be accurate. Don鈥檛 mislead or editorialize. Offer significance. Be clever and delightful when called for. Don鈥檛 understate, don鈥檛 overpromise.
It鈥檚 a big demand for a few words that have a nanosecond to grab your attention. So Monitor staffers were delighted to learn that their work recently won top honors from ACES: The Society for Editing, for the best headline portfolio among national publications in 2022. Second place went to The Washington Post, and third place to The Triton News.
Headlines face particular pressure in an era of news overload and 鈥渘ews avoiders鈥 鈥 the 38% of people in 2022 who sometimes or often stayed away from news, up from 29% in 2017, according to a Reuters Institute report. Factors behind that rise include a sense of being overwhelmed by stories that 鈥渄arken their mood鈥 and seem disconnected from society鈥檚 needs.
Monitor editors take countering that disconnect seriously with stories that plumb the outlooks and values driving news events 鈥 and with headlines that telegraph that added depth. Our stylebook entry on 鈥渉eadline guidance鈥 is 15 paragraphs long. Every day, editors, who write most of our headlines, toss several options for their story into a 鈥渉eadline rodeo鈥 for colleagues to critique.
We hope you鈥檒l tell us when you like a particular headline, or find it wanting. In the meantime, here are the headlines that ACES said aced the job.
Moral math: Does 1 WNBA star = 1 arms dealer?
Welcome to the office, Gen Z. You鈥檙e the only one here.
What鈥檚 booming in wartime Odesa? Laughter.
鈥楧emocrats woke a sleeping giant鈥: Why parents say they鈥檝e had enough
I needed a fence builder. He turned out to be a rock star.
On Broadway: This musician is in the pits, but far from blue聽
鈥楤eacon of freedom鈥 or 鈥楲oudocracy鈥? How Florida became culture war central.
Daisies and daggers: In Saudi mountains, garlands crown the brave
To fish is to live just a moment in the future
One country, two histories: What does it mean to be an American?