The Detroit Free Press is guilty of using the pointless "it's official." And this headline was taken directly from the lede. Can it get any worse?
This post comes directly from the Rip Your Hair Out Department at The Offlede. "It's official" has to be one of the most grossly overused, unnecessary phrases in newspaper and online headlines. Why?
- It rarely adds anything.
- You can always drop it from a headline without losing any vital information.
- You could probably add it to most any headline without making it incorrect.
To illustrate how perpetual it is, I did a quick survey. "It's official" appeared in 212 article headlines on Google News over the last two weeks. The unpunctuated "Its official" (the "its" still meaning "it is") even appeared six times.
Here are some of the star examples:
It's official: Jake Long is a Miami Dolphin (The Palm Beach Post)
- Can't you just say that he's a Dolphin?
- No. It's not that it's official now: It's that it actually happened. Everything else before the actual happening was just speculation through "sources with knowledge of the situation but without the authority to speak with the press."
- When he was unofficially benched, where was he exactly? On the bench? The Freep was an especially egregious violator of the no-it's official rule. This particular one was taken from the story's lede. That's horrible and horribly uncreative headline writing.
- Oh, thank goodness! There was that unofficial limbo period, and I was so worried it wouldn't really happen. Soup, salad and bread sticks for everyone!
- A good, vindicating, strangely biblical one for some of you traditional journalists.
- Because everyone knew that before anyway. And finally, it has been written down.
- Everyone knows it's cold up there.
- Before it became official, the tournament was covertly ESPNized. Isn't that better than CBSized anyway?
It's official -- no clothesline ban (Oakville Beaver, Ontario)
- Wait. Things can officially NOT happen?!
- This must have been the lede: Despite his earlier threats of a veto, President Bush today signed a bill compelling his daughter to marry at his crib in Crawford, Texas.
- There's nothing like unofficial officialism.
- That's expected from Arianna.
It's official: Piestewa Peak name OK'd (East Valley Tribune, Ariz.)
It's Official: Piestewa Peak (Reznet News, Mont.)
Squaw Peak officially Piestewa Peak (The Arizona Republic)
- Same story. Different newspapers. Same official headline. This was the fault of none other than The Associated Press. Other newspapers thought it necessary to keep the AP editor's "official" in their versions of the headline.
- When did they unofficially close it?
- Like, so, yeah, it became official when the teams advanced to the next round, right? Or what?
2 comments:
It's official: You've overstated your point.
Though it IS a good point.
I tend to go overboard sometimes. You probably noticed in other posts, too.
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