Unlike most newspapers in Australia, the Herald is a broadsheet, meaning that each page is approximately A2 in size. Tabloid newspapers, such as its competitior The Daily Telegraph are considerably smaller, with each page having a size of approximately A3.
The Sydney Morning Herald is sometimes perceived to be elitist and left wing in orientation, particularly when compared to the sensationalism and conservativism of the only other daily newspaper in Sydney, The Daily Telegraph. Whether this is true is highly subjective and a matter for debate; however, its circulation is very small compared to the Telegraph - the Herald sells about 200,000 copies per diem compared to around 500,000 cipies of the Telegraph.
The Sydney Morning Herald was founded by two brothers named Fairfax, and is still owned by John Fairfax Publications Pty. Ltd. which also owns The Age in Melbourne, The Illawarra Mercury in Wollongong and the daily business newspaper The Australian Financial Review.
Prominent columnists and journalists who write for The Sydney Morning Herald include Margo Kingston[?], Robert Manne[?], Paul Sheehan[?], Mark Riley[?] and Kirsty Needham[?].
The Sydney Morning Herald website - http://www.smh.com.au
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