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Type | Two publications per University of York term |
---|---|
Format | Tabloid |
Owner(s) | YUSU |
Editor | Kaitlyn Beattie-Zarb and Emily Sinclair |
Deputy editor | Laura Rowe |
Founded | 1987 |
Language | English |
Headquarters | Eric Milner-White B Block, University of York |
Website | yorkvision |
York Vision (previously known as yorkVision and York Student Vision) is one of two student newspapers at the University of York. Vision is a registered society of, and is funded by the University of York Students' Union (YUSU).
Organisation
Unlike many other university newspapers, which have sabbatical editors, York Vision's staff is made up entirely of current students. The current Editors are Kaitlyn Beattie-Zarb and Emily Sinclair.[1] The Deputy Editor is Laura Rowe.[2]
The newspaper itself contains several sections, with Opinion, Features, Lifestyle, Science, SCENE, and Environment, bookended by news and sport.[citation needed]
Special features
Vision has a number of features that help mould its distinct character. These include:
- Interviews: Almost every section of the paper has, at one time or another, secured a top-tier interview. Recent highlights include Alastair Campbell, Miley Cyrus, Karl Pilkington, Hot Chip, Guantanamo detainee Moazzam Begg, Nick Clegg, Mark Watson, Franz Ferdinand, Shami Chakrabarti, Aaron Porter, Wretch 32, Dr Jessen, Harry Enfield and Sarah Beeny. In 2022, Marti Stelling interviewed Tik-Tok famous Katylee Bailey.
- SCENE: The arts pullout containing sections dedicated to Screen, Stage, Music, Literature, Art, Food, Games, and Spotlight, the arts and culture features section. The current editor of SCENE is Dan Gordon-Potts.
- The Roses Specials: Either an annual pull-out published after the Roses Tournament, or a limited-run, special edition distributed during the tournament itself. The 2008 Roses review was incorporated into the Sport section. 2012 saw the largest scale Roses coverage yet, both online and in print, including a 16-page pull-out produced away from home at Lancaster University.
- Goalside: A pull-out dedicated to coverage of the summer term 'College Cup', which dominates summer sport at the University of York, first published in 2012.
- FRESH: The freshers magazine given to all new students at the University of York.
Notable former contributors
- Mark Watts
- Ste Curran
- Dan Roberts – Guardian Brexit editor[3]
- Greg Jenner – Horrible Histories comedian [4]
- Rajini Vaidyanathan – BBC News North America correspondent[5]
- Rob Harris – Associated Press reporter[6]
- Poppy Sharp – Food Correspondent
Controversies
In early 2018, The Lemon Press, the University of York's satirical student magazine, accused York Vision of erroneously claiming to be the "most awarded student newspaper" in the country.[7] The outcome of their investigation suggested that the United Kingdom's most awarded student newspaper was The Gryphon, of the University of Leeds. In response, York Vision changed their Twitter description to "one of the most awarded student publications".[8]
The October 2018 issue of York Vision was removed from circulation for a back page advert that consisted of a link to an online submission form, and the heading "Send Nudes". The page received condemnation from the University of York Students' Union, which also claimed that issue had been published without their required approval.[9] The paper was then sanctioned by YUSU and the society was suspended from operating until the start of the 2019/20 academic year under new leadership.
Awards
York Vision has received awards for its writing, design, and in both overall best publication and best small budget categories (due to the lack of sabbatical positions of the paper). In 2009 it was the only student newspaper without a full-time paid member of staff to be nominated for Guardian Student Newspaper of the Year.
It won the award four times in six years, having held the award from 2002 to 2004. Vision remains the only paper to achieve the remarkable hat-trick in the ceremony's 26-year history.
In 2011, Vision was named Student Publication of the Year at the Guardian Student Media Awards.[10]
Guardian Student Media Awards
2015[11]
- Best Opinion Writer: Edward Greenwood (Nominee)
2014[12]
- Best Publication (Winner)
- Best Reporter: Patrick Greenfield (Winner)
2013[13]
- Best Publication (Runner up)
- Best Website (Nominee)
2012[14]
- Best Reporter: Oliver Todd (Nominee)
2011[15]
- Best Publication (Winner)
2010[16]
- Best Publication (Nominee)
- Best Reporter: Daniel Goddard (Nominee)
- Best Reporter: Martin Williams (Nominee)
- Best Writer: Jim Norton (Nominee)
2009
- Best Newspaper (Nominee)
- Best Reporter: Martin Williams (Nominee)
- Best Reporter: Tom McDermott (Nominee)
- Best Sports Writer: Jim Norton (Nominee)
2008[17]
- Best Reporter: Adam Thorn (Runner up)
- Best Feature Writer: Anna Wormleighton (Nominee)
- Best Sports Writer: Grumpy Panda Alex Richman (Runner up)
- Best Sports Writer: Tom Sheldrick (Nominee)
2007[18]
- Best Newspaper (Winner)
- Best Reporter: Lucy Taylor (Winner)
- Best Reporter: Adam Thorn (Nominee)
- Best Sports Writer: Darius Austin (Nominee)
- Best Critic: Richard Webb (Winner)
2006
- Best Columnist: Ruth Mclean (Nominee)
2005
- Best Newspaper (Nominee)
- Best Small Budget Publication (Nominee)
- Best Sports Writer: Simon Osborn (Winner)
- Best Columnist: Jonathan Bray (Winner)
2004
- Best Newspaper (Winner)
- Best Small Budget Publication (Runner up)
- Best Journalist: Jon Bentham (Winner)
- Best Reporter: Jon Bentham (Nominee)
- Best Feature Writer: Jon Bentham (Runner up)
2003
- Best Newspaper (Winner)
- Best Small Budget Publication (Nominee)
- Best Journalist: Rob Harris (Winner)
- Best Reporter: Rob Harris (Winner)
- Best Travel Writer: Jon Bentham (Winner)
- Best Travel Writer: Rob Harris (Nominee)
2002
- Best Newspaper (Winner)
- Best Columnist: Gareth Walker (Winner)
- Best Website (Winner)
2001
- Best Website (Runner up)
Student Publication Association Awards
2020
- Best Publication (Pending)
- Best Newspaper Design (Pending)
- Billy Dowling-Reid Award for Outstanding Commitment – Harry Clay and Chay Quinn (Pending)
- Best Science/Tech Piece – Maddie Jenkins (Pending)
2017
- Outstanding Commitment – Abbie Llewelyn (Winner)
- Best News Story – Josh Salisbury (Shortlisted)
- Best News Story – Huw James (Shortlisted)
- Best News Story – Abbie Llewelyn (Shortlisted)
2016
- Best Comment – Costas Mourselas (Highly Commended)
- Best Publication (Shortlisted)
- Best Sports Coverage (Shortlisted)
- Best Reporter – Thomas Butler-Roberts (Shortlisted)
- Best News Story – Jonny Long & Abbie Llewelyn (Shortlisted)
- Best Feature – Jonny Long (Shortlisted)
National Union of Students Awards
- 2014 Best Journalist: Jack Gevertz (Winner) [19]
- 2012 Best Media (Runner up)
- 2012 Best Journalist: Oliver Todd (Highly Commended)
- 2008 Best Journalist: Lucy Taylor (Nominee)
National Union of Students Journalism Awards
- 2006 Best Small Budget Publication (Winner)
- 2004 Best Publication Design (Winner)
- 2004 Best Feature Writer: Jon Bentham (Winner)
- 2004 Best Arts Journalist: Sam Walton (Runner up)
- 2003 Best Newspaper (Winner)
- 2003 Best Reporter: Rob Harris (Winner)
- 2003 Best Arts Journalist: Bella Todd (Winner)
- 2001 Best Small Budget Publication (Winner)
References
- ^ "About". York Vision. Retrieved 31 March 2020.
- ^ "Laura Rowe". Trill! Mag. Retrieved 27 June 2023.
- ^ "Dan Roberts Profile". The Guardian. London.
- ^ "20 Questions with Greg Jenner". York Vision. York.
- ^ "BBC journalist denies corporation covered up sexual harassment". The Guardian. London.
- ^ "Van Gaal reacts angrily to question over his Manchester United future". BBC. London. Retrieved 8 February 2016.
- ^ "York Vision Not the UK's Most Awarded Student Newspaper (And Never Was)". The Lemon Press. 9 March 2018. Archived from the original on 28 January 2019. Retrieved 12 March 2018.
- ^ Vision, York (10 March 2018). "@thelemonpresspic.twitter.com/bHn1c45Uhq". @YorkVision. Retrieved 12 March 2018.
- ^ "York Vision latest issue criticised after it asks students to 'send nudes'". The Yorker. 19 October 2018. Retrieved 20 October 2018.
- ^ "Student Media awards 2011 Winners". The Guardian. 28 November 2011. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 1 March 2017.
- ^ "Student Media Awards 2015: winners and runners-up". The Guardian. 4 December 2015. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 1 March 2017.
- ^ "Student Media Awards 2014: winners and runners-up". The Guardian. 2014. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
- ^ "Student Media Awards 2013 – Winners and runners-up". The Guardian. 2 December 2013. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 1 March 2017.
- ^ "Student Media awards 2012 winners". The Guardian. 7 November 2012. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 1 March 2017.
- ^ "Student Media awards 2011 Winners". The Guardian. London. 28 November 2011. Retrieved 26 October 2012.
- ^ "Winners and Runners-Up 2010". The Guardian. 25 November 2010. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 1 March 2017.
- ^ "Guardian Student Media Awards 2008". The Guardian. 26 November 2008. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 1 March 2017.
- ^ "Student Media Awards winners". The Guardian. 22 November 2007. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 1 March 2017.
- ^ "NUS Awards 2016". www.nusawards.org.uk. Retrieved 1 March 2017.