Betteridge's law of headlines

Betteridge's law of headlines is an adage that states: "Any headline that ends in a question mark can be answered by the word no." It is named after Ian Betteridge, a British technology journalist who wrote about it in 2009, although the principle is much older.[1][2] Like similar "laws" (e.g., Murphy's law), it is intended to be humorous rather than the literal truth. The adage fails to make sense with questions that are more open-ended than strict yes–no questions.[3]

The maxim has been cited by other names since 1991, when a published compilation of Murphy's Law variants called it "Davis's law", a name that also crops up online without any explanation of who Davis was.[4][5][6][7] It has also been referred to as the "journalistic principle" and in 2007 was referred to in commentary as "an old truism among journalists".[8][9][10]

History

Ian Betteridge's name became associated with the concept after he discussed it in a February 2009 article, which examined a previous TechCrunch article that carried the headline "Did Last.fm Just Hand Over User Listening Data to the RIAA?" (Schonfeld 2009):

This story is a great demonstration of my maxim that any headline which ends in a question mark can be answered by the word "no." The reason why journalists use that style of headline is that they know the story is probably bullshit, and don’t actually have the sources and facts to back it up, but still want to run it.[1]

A similar observation was made by British newspaper editor Andrew Marr in his 2004 book My Trade, among Marr's suggestions for how a reader should interpret newspaper articles:

If the headline asks a question, try answering 'no'. Is This the True Face of Britain's Young? (Sensible reader: No.) Have We Found the Cure for AIDS? (No; or you wouldn't have put the question mark in.) Does This Map Provide the Key for Peace? (Probably not.) A headline with a question mark at the end means, in the vast majority of cases, that the story is tendentious or over-sold. It is often a scare story, or an attempt to elevate some run-of-the-mill piece of reporting into a national controversy and, preferably, a national panic. To a busy journalist hunting for real information a question mark means 'don't bother reading this bit'.[11]

Studies

A 2016 study of a sample of academic journals that set out to test Betteridge's Law and Hinchliffe's Rule (see below) found that few titles were posed as questions and of those, few were yes/no questions and they were more often answered "yes" in the body of the article rather than "no".[12] A 2018 study of 2,585 articles in four academic journals in the field of ecology similarly found that very few titles were posed as questions at all, with 1.82 percent being wh-questions and 2.15 percent being yes/no questions.[13] Of the yes/no questions, 44 percent were answered "yes", 34 percent "maybe", and only 22 percent were answered "no".[13] In 2015, a study of 26,000 articles from 13 news sites on the World Wide Web, conducted by a data scientist and published on his blog, found that the majority (54 percent) were yes/no questions, which divided into 20 percent "yes" answers, 17 percent "no" answers and 16 percent whose answers he could not determine (all percentages rounded by Linander).[14]

Question headlines

Phrasing headlines as questions is a tactic employed by newspapers that do not "have the facts required to buttress the nut graph".[15][3] Roger Simon characterized the practice as justifying "virtually anything, no matter how unlikely", giving Hillary to Replace Biden on Ticket? and Romney to Endorse Gay Marriage Between Corporations? as hypothetical examples of such a practice.[16][17] Many question headlines were used, for example, in reporting of BJP in-fighting in 2004, because no politicians went on record to confirm or deny facts, such as Is Venkaiah Naidu on his way out?[18] Because this implication is known to readers, guides giving advice to newspaper editors state that so-called "question heads" should be used sparingly.[19] Freelance writer R. Thomas Berner calls them "gimmickry".[20] Grant Milnor Hyde observed that they give the impression of uncertainty in a newspaper's content.[21] When Linton Andrews worked at the Daily Mail after the First World War, one of the rules set by Lord Northcliffe was to avoid question headlines, unless the question itself reflected a national issue.[22]

Question headlines are not legally sound when it comes to avoiding defamation.[23] The Supreme Court of Oklahoma held in 1913, in its decision in Spencer v. Minnick, that "A man cannot libel another by the publication of language the meaning and damaging effect of which is clear to all men, and where the identity of the person meant cannot be doubted, and then escape liability through the use of a question mark."[24][23] The use of question headlines as a form of sensationalism has a long history, including the 9 June 1883, headline in Joseph Pulitzer's New York World, Was It Peppermint Mary?[25] The story, about a jewellers that had tried to prevent its female employees from flirting with people outside the store, only mentioned "Peppermint" Mary at the end of the piece as an employee who might possibly have caused this and did not answer the question.[25]

The New York World also famously used a question headline for hedging when editors were unsure of their facts, when it reported the outcome of the 1916 United States presidential election.[26][27] When other New York City newspapers ran statement headlines on 8 November 1916 saying Hughes Is Elected (The Evening Sun, final edition the night before), Hughes Is Elected by Narrow Margin (The Sun), Hughes Is Elected by Majority of 40 (The New York Herald), Hughes the Next President (The Journal of Commerce), Hughes Sweeps State (New York Tribune) and Nation Swept by Hughes! (New York American), the World ran one with a question headline, Hughes Elected in Close Contest?[28] This was the result of a last-minute intervention by then World journalist Herbert Bayard Swope, who, having received a tip from gambling friends that Charles Evans Hughes might not in fact win, persuaded Charles M. Lincoln, the managing editor of the paper, to reset the headline in between editions, inserting a question mark.[29][30] Confusingly, below the question headline the World still had a picture of Hughes captioned "The President-Elect" but the question headline did indeed turn out to have the answer "no", as President Woodrow Wilson was re-elected, which the World finally announced in a headline two days later.[26][28]

Advertisers and marketers prefer yes/no question headlines that are answered "yes", as a reader that immediately answers "no" to a question headline on an advertisement is likely to skip over the advertisement entirely.[31] The most famous example of such a question headline in advertising is "Do you make these mistakes in English?", written to advertise Sherwin Cody's English-language course and used from 1919 to 1959, which (with readers answering "yes" they did make the mistakes that the advertisement proceeded to outline) was measured as more successful than non-yes/no-question alternatives.[32][33] Victor Schwab, a partner in the advertising agency that worked for Cody, published an analysis of the aspects of the headline (as Schwab 1939) attempting to look at it scientifically and using ten years' worth of revenue and customer enquiry data for both it and a statement headline that Cody had also used.[34][35] He noted amongst other things that working in its favour was the question addressing the reader using the second person.[36] A 2013 study into computer-mediated communication came to a similar conclusion, finding that question headlines posted to Twitter and eBay increased click-through rates in comparison to statement headlines and that questions that address or reference the reader have statistically significant higher click-through rates than rhetorical or general questions.[37][38]

In physics

In the field of particle physics, the concept is known as Hinchliffe's Rule, after physicist Ian Hinchliffe, who stated that if a research paper's title is in the form of a yes–no question, the answer to that question will be "no".[39][40] The adage led into a humorous attempt at a liar's paradox by a 1988 paper, written by physicist Boris Kayser under the pseudonym "Boris Peon", which bore the title: "Is Hinchliffe's Rule True?"(Peon 1988)[41][40]

See also

References

  1. Betteridge 2009.
  2. Macalope, The (11 August 2012). "The Macalope Weekly: Pointless Exercises". Macworld. Retrieved 12 May 2019.
  3. Murtha 2015.
  4. Bloch 1991, p. 163.
  5. Anvari 2006
  6. "List of variants of Murphy's Law". Retrieved 12 May 2019.
  7. Liberman 2006.
  8. Götz 1997, Journalistic Principle.
  9. ""It's an old truism among journalists..."". MeatRobot.org.uk. 4 December 2007. Retrieved 12 May 2019.
  10. "The Vitamin B scam. Don't trust Boots". 22 November 2007. Retrieved 12 May 2019.
  11. Marr 2004, p. 253.
  12. Cook & Plourde 2016.
  13. Mola 2017, p. 11.
  14. Linander 2015.
  15. Berthon et al. 2019, p. 257.
  16. Paul & Moss 2015, p. 275.
  17. Simon 2012.
  18. Saxena 2006, pp. 95–96.
  19. Saxena 2006, p. 95.
  20. Berner 2007, p. 233.
  21. Hyde 1931, p. 154.
  22. Andrews 1964, p. 106.
  23. Sack 1999, pp. 2–48.
  24. Oklahoma 1913.
  25. Juergens 2015, pp. 63–64.
  26. Kahn 1965, p. 181.
  27. Gies 1979, p. 64.
  28. O'Keefe 2013, p. 154.
  29. Kahn 1965, pp. 52, 181.
  30. Ellis 1975, p. 305.
  31. Zacher 1961, p. 118.
  32. De Voe 1956, pp. 198,262.
  33. Battistella 2009, pp. 6, 39–40.
  34. De Voe 1956, pp. 198, 262.
  35. Battistella 2009, pp. 6,39–40.
  36. Battistella 2009, pp. 40.
  37. Jarrett 2013.
  38. Lai & Farbrot 2013.
  39. Carroll 2006.
  40. Shieber 2015.
  41. Sher 2013.

Sources

Further reading

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