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    • 2,500 reporters

      • In the early 1980s the AP’s staff was made up of some 2,500 reporters and correspondents, in bureaus in more than 100 U.S. and 50 other cities around the world, who collected and relayed to member papers news from about 100 countries.
      www.britannica.com/topic/Associated-Press
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  2. Founded in 1846, it operates as a cooperative, unincorporated association, and produces news reports that are distributed to its members, major U.S. daily newspapers and radio and television broadcasters. Since the award was established in 1917, the AP has earned 59 Pulitzer Prizes, including 36 for photography.

  3. Our journalists routinely cover perilous situations, from the war in Afghanistan to the front lines of the Ebola outbreak, putting themselves in danger on a daily basis to tell the world’s stories. Here we remember those who lost their lives while reporting the news.

  4. Sep 17, 2024 · AP today remains the most trusted source of fast, accurate, unbiased news in all formats and the essential provider of the technology and services vital to the news business. For over 175 years, the people of The Associated Press have had the privilege of bringing news and information to the world.

  5. In an era of shrinking journalism budgets and shuttered newsrooms, the organization still operates 248 bureaus in 99 countries. Even in the United States, an AP reporter is often the only...

    • Early Years: The 1800s
    • Dissolution and Rebirth: 1900 to Early 1920s
    • Growth Under Kent Cooper: 1925–45
    • Expansion and World War II: Late 1940s to 1970
    • Improved Newsgathering Technology: 1970s to Early 1990s
    • Further Growth and Change: 1995–99
    • The 21st Century: 2000–05
    • Principal Operating Units
    • Principal Competitors
    • Further Reading

    The Associated Press was first established in 1848, when six of the most prominent daily newspapers in New York City decided to pool their resources to cut costs. Representatives of the six papers—the Journal of Commerce, the New York Sun, the Herald, the Courier and Enquirer, the Express, and the New York Tribune —were able to put aside their comp...

    Controversy erupted near the close of the century and again Laffan of the Sun was involved. Laffan had set up his own agency, the Laffan News Bureau, following the collapse of UP. When AP discovered one of its client papers, the Chicago Inter Ocean, had used Laffan copy it sought to punish the Inter Ocean by cutting off its AP service. The Inter Oc...

    Under Cooper AP grew into a gigantic international news machine. From the beginning, Cooper saw countless ways to improve the organization's methods of collecting and distributing information. One of his most important moves was to free AP from its obligations to import European news by way of news agencies there—ironically, these were the same arr...

    With the onset of World War II came further breakthroughs in international news coverage, including the additions of transatlantic cable and radio-teletype circuits, leased land circuits in Europe, and an overseas radiophoto network. In 1946 AP launched its World Service and two years later, in 1948, Cooper retired. He was succeeded as general mana...

    Technological progress continued to improve AP services during the 1970s. One of its breakthroughs during this period was the Laserphoto news picture system, developed jointly with researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology(MIT). The Laserphoto system allowed AP to transmit photographs of a much higher quality than previously possible...

    In 1995 came the introduction of AP AdSEND, a digital advertising delivery service. For a small per-use fee, advertisers could upload copy and images into an AP database, which could then be downloaded by newspapers and other users. The system saved both time and money for advertisers, and enabled wider and easier distribution of advertising messag...

    AP had come a long way by the dawn of the new millennium, from using the telegraph to transmit news to the advances of the electronic and digital age. By the year 2000 AP was owned by 1,500 member newspapers and over one billion people saw, heard, or read its news reports on any given day. Yet with such advances came problems, like when a simple ke...

    AP Ad Services; AP Broadcast; AP Digital; AP ENPS; AP International; AP Photo Services; APTN (Associated Press Television News).

    Agence France-Presse; Bell & Howell Company; Bloomberg L.P.; Dow Jones & Company, Inc.; Gannett Company, Inc.; Knight Ridder-Tribune News Service; New York Times Company; Reuters Group PLC; United Press International, Inc.

    Alabiso, Vincent, "Digital Era Dawns," Editor & Publisher, March 2, 1996, p. 8P. Alabiso, Vincent, Kelly Smith Tunney, and Chuck Zoeller, Flash! The Associated Press Covers the World, New York: Associated Press in association with Harry N. Abrams, 1998. "AP in 'Healthiest Condition,' 1963—$44 Million News Year," Editor & Publisher, April 25, 1964, ...

  6. Today we operate in almost 250 locations in nearly 100 countries relaying breaking news, covering war and conflict and producing enterprise reports that tell the world’s stories. We maintain an official repository for all records of enduring historical value created by AP, regardless of format.

  7. 1 day ago · In the early 1980s the AP’s staff was made up of some 2,500 reporters and correspondents, in bureaus in more than 100 U.S. and 50 other cities around the world, who collected and relayed to member papers news from about 100 countries.

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