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The Onion's Front Pages

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Detail from a front page of The Onion, as featured in the new book "Our Front Pages" (simonandschuster.com).
Detail from a front page of The Onion, as featured in "Our Front Pages" (simonandschuster.com).

For two decades and counting now, the satirical news source The Onion has been churning out the headlines that make you laugh or cry or both.

"Amish Give Up." "Inner Cities to Receive Soothing Heroin." "Cheney Vows to Attack U.S. If Kerry Elected." "God Outdoes Terrorists."

And, the day after last year’s presidential election: "Black Man Given Nation’s Worst Job."

Oh, my.

It all started as a college humor paper in Madison, Wisconsin. Now, it’s everywhere.

This hour, On Point: Hot headlines and the truth in bleak humor. We’ll peel back The Onion.

You can join the conversation. Tell us what you think — here on this page, on Twitter, and on Facebook.

Guests:

Joining us from New York is Joe Garden, features editor for The Onion. He joined the staff in 1993, after dropping out of the University of Wisconsin, when the paper was still produced out of Madison. The Onion's new book is "Our Front Pages: 21 Years of Greatness, Virtue, and Moral Rectitude From America's Finest News Source."

Also from New York we're joined by Seth Reiss, a staff writer for The Onion. He’s been on staff for three years, at the New York base The Onion has had since 2001.

From Pasadena, Calif., we're joined by Robert Niles, editor at the Online Journalism Review, published by the University of Southern California's Annenberg School for Communication & Journalism.

And with us in our studio is star On Point intern Suzanne Merkelson, late, great editor-in-chief of The Colby Echo in Waterville, Maine.

This program aired on November 12, 2009.

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