The Washington Herald (House of Cards): Difference between revisions
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{{DISPLAYTITLE: ''The Washington Herald'' (''House of Cards'')}} |
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{{Short description|Fictional newspaper in the television series House of Cards}} |
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{{For|the actual daily newspaper published in Washingtion D.C. (1906-1939)|The Washington Herald}} |
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[[Image:The-Washington-Herald-House-of-Cards-Newspaper.jpg|thumb|right|240px|The fictional ''The Washington Herald'', with the main headline being the fictional U.S. President [[Frank Underwood (House of Cards)|Frank Underwood]] asking Senate to approve him declaring a war]] |
[[Image:The-Washington-Herald-House-of-Cards-Newspaper.jpg|thumb|right|240px|The fictional ''The Washington Herald'', with the main headline being the fictional U.S. President [[Frank Underwood (House of Cards)|Frank Underwood]] asking Senate to approve him declaring a war]] |
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'''''The Washington Herald''''' is a fictional daily newspaper in the [[Netflix]] series ''[[House of Cards (American TV series)|House of Cards]]''.<ref>[https://www.baltimoresun.com/entertainment/bs-xpm-2012-05-30-bal-baltimore-sun-house-of-cards-washington-herald-for-a-movie-minute-20120530-story.html ''Baltimore Sun'': Baltimore Sun becomes The Washington Herald -- for a TV minute anyway]</ref><ref>[https://maps.roadtrippers.com/us/baltimore-md/entertainment/the-washington-herald Roadtrippers: ''The Washington Herald'']</ref> The building and offices of ''[[The Baltimore Sun]]'' were used to film the |
'''''The Washington Herald''''' is a fictional daily newspaper in the [[Netflix]] series ''[[House of Cards (American TV series)|House of Cards]]''.<ref>[https://www.baltimoresun.com/entertainment/bs-xpm-2012-05-30-bal-baltimore-sun-house-of-cards-washington-herald-for-a-movie-minute-20120530-story.html ''Baltimore Sun'': Baltimore Sun becomes The Washington Herald -- for a TV minute anyway]</ref><ref>[https://maps.roadtrippers.com/us/baltimore-md/entertainment/the-washington-herald Roadtrippers: ''The Washington Herald'']</ref> The building and offices of ''[[The Baltimore Sun]]'' were used to film the newsroom. ''The Washington Herald'' is largely based on the actual ''[[The Washington Post|Washington Post]]''. Another fictional newspaper in the series called ''The Wall Street Telegraph'' is largely based on the actual ''[[Wall Street Journal]]''. |
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==Story line== |
==Story line== |
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[[List of House of Cards (American TV series) characters#Tom Hammerschmidt|Tom Hammerschmidt]] is the fictional '' |
[[List of House of Cards (American TV series) characters#Tom Hammerschmidt|Tom Hammerschmidt]] is the fictional ''Washington Herald'' editor-in-chief. He presides over a newsroom that included the White House correspondent [[List of House of Cards (American TV series) characters#Janine Skorsky|Janine Skorsky]], the political editor [[List of House of Cards (American TV series) characters#Lucas Goodwin|Lucas Goodwin]], and upstart reporter [[List of House of Cards (American TV series) characters#Zoe Barnes|Zoe Barnes]] who later moves to "''Slugline''" (also fictional). The character Lucas Goodwin is a national politics reporter and editor at ''The Washington Herald''. He appeared as a main character in the first, second and fourth seasons of ''House of Cards''. He had previously worked on the paper's crime beat as well. Lucas Goodwin is romantically involved with Zoe Barnes, who is heavily involved in investigating the former "Congressman" now "U.S. Vice President" [[Frank Underwood (House of Cards)|Frank Underwood]]. After owner Margaret Tilden forces Tom Hammerschmidt to resign, Lucas takes on further editorial responsibilities at the newspaper, becoming deputy editor and continuing the investigation Zoe had conducted after the latter's sudden death. Lucas participates in an act of cyber-terrorism upon which he is arrested and imprisoned. Two years after being imprisoned, Lucas is released, assuming a new identity. |
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The series also features journalists working in other fictional newspapers, like [[List of House of Cards (American TV series) characters#Ayla Sayyad|Ayla Sayyad]] and [[List of House of Cards (American TV series) characters#Kate Baldwin|Kate Baldwin]] working in the fictitious "''Wall Street Telegraph'' |
The series also features journalists working in other fictional newspapers, like [[List of House of Cards (American TV series) characters#Ayla Sayyad|Ayla Sayyad]] and [[List of House of Cards (American TV series) characters#Kate Baldwin|Kate Baldwin]] working in the fictitious "''Wall Street Telegraph''”.<ref>[https://www.etonline.com/tv/160570_powerless_ranking_journalists_house_of_cards ET Online: A Power(less) Ranking: The Journalists in 'House of Cards']</ref> |
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==References== |
==References== |
Latest revision as of 11:35, 15 May 2024
The Washington Herald is a fictional daily newspaper in the Netflix series House of Cards.[1][2] The building and offices of The Baltimore Sun were used to film the newsroom. The Washington Herald is largely based on the actual Washington Post. Another fictional newspaper in the series called The Wall Street Telegraph is largely based on the actual Wall Street Journal.
Story line
[edit]Tom Hammerschmidt is the fictional Washington Herald editor-in-chief. He presides over a newsroom that included the White House correspondent Janine Skorsky, the political editor Lucas Goodwin, and upstart reporter Zoe Barnes who later moves to "Slugline" (also fictional). The character Lucas Goodwin is a national politics reporter and editor at The Washington Herald. He appeared as a main character in the first, second and fourth seasons of House of Cards. He had previously worked on the paper's crime beat as well. Lucas Goodwin is romantically involved with Zoe Barnes, who is heavily involved in investigating the former "Congressman" now "U.S. Vice President" Frank Underwood. After owner Margaret Tilden forces Tom Hammerschmidt to resign, Lucas takes on further editorial responsibilities at the newspaper, becoming deputy editor and continuing the investigation Zoe had conducted after the latter's sudden death. Lucas participates in an act of cyber-terrorism upon which he is arrested and imprisoned. Two years after being imprisoned, Lucas is released, assuming a new identity.
The series also features journalists working in other fictional newspapers, like Ayla Sayyad and Kate Baldwin working in the fictitious "Wall Street Telegraph”.[3]
References
[edit]