From the beginning, the paper featured a
gossip column by
Walter Winchell and when he quit in 1929, Louis Sobol. In 1931,
Ed Sullivan, who had authored a sports column entitled "Sport Whirl", debuted his column,
Ed Sullivan Sees Broadway. Film director
Sam Fuller worked for
The Graphic as a crime reporter.
Ernie Bushmiller created the comic strip
Mac the Manager at the
Graphic prior to his creation of the
Nancy comic strip. The
Graphic, which sported the motto "Nothing But the Truth", often exploited a
montage technique known as the
composograph to create "photographs" of events it could not obtain actual photos of, such as
Rudolph Valentino's corpse, or Valentino's spirit being greeted in heaven by
Enrico Caruso. Historians
Bill Blackbeard and
Martin Williams described the
Graphic as "possibly the most iconoclastically innovative newspaper in American history," while lamenting its relative absence from Library collections. Writing in 1977, they were fearful that copies of the paper "ha[ve] apparently not survived at all; there may be no file of that paper, public or private, left on earth". In his 1931 autobiographical novel,
Hot News, Gauvreau takes personal credit for the invention and for launching "a new chapter in the history of tabloid journalism". Gauvreau, the ''Graphic's'' contest editor Lester Cohen, and
Fulton Oursler,
Macfadden Publications' second-in-command, later claimed the images were intended to catch attention, present the news in pictorial form, and sell newspapers, but not to deceive. Gauvreau, however, said his staff had to create news to maintain its circulation, and composograph pictorials helped move things along. "We could no longer wait for calamities to happen. "Characters were built up and paraded. Hot news became the wild, blazing, delirious symptom of the time." Cohen credits art department staff member Harry Grogin as "the inventor of the composite picture." In 1929,
Time magazine in a profile of Winchell, wrote: Not all readers of that gum-chewers' sheetlet, the
New York Graphic, are gum-chewers. Some of them smuggle the pink-faced tabloid into
Park Avenue homes, there to read it in polite seclusion. They have reason: the ''Graphic's'' gossip-purveying, scandal-scooping, staccato-styled Monday column, "Your
Broadway and Mine. Further evidence that the
Graphic was secretly enjoyed by the intelligentsia is provided by a 1929
Cole Porter lyric, in which the heroine asks "Should I read
Euripides or continue with the
Graphic?" ==Criticism==