 This video explains how to include newspaper and magazine articles in your notes and in your bibliography according to the 16th edition of the Chicago Manual of Style. I will show you how to cite both online and print newspaper and magazines, and what to do if there is no author or page numbers given. In these examples, the punctuation is in red for emphasis. In your actual paper, all font would be black. To cite a magazine article you accessed online in a note. Start with the author's first name and last name. Next, within quotation marks, enter the title of the article followed by a comma. Leave out the word the from the title of magazines. Next, the name of the magazine in italics followed by a comma. Then, the month, day, and year of publication. In Chicago style, magazines are usually cited by date only, even if they have a volume and issue number. After the comma, enter the page number where you found the quotation. For online articles, enter the URL for the article. If it has a DOI or digital object identifier, use that instead of a URL. However, many magazine articles won't have a DOI number. If you used the print version of the magazine, you would just end the citation with a period after the page number. In your bibliography, there are some differences in formatting. Put the author's last name first. In some places where you used a comma in the note, you use a period in the bibliography. And the first line of each citation is aligned left, and the following lines are indented. For magazines, you don't include the page numbers of the full article in the bibliography. Newspapers are cited in a similar way as magazines, with one difference. Chicago style suggests not including page numbers at all for newspaper article citations, even in your note. For online newspaper articles, include the URL or DOI at the end of the citation after the date. For newspaper articles, unless the specific article is critical to your argument or cited multiple times, you don't include it in your bibliography. Newspaper articles are rarely included in Chicago style bibliographies. Often with newspaper and magazine articles, there isn't an author's name listed, or for an online magazine, there aren't any page numbers. If you don't have an author's name, start with the title of the article instead of the author. For magazines, if you don't have a page number to help your reader locate the original quotation, use a paragraph number or a heading or section description instead. Remember, for newspaper articles, Chicago recommends never using page numbers. For more information about Chicago style, check out our other videos or visit the Munn Libraries website for our Chicago style guide and to chat live with library staff. Thanks for watching!