From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishfront-pageˈfront-page adjective [only before noun] → front-page news/article/story etc
Examples from the Corpus
front-page• Soon, the desegregation of education became front-page news again and forced the Kennedy administration to respond with force.• If she knew that each of these unhappy events would be international front-page news she would be even more upset.• If even one of the cited companies faltered, even though it might later spring back, it became front-page news.• The war was no longer front-page news.