All titles of creative works — books, articles, publications, movies, songs, radio and television shows, etc. — should be written exactly as they appear, in terms of spelling and capitalization, provided they do not use offensive language.
Books, magazines, journals, newspapers and other print or online publications, as well as music albums, should be written as they appear in their official masthead or cover. They never take quotation marks or any special font formatting such as bold, italics or underline: The New York Times; A Tale of Two Cities; the San Francisco Chronicle; Reader’s Digest; Catch-22; I Am…; The Blueprint 2; A Game of Thrones
Movies, shows, news and feature articles, podcasts, stage plays and songs take quotation marks, with the same spelling, capitalization, and font formatting rules as above: “The Sound of Music”; “At the End of the Day”; “2 Legit 2 Quit”; “Three’s Company”; “2 Broke Girls”; “Game of Thrones”; “RRR”
