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The Alameda Journal is an American weekly paid newspaper which serves the city of Oakland and surrounding Alameda County, California. The Alameda Journal is now published under the name East Bay Times. It is published weekly on Friday with an estimated circulation is 23,259.
The Redwood City Daily News, along with five other Daily News editions, was sold to Knight Ridder on Feb. 15, 2005. After McClatchy's acquisition of Knight Ridder in early 2006, all six Daily News editions, including the Redwood City Daily News, were bundled with the San Jose Mercury News and sold to MediaNews Group of Denver, Colorado.
The Daily News, originally the Palo Alto Daily News, is a free newspaper owned by MediaNews Group and located in Menlo Park. [1] Founded in 1995, it was formerly published seven days a week and at one point had a circulation of 67,000 (a figure that included five zoned editions which no longer exist).
The East Bay Times is a daily broadsheet newspaper based in Walnut Creek, California, United States, owned by the Bay Area News Group (BANG), a subsidiary of Media News Group, that serves Contra Costa and Alameda counties, in the East Bay region of the San Francisco Bay Area.
Mass media in the Inland Empire — a region of the eastern Greater Los Angeles Area and Southern California. Subcategories This category has the following 7 subcategories, out of 7 total.
Many News Tribune editorial staffers then believed the News Tribune could have grown in circulation far more rapidly in the late '60s and '70s by venturing circulation into rapidly growing Anaheim. At that time, Anaheim had a small daily newspaper, The Anaheim Bulletin, a newspaper which had a five days a week daily circulation of only about 7,500.
The current News-Herald format was established under the Heritage Newspapers brand in 1986, when the late industrialist Heinz Prechter brought the old News-Herald (based in Wyandotte, MI) and Mellus Newspapers (based in Lincoln Park, MI) from SEM Newspapers Inc. and combined them into a single Downriver publication each Wednesday.
The Contra Costa Times, San Ramon Valley Times, East County Times, Tri-Valley Herald and San Joaquin Herald were scheduled to become the new The Times. [9] The San Mateo Times was scheduled to publish its last issue on November 1, 2011. As of November 2, 2011, subscribers were to get localized versions of the San Jose Mercury News. [7]
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