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According to third-party web analytics providers Alexa and SimilarWeb, the Brisbane Times is the 191st and 250th most visited website in Australia respectively, as of August 2015. [5] [6] SimilarWeb rates the site as the 24th most visited news website in Australia, attracting more than 2 million visitors per month. [6] [7]
Pesticides in California's legal weed. Shohei Ohtani's former interpreter pleading guilty. The presidential elections: These were some of the biggest news events the L.A. Times covered in 2024.
Xone Autosport News: Los Angeles 233,200 Weekly Formula One and IndyCar news (International) Los Angeles Sentinel: Los Angeles 125,000 Weekly African-American The Epoch Times: Los Angeles Epoch Times Media Group 30,000 Weekly News and lifestyle Pacific Citizen: Los Angeles 30,000 Monthly Asian-American Armenian Observer: Los Angeles Weekly ...
Australian Community Media (ACM) is a media company in Australia responsible for over 160 regional publications. Its mastheads include the Canberra Times, Newcastle Herald, The Examiner, The Border Mail, The Courier and the Illawarra Mercury along with more than one hundred community-based websites across Australia and numerous agricultural publications including The Land and Queensland ...
The Los Angeles Times’ editorials editor said Wednesday she had resigned from her post after the newspaper’s owner blocked a decision to endorse Kamala Harris in the presidential election.
(Al Seib / Los Angeles Times) By the time the feisty and locally focused Herald Examiner closed in 1989, Broadway was no longer the shopping, entertainment and theater hub it had been for much of ...
The publisher of the Los Angeles Times since June 16, 2018, has been Patrick Soon-Shiong, who purchased the newspaper from the Tribune Company of Chicago. Soon-Shiong replaced Ross Levinsohn, who was appointed to the position in August of 2017 following the firing of publisher Davan Maharaj. [1]
The Los Angeles Times said it planned to lay off at least 115 employees — more than 20% of the newsroom — starting Tuesday, one of the largest staff cuts in the newspaper's 143-year history.