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The Washington City Paper [a] is a U.S. alternative weekly newspaper serving the Washington, D.C., metropolitan area since 1981. The City Paper is distributed on Thursdays; its average circulation in 2006 was 85,588. The paper's editorial mix is focused on local news and arts. It is owned by Mark Ein, who bought it in 2017.
Special interest newspapers in Washington, D.C. Title Year est., freq. Interest References Catholic Standard: 1951, weekly Catholics OCLC 11760218 [8] County News: 1973 County governments, National Association of Counties OCLC 1643384, LCCN sn82017007 [9] DC Black: African-American [10] [11] DC Spotlight Newspaper [11] The Georgetowner: 1954 ...
Headquartered in downtown Washington, the newspaper employs journalists at 11 regional bureaus in Maryland and Virginia and 14 international bureaus. Content is shared across titles within the Washington Post Company. [1] The daily Washington Times and the free weekly Washington City Paper also have readership in the
“Keep DC trash free,” reads the incendiary ad spotted by Capitol Hill Baptist Church pastor Caleb Morell. The ad featured a red circle with a line through it over an image of a MAGA hat wearer ...
Barras resigned from the paper on August 13, 2001, [1] and Elissa Silverman held the position from January 2002 until December 2004, when her employment with the newspaper was terminated. [2] Former WAMU-FM reporter James Jones wrote the column from March 2005 through June 21, 2007, [ 3 ] when he posted his "last column" as "Loose Lips" and ...
The company previously owned a newspaper on Capitol Hill – Voice of the Hill – but ceased publication on May 5, 2010, citing declines in advertising revenue. [2] This announcement came around 9 months after the death of the paper's co-founder, Bruce Robey, who was found dead due to an apparent heart attack in September, 2009. [ 3 ]
Bruce Holmes, 65, grew up fishing on the Anacostia River, a 9-mile (14-kilometer) urban waterway that flows through Washington, D.C. and parts of Maryland, and has long been defined by pollution ...
Georgetown, originally part of the state of Maryland, was the first populated place in Washington, D.C. The first newspapers appeared in Georgetown, which became an independently municipal government within the District of Columbia, along with the City of Washington, the City of Alexandria (retroceeded to Virginia in 1846), [4] and the newly created County of Washington and County of ...