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San Diego CityBeat, San Diego; Seattle Sun, Seattle, Washington (1974–1982) See Magazine, Edmonton (ended 2011) Syracuse New Times, Syracuse, New York; Urban Tulsa Weekly, Tulsa, Oklahoma and surrounding areas (1991–2013) The Real Paper, Cambridge, Massachusetts (1972–1981) The Vancouver Voice, Vancouver, Washington (ended 2011)
Patch, a national network of local news sites, operates in San Diego; San Diego Story, an arts review website [22] The Times of San Diego is a web-based news outlet founded in 2014 [23] [24] that features local news daily for the city and surrounding area. [25] [26] It has earned acclaim as a small business with a booming readership.
Options Secondary School (commonly known as The Portal), is a public high school in San Diego, California, located on the campus of Montgomery High School. It is run under the " Alternative Education " division of Sweetwater Union High School District , which also runs the Independent Studies program. [ 2 ]
The San Diego Reader is an alternative press newspaper in San Diego County, California. ... The initial press run of the San Diego Reader was 20,000 copies. In 1989 ...
San Diego Free Press was an underground newspaper founded by philosophy students of Herbert Marcuse at the University of California, San Diego, in November 1968, and published under that title biweekly until December 1969, when it became the weekly Street Journal starting with its 29th issue.
The Association of Alternative Newsweeklies was founded in 1978 in Seattle, Washington, with 30 newspapers from America's largest cities. In July 2011, the organization's name was changed to the Association of Alternative Newsmedia by a vote of members attending the group's annual meeting.
A SF Weekly newspaper box on Sansome Street in San Francisco. Alternative papers have usually operated under a different business model than daily papers. [1] Most alternative papers, such as The Stranger, the Houston Press, SF Weekly, the Village Voice, the New York Press, the Metro Times, the LA Weekly, the Boise Weekly and the Long Island Press, have been free, earning revenue through the ...
An American company, Local Media San Diego, holds 49% of the concession. LMSD pays a fee to use the frequency and programs the station. The studios, in the Sorrento Valley neighborhood of San Diego, are home to two other Mexican FM stations broadcasting in English, classic alternative-formatted XETRA-FM and rhythmic AC-formatted XHRM-FM.