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Jewish Rhode Island, published monthly and owned by the Jewish Alliance of Greater Rhode Island. Based in Providence, but covering the entire state. Mercury, published monthly and owned by Gatehouse Media. An alternative weekly-style paper covering Rhode Island arts, entertainment and food in Newport and Middletown.
This is a list of all daily newspapers in Rhode Island. For weeklies, please see List of newspapers in Rhode Island. The Boston Globe (Rhode Island) of Boston, owned by Boston Globe Media Partners, via their Providence-based bureau, covering all of Rhode Island; The Brown Daily Herald of Providence, owned independently, covering Brown University
RISN Operations Inc., also called Rhode Island Suburban Newspapers, is a privately owned publisher of three daily newspapers and several weekly newspapers in the U.S. state of Rhode Island. The company was founded by Illinois -based newspaper executives in early 2007 to purchase the Rhode Island holdings of Journal Register Company , which it ...
The Providence Journal, colloquially known as the ProJo, is a daily newspaper serving the metropolitan area of Providence, the largest newspaper in Rhode Island, US. The newspaper was first published in 1829. The newspaper had won four Pulitzer Prizes as of 2023.
East Bay Media Group [1] (a.k.a. in 2024, [2] and officially copyrighted until at least 2022, [3] as East Bay Newspapers), registered as Phoenix-Times Publishing Company, [4] is a publisher based in Bristol, Rhode Island, United States, and owner of seven weekly newspapers in eastern Rhode Island and southeastern Massachusetts.
The Warren Times-Gazette is a weekly newspaper in Bristol County, Rhode Island covering local news, sports, business and community events. It is owned by East Bay Newspapers . [ 2 ]
The city of Providence, Rhode Island is part of a media market that includes New Bedford, Massachusetts.The area is served by several local television stations, radio stations, newspapers, and blogs based in the cities proper and the surrounding communities of Rhode Island and Bristol County, Massachusetts.
In addition to its African American newspapers, Rhode Island is the site of another important advancement in the history of the Black press: when John Carter Minkins became editor-in-chief of the Providence News-Democrat in 1906, he was the first African American to head a daily newspaper that catered to the white community. [3]