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The Mercury News headquarters in downtown San Jose. The Mercury News is the largest tenant in the Towers @ 2nd high-rise office complex in downtown San Jose. [64] Business functions occupy the seventh floor of 4 North Second Street, while news staff and executives occupy the eighth floor, for a total of 33,186 square feet (3,083.1 m 2). [4]
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]
Silicon Valley Community Newspapers and the Sunnyvale Sun are published as part of the San Jose Mercury News. [1] As part of its merger with San Jose Mercury News, Sunnyvale Sun is offered as part of a subscription model, rather than as a free weekly paper. [12]
San Jose, California's first city, has one of the oldest newspapers in the state. The San Jose Mercury was founded in 1851 as the San Jose Weekly Visitor, while the San Jose News was founded in 1883. In 1942 the Mercury purchased the News and continued publishing both newspapers, with the Mercury as the morning paper and the News as the evening ...
San Jose Rossana Drumond Weekly Willow Glen Resident: San Jose Digital First Media: Weekly India-West: San Leandro India-West Publications 25,000 Weekly Indo-American The Paper: San Marcos 20,000 Weekly Random Lengths News: San Pedro 22,500 Biweekly Hyperlocal (harbor-area communities) San Lorenzo Valley Post Santa Cruz Mountains
Jay T. Harris (born December 3, 1948), an African-American journalist; journalism educator at the Medill School of Journalism, Northwestern University in Chicago, Illinois; and chairman and publisher of the San Jose Mercury News in San Jose, California, United States. He is a self-described "journalistic traditionalist" and stepped down as ...
Alianza Metropolitan was founded in 1986 by George Villalobos. [4] [1]In 1996, San Jose Mercury News, owned by media conglomerate Knight Ridder, established Nuevo Mundo and its Spanish-language weekly subsidiary to compete directly with the three local Hispanic-owned papers: La Ofreta, El Observador, and Alianza. [5]
The corporate ancestors of Knight Ridder were Knight Newspapers, Inc. and Ridder Publications, Inc. The first company was founded by John S. Knight upon inheriting control of the Akron Beacon Journal from his father, Charles Landon Knight, in 1933; the second company was founded by Herman Ridder when he acquired the New Yorker Staats-Zeitung, a German language newspaper, in 1892.