Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Creative Loafing is a U.S. city monthly paper serving the Atlanta metropolitan area covering local news, politics, arts, entertainment, food, music and events. Its weekly print circulation is 70,000, and its cumulative readership in print is 477,000 according to Scarborough Feb 2014 - Jan 2015 study, and the website creativeloafing.com draws nearly 500,000 visitors monthly according to Google ...
Early 2000s Creative Loafing paper [1]. Creative Loafing is an Atlanta-based publisher of an arts and culture news and events newspaper/magazine.The company historically published a weekly publication that once had a 160,000 weekly circulation.
In April 2012, Creative Loafing reported that "on some streets more houses are boarded up than are lived in". Occupy Atlanta protested the Vine City foreclosure of Mrs. Pamela Flores by Bank of America. [28] The desperate state of the area was described by reporter Thomas Wheatley in Creative Loafing in September 2012 as: [29]
Williams and Hudson were profiled by the Atlanta-based magazine Creative Loafing to talk about the events of 1970 and their lives since. Despite rumors that he had died, Williams was alive and well.
Atlanta Medical Center Shotgun houses on Auburn Avenue at Boulevard, part of the Martin Luther King, Jr., National Historic Site Federal Penitentiary on postcard from 1920 YoBoulevard! banner 2012 Boulevard is a street in and, as a corridor, a subdistrict, of the Old Fourth Ward neighborhood of Atlanta , Georgia .
Leaving Atlanta is the first novel by the American author Tayari Jones. The book was published by Warner Books in 2002. [ 1 ] Jones's experiences through the Atlanta child murders of 1979–1981 largely inspired the book.
Hollis Gillespie, Atlanta author and humor columnist. Hollis Gillespie is a humor columnist, writer and comedian based in Atlanta, Georgia. She wrote for Atlanta's Creative Loafing weekly for eight years until October 2008. [1] In 2004, Writers Digest named Hollis Gillespie a "Breakout Author of the Year."
In 2010, Cramer penned a letter to the Atlanta Business Chronicle in defense of the shelter and called on the business community to "call off the dogs". [16] Cramer's other public writings on the shelter include an op-ed piece in the Atlanta Journal [17] and a comment in Creative Loafing. [18]