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LA Downtown News (Los Angeles, 2011–2017) LA Evening Citizen News (Hollywood, 1944–1949) La Habra Star (La Habra, 1916–1966) La Jolla Light (La Jolla, 1922–1963) La Jolla Light and La Jolla Journal (La Jolla, 1919–1964) La Jolla Village News (San Diego, 2007) La Jolla Village News Readers Choice Awards (San Diego, 2009)
The Union-Tribune and the Los Angeles Times became part of a new operating entity known as the California News Group, with both newspapers led by Times publisher and chief executive officer Austin Beutner. The two newspapers reportedly would retain distinct operations, but there would be a larger amount of synergy and content sharing between them.
In 2015, Tribune Publishing, which operates the Los Angeles Times and other major U.S. daily newspapers, purchased the newspaper in an $85 million deal. [4] The purchase ended 146 years of private local ownership for the paper. [4] Other papers and news outlets published in the city include: La Prensa San Diego [5] San Diego Daily Transcript
The Los Angeles Times said it planned to lay off at least 115 employees — more than 20% of the newsroom — starting Tuesday, one of the largest staff cuts in the newspaper's 143-year history.
Los Angeles Times owner Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong tells 'Fox News @ Night' why he wants to take the left-leaning paper in a different direction.
First issue of a Los Angeles Times suburban section, published on April 6, 1952. The Los Angeles Times suburban sections or zone sections were printed between 1952 and 2001 as adjuncts to the main newspaper to cover the news of and sell advertising space in various parts of Southern California that the Times considered to be in the prime part of its circulation area.
(Al Seib / Los Angeles Times) By the time the feisty and locally focused Herald Examiner closed in 1989, Broadway was no longer the shopping, entertainment and theater hub it had been for much of ...
New Times LA was formed on August 22, 1996, by the purchase and merger of the Los Angeles View and the Los Angeles Reader. [2] The staff members of both papers were fired during the formation of the paper. [3] The editor-in-chief for its entire run was Rick Barrs. Writer Jill Stewart was the paper's controversial political columnist.