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The Louisville Eccentric Observer (also called LEO Weekly but widely known as just LEO) is a privately owned free urban alternative weekly newspaper, distributed every Wednesday in about 700 locations throughout the Louisville, Kentucky, metropolitan area, including areas of southern Indiana.
Hillsdale Daily News; The Holland Sentinel; Ionia Sentinel-Standard; Lansing State Journal; The Livingston County Daily Press & Argus; The Monroe News; Observer and Eccentric Newspapers; Petoskey News-Review; The Sault News; Sturgis Journal; The Times Herald, Port Huron; Michigan Lawyers Weekly
The Livonia Observer, Livonia, Michigan, ceased printing in December 2022, but an online edition persists. [9] That paper had an circulation of over 14,000. [10] It was part of a larger slaughter of local newspapers. Gannett shut six newspapers down in a stroke. [11] "The publisher said publications will continue online and there were no new ...
Birmingham, Eccentric, Birmingham – circulation was just in excess of 6,000. [250] It ceased print publication in December 2022. [251] [252] Bloomfield-Birmingham Eccentric Newspaper [253] Bronson Journal, Bronson ceased publication on Nov. 16, 2017 Archived 2019-11-21 at the Wayback Machine. Copper Island News, Hancock [254]
Louisville Eccentric Observer, Louisville, Louisiana. Gambit, New Orleans, Maine ... TAPinto, hyperlocal digital news in Putnam County, Village Voice; North Carolina
As part of the cuts, Gannett stopped printing six community papers, collectively known as the Observer and Eccentric chain, in southeast Michigan, including the print editions of the Livonia Observer and papers covering Westland, Farmington, Plymouth, Canton, and Birmingham.
In addition to The Detroit News and Detroit Free Press, regional newspapers serving all of southeast Michigan, the city is served by the Daily Tribune [29] (published daily), the Observer & Eccentric [30] (which is published twice a week), the Troy Beacon (published every Thursday), the Troy Times, [31] and the Troy-Somerset Gazette and, most ...
Velocity was widely seen as an attempt by the Courier-Journal and its parent company, Gannett, to gain some of the market dominated by the Louisville Eccentric Observer, an alternative newsweekly. Velocity targeted the 25-to-34-year-old age demographic. It was consciously non-political, although it occasionally covered hot-button issues such as ...