Los Angeles Daily News
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Daily News of Los Angeles | |
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The December 7, 2005 front page of the Daily News of Los Angeles |
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Type | Daily newspaper |
Format | Broadsheet |
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Owner | MediaNews Group |
Publisher | John McKeon |
Editor | Ron Kaye |
Founded | 1911 (as the Van Nuys Call) |
Headquarters | 21221 Oxnard Street Woodland Hills, CA 91367 United States |
Circulation | 157,020 Daily 187,740 Sunday[1] |
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Website: www.dailynews.com |
The Daily News of Los Angeles, also known as the Los Angeles Daily News, is the second largest circulating daily newspaper of Los Angeles, California. It is published by the Los Angeles Newspaper Group, which owns eight other Southern California newspapers including The Inland Valley Daily Bulletin and The Long Beach Press-Telegram.
It began life in 1911 as the Van Nuys Call, morphing into the Van Nuys News after a merger with a competing newspaper called the News. In 1941, the newspaper was renamed the Van Nuys News and Valley Green Sheet, the "green sheet" being a reference for the paper's extensive classified advertising. The Green Sheet name is used today as an insult by veterans of the Los Angeles Times to refer to the days when classified ads outnumbered the pages of news, and when the newspaper was given away for free. During much of this period, the entire newspaper (in later days, just the outer page) was printed on green-tinted newsprint.
In 1971, the newspaper was sold to the Tribune Company by the original family owners. In 1976, to de-emphasize the Van Nuys location, the paper changed its name to the Valley News and Green Sheet, and gradually converted from the four times a week operation to a daily newspaper with paid circulation. Throughout this period, an iconic green stripe continued to appear along the right-hand edge of the front page.
In 1981, the paper changed its name to the Daily News of Los Angeles. In 1985, the paper was sold by Tribune to Jack Kent Cooke, who spent millions of dollars in building state of the art offices and expanding coverage to include the entire San Fernando Valley. Upon Cooke's death, in 1998, William Dean Singleton's MediaNews Group purchased the newspaper and consolidated it with his other Southern California MediaNews holdings into the Los Angeles Newspaper Group.
The offices of the Daily News are based in Woodland Hills, and much of the paper's reporting is targeted toward readers in suburban areas of the city. As a result, its stories tend to focus on issues surrounding business, education, and crime, and it is generally taken to have a center-right editorial orientation as opposed to the Los Angeles Times and other area periodicals. It also has historically had more front-page coverage of local Valley politics and government than the Times.
The paper's editorial page and news reporting helped drive and organize the Valley Secession movement: whether the 1.35 million residents of the San Fernando Valley would split off to form a new city. The story had been neglected by the larger LA Times. On November 5, 2002, Angelenos voted against secession. Under longtime editor Ron Kaye, the Daily News has continued to spotlight waste and inefficency in local government and publish sharp-toned editorials critical of same.
The LA Newspaper Group publishes several local editions, including The Daily News - Antelope Valley, Daily News - Santa Clarita, Daily News - Ventura County, and San Gabriel Valley Tribune.
The current Daily News should not be confused with the Los Angeles Daily News, a morning newspaper based in Downtown Los Angeles which ceased publication in 1954.
[edit] References
- ^ 2006 Top 100 Daily Newspapers in the U.S. by Circulation (PDF). BurrellesLuce (2006-03-31). Retrieved on 2007-03-04.