Philadelphia City Paper
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Philadelphia City Paper | |
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Image:CP 2007-11-22.jpg The November 22, 2007 front page of the Philadelphia City Paper |
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Type | Alternative weekly |
Format | Tabloid |
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Owner | Independent |
Publisher | Paul Curci |
Editor | Brian Howard |
Founded | 1981 |
Headquarters | 123 Chestnut St., Third Floor Philadelphia, PA 19106 United States |
Circulation | 90,807[1] |
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Website: citypaper.net |
Philadelphia City Paper is a free alternative news weekly in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It was established in November 1981 as a spin-off of the now defunct WXPN Express newsletter. New issues are released every Thursday.
The Philadelphia City Paper regularly covers offbeat news, arts, and entertainment stories, both in Philadelphia and nationwide. It also publishes schedules of concerts, festivals, and live performance art. Regular features include guest columns (the "Slant"), "I Love You I Hate You" (a section wherein readers may submit short anonymous messages to other readers or larger organizations), and Free Will Astrology horoscopes. Tom Tomorrow's weekly political comic strip This Modern World is also included in each issue. In addition, the paper's numerous advertisers include local nightspots, bars, and escort services.
It serves the Philadelphia suburbs and southern New Jersey. Within the city limits, copies may be obtained from the paper's signature orange-colored boxes. The Philadelphia City Paper is found on many of the street corners in Center City Philadelphia as well as many points throughout the city and the surrounding region. It can also be found in many local cafes and small businesses, stores such as FYE and Borders Books and Music as well as the dormitories of Philadelphia's many universities.
Its estimated audience is 245,000, which has been verified by Verified Audit Circulation (VAC). Its main competitor is the Philadelphia Weekly, a similarly themed free weekly publication that releases new issues each Wednesday.
[edit] References
- ^ Philadelphia City Paper. Association of Alternative Newsweeklies. Retrieved on 2007-02-20.