Arkansas Times


A sample front page of the Arkansas Times
Type Alternative weekly
Format Tabloid
Owner Arkansas Times Limited Partnership
Publisher Alan Leveritt
Editor Max Brantley
Founded 1978
Headquarters 201 East Markham
Suite 200
Little Rock, AR 72201
United States
Circulation 32,057[1]
Official website arktimes.com

Arkansas Times, a weekly alternative newspaper based in Little Rock, Arkansas, is a publication that has circulated for more than 35 years, originally as a magazine. Its current format stems from reaction to the Arkansas Democrat buyout of assets from Gannett's closure of the Arkansas Gazette in 1991, which had resulted in the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette. Arkansas Times ' current editor, Max Brantley, is among those former Gazette staffers who lost their jobs as a result of the merger. The Gazette's editorial cartoonist, George Fisher, became the Times cartoonist until his death.

Billed as Arkansas's weekly newspaper of politics and culture (similarly styled as other regional publications like The Memphis Flyer), Arkansas Times is noted for its opinion columnists and feature articles that take a decidedly liberal stance in comparison to the larger, daily Democrat-Gazette.

Over the years since its founding, the publication's parent company — Arkansas Times Limited Partnership — has gone on to produce a number of special inserts and associated publications. Among these are the weekly Arkansas Times AutoBuyer, which circulates separately, and "El Latino," a Spanish language weekly. Annually, the first issue of the new year is the Native's Guide to Pulaski County — a comprehensive guide to communities and services in Little Rock and throughout Arkansas's most populous county.

The icon used at the close of most articles and columns throughout the publication is the stylized face of a catfish. A larger version appears with a top hat and monocle at the top of the "Observer" column, typically found on Page 5 each week. The catfish is also seen in the newspaper's sign outside its building at Markham and Scott Streets in downtown Little Rock.

References

  1. ^ "Arkansas Times". Association of Alternative Newsweeklies. http://aan.org/alternative/Aan/ViewCompany?oid=oid%3A38. Retrieved 2007-01-14. 

External links

Arkansas portal
Journalism portal