Columbus Alive

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Columbus_Alive an entity of type: Thing

Columbus Alive (also presented as ALIVE), was a free online news site serving Columbus, Ohio. The site focused on local music, art, dining, film and culture. Formerly distributed in print form each week on Thursdays, the final print version of the alternative-weekly newspaper was published on July 3, 2019. The publication was acquired by The Columbus Dispatch in the first half of 2006 and the circulation at that time was approximately 55,000. In 2015, the Dispatch was acquired by New Media Investment Group, which later became Gannett. Circulation had fallen to 32,000 copies by 2019, which according to editor Andy Downing made the newspaper "no longer sustainable" in print form. On May 31, 2022 it was announced that the final edition will be published on June 3, 2022. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Columbus Alive
rdf:langString Columbus Alive
rdf:langString Columbus Alive
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rdf:langString The Columbus Dispatch
rdf:langString Example cover of aLIVE
xsd:integer 250
rdf:langString English
rdf:langString Ray Paprocki
rdf:langString Columbus Alive (also presented as ALIVE), was a free online news site serving Columbus, Ohio. The site focused on local music, art, dining, film and culture. Formerly distributed in print form each week on Thursdays, the final print version of the alternative-weekly newspaper was published on July 3, 2019. The publication was acquired by The Columbus Dispatch in the first half of 2006 and the circulation at that time was approximately 55,000. In 2015, the Dispatch was acquired by New Media Investment Group, which later became Gannett. Circulation had fallen to 32,000 copies by 2019, which according to editor Andy Downing made the newspaper "no longer sustainable" in print form. On May 31, 2022 it was announced that the final edition will be published on June 3, 2022. Before the paper was sold, the publisher was Sally Crane (of the Crane Plastics family). In the early 2000s, while still operated by Ms. Crane, the paper had significant gay & lesbian, environmental, and political reporting and commentary, including the columns of Harvey Wasserman and Bob Fitrakis.
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