"Being ahead was a lot less complicated than being alone," Andy Newman, editor of Pittsburgh City Paper, tells the Pittsburgh Business Times. The staff plans to meet this week to redesign and remake City Paper after its parent company bought rival newsweekly In Pittsburgh last month and closed it. City Paper has since then absorbed a number of former In Pittsburgh employees. Newman says he would rather "drive carpet staples" into his gums than conduct a focus group, but admits he's asked some other journalists for input on the new design.

Continue ReadingLife After In Pittsburgh

Former St. Petersburg Times staffers are set to launch St. Pete Weekly, an alternative paper that's due to hit the streets Nov. 7. Although the well-entrenched Weekly Planet also publishes in the Tampa Bay area, Publisher Dean Capone says there's plenty of room for another alternative.

Continue ReadingNew Weekly Launched in St. Petersburg

A couple of weeks ago Lee Enterprise's daily paper in Missoula changed the publication day of its weekend section and started to distribute it as a free, stand-alone paper. In a publisher's note, Missoula Independent's Matt Gibson says the move is "a transparent attempt by the Missoulian to impede the growth" of his paper, and calls it unethical, anti-competitive and "probably illegal". He promises that Lee is "going to find themselves in a fight so fierce and unrelenting, they’ll wish they’d picked on somebody their own size."

Continue ReadingAAN Publisher Says Daily Puts Bulls-Eye on His Back

Lisa Chamberlain, editor of Cleveland Free Times, tells JournalismJobs.com that alt weeklies thrive because mainstream media is "so neutered, so buttoned down and so devoid of any personality that people simply cannot relate to it." She says alternative papers have "grown up without losing our edge" and calls alternative journalism "one of the last places left to do really in-depth, hard-hitting work."

Continue ReadingEditor Says Alternatives Cover Stories That Other Papers Neglect