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Metro Newspapers : ウィキペディア英語版
Metro Newspapers

Metro Newspapers is an American newspaper company based in San Jose, California. It currently publishes four free alternative weekly newspapers in Northern California: ''Metro Silicon Valley'', ''Good Times'', the ''Pacific Sun'' and the ''North Bay Bohemian''; and three community newspapers: the ''Gilroy Dispatch'', the ''Hollister Free Lance'' and the ''Morgan Hill Times''. Together, the publications reach a weekly audience of about half a million people, according to The Media Audit.
The publications are free-distribution, tabloid-sized newspapers emphasizing news and analysis, local coverage and in-depth coverage of arts, culture and entertainment. Its Boulevards subsidiary operates city guides on the web internationally, under such URLs as Seattle.com and LosAngeles.com.
Founded in 1985, the ''Metro'' weekly began celebrating its 25th year starting in March 2009,〔Dan Pulcrano, "Twenty-Four and Counting," ''Metro Silicon Valley'' March 4–10, 2009, p. 06, http://www.metroactive.com/metro/03.04.09/letters-0909.html〕 making it the most established free weekly in the South Bay Area of Northern California. It was one of the first newspapers to publish Matt Groening's ''Life in Hell'' and Rob Brezsny's ''Real Astrology''. The company is operated by its founder and longtime executive editor, Dan Pulcrano.
''Metro Santa Cruz'' began publishing in 1994. The same year, Metro Newspapers purchased the ''Sonoma County Independent'', which, in October 2000, expanded its distribution to cover Napa and Marin counties and is now published under the ''North Bay Bohemian'' flag. In March 2009, on the publication's 15th anniversary, ''Metro Santa Cruz'' was renamed ''Santa Cruz Weekly''. In March 2014, Metro Newspapers acquired ''Good Times'', the ''Gilroy Dispatch'', the ''Hollister Free Lance'' and the ''Morgan Hill Times'', and merged ''Good Times'' and the ''Santa Cruz Weekly''.〔(Metro Newspapers buys weeklies in Santa Cruz, Gilroy, Morgan Hill and Hollister )〕 In 2015, Metro acquired the ''Pacific Sun''; the ''Bohemian'' withdrew from Marin County.
==Silicon Valley Community Newspapers==
Metro developed a group of weekly community newspapers, including the ''Los Gatos Weekly-Times'', ''Saratoga News'', ''Campbell Reporter'', ''Willow Glen Resident'' and ''Sunnyvale Sun''. Under Metro's ownership, the group won numerous awards, including the California Newspaper Publishers Association's "General Excellence" award in its Better Newspapers Contest. On December 17, 2001, David Cohen, a co-founder of Metro, bought the group, which at the time included six publications and left to run Silicon Valley Community Newspapers as an independent company. Cohen sold it four years later to Knight Ridder which sold the group to McClatchy Corp. McClatchy immediately resold SVCN to Dean Singleton's MediaNews Group. In 2014, Bay Area News Group marketing director Erika Brown announced that the newspapers would be distributed to subscribers of the Mercury News, rather than generally to homes in the community.

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