翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Nashville Post Office
・ Nashville Predators
・ Nashville Predators Radio Network
・ Nashville Pride
・ Nashville Public Library
・ Nashville Pussy
・ Nashville Rebel
・ Nashville Rebel (box set)
・ Nashville Rebel (film)
・ Nashville Records
・ Nashville Rehearsals
・ Nashville Rhythm
・ Nashville Rises
・ Nashville Riverfront (Music City Star station)
・ Nashville Rollergirls
Nashville Scene
・ Nashville School District
・ Nashville School of Law
・ Nashville School of the Arts
・ Nashville Seamount
・ Nashville Secondary School
・ Nashville Seraphs
・ Nashville Shakespeare Festival
・ Nashville sit-ins
・ Nashville Skyline
・ Nashville Songwriters Association International
・ Nashville Songwriters Foundation
・ Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame
・ Nashville Soul
・ Nashville sound


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Nashville Scene : ウィキペディア英語版
Nashville Scene

''Nashville Scene'' is an alternative newsweekly in Nashville, Tennessee. It was founded in 1989, became a part of Village Voice Media in 1999, and later joined the ranks of sixteen other publications after a merger of Village Voice Media with New Times Media early in 2006. In 2009 the paper was acquired by SouthComm Communications. The publication mainly reports and opines on music, arts, entertainment, and local and state politics in Nashville.
==Early history==
''Nashville Scene'' began life as a shopper, a home-distributed advertising product. It was purchased on April 26, 1989, by advertising executive Albie Del Favero and ''Nashville Banner'' political reporter Bruce Dobie, who became its publisher and editor respectively. Their new product became Nashville's first successful alternative weekly, according to newspaper marketing materials.
The new owners modified the paper's circulation model, distributing it for free in racks at restaurants and other high-traffic locations, and modeled their editorial product after the ''Village Voice'', the oldest alternative weekly in the United States.
"The dailies break the news, we put it back together," was one of the ''Nashville Scene'''s early marketing mantras, as it attempted to distinguish itself from other news sources with longer, more detailed features and commentaries on current topics, as well as some community activism that helped lead to the development of an area of Nashville labeled "SoBro" (south of Broadway), a term coined by the ''Scene'''s editorial staff.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Nashville Scene」の詳細全文を読む



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