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The following is a list of media in Atlanta, Georgia, United States. Print Daily *''The Atlanta Journal-Constitution'' *'' Atlanta Voice'' *'' Fulton County Daily Report'' Weekly *''Atlanta Business Chronicle'' *'' Atlanta Inquirer'' *''The Atlanta Jewish Times'' *''The Emory Wheel'' *'' The Signal'' *''The Technique'' Monthly *''Creative Loafing'' *'' Barbershop Digest'' *'' The Southerner'' Suburban *'' Acción Deportes'' *''Gwinnett Daily Post'' *''Marietta Daily Journal'' *'' El Nuevo Georgia'' Defunct *''Atlanta Constitution'' *'' Atlanta Georgian'' *''Atlanta Journal'' *'' Atlanta Southern Confederacy'' *''Daily Examiner'' *'' Daily Intelligencer'' *'' The Great Speckled Bird'' *'' Southern Voice'' *'' The Sunny South'' Magazines *''Art Papers'' *''Atlanta'' *'' Atlanta History'' *'' David Atlanta'' *''FENUXE'' *''Jezebel'' Broadcast radio The Atlanta metropolitan area is currently the ninth-largest radio market in the United States as ranked by Niels ...
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Atlanta
Atlanta ( ) is the capital and most populous city of the U.S. state of Georgia. It is the seat of Fulton County, the most populous county in Georgia, but its territory falls in both Fulton and DeKalb counties. With a population of 498,715 living within the city limits, it is the eighth most populous city in the Southeast and 38th most populous city in the United States according to the 2020 U.S. census. It is the core of the much larger Atlanta metropolitan area, which is home to more than 6.1 million people, making it the eighth-largest metropolitan area in the United States. Situated among the foothills of the Appalachian Mountains at an elevation of just over above sea level, it features unique topography that includes rolling hills, lush greenery, and the most dense urban tree coverage of any major city in the United States. Atlanta was originally founded as the terminus of a major state-sponsored railroad, but it soon became the convergence point among several ...
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El Nuevo Georgia
''El Nuevo Georgia'' Hispanic Newspaper is a Spanish-language newspaper distributed in Greater Atlanta, with its headquarters in unincorporated Gwinnett County, Georgia, near Norcross. Published since March 1998Contáctenos
" ''El Nuevo Georgia''. Retrieved on September 18, 2012.Media Kit 2011
"
Archive
''El Nuevo Georgia''. p. 7. Retrieved on September 18, 2012. "5855 Jimmy Carter Blvd. Norcross, GA 30071"


Circulation and Coverage

El Nuevo Georgia is a ...
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David Atlanta
''David Atlanta'' magazine was an Atlanta-based weekly periodical for the gay community. It was owned by gay press publisher Window Media until Window Media closed operations, and ceased publication on November 16, 2009. On March 11, 2010, David Atlanta returned to publishing weekly issues after being purchased from the bankruptcy court by Gaydar Atlanta. In August 2010, David Atlanta was sold along with '' Southern Voice'' to DRT Media. The August 11, 2011 issue was the first under new ownership. History Founded in October 1998, ''David'' was brought to Atlanta by Andy Jones to serve as an entertainment and lifestyle magazine for the Southeastern United States. It was the successor to a line of gay magazines dating back to 1968, beginning in Jacksonville, Florida, founded by Henry C. Godley and Mark W. Riley. The magazine was named after the Michaelangelo statue. In 2003 the publication was bought by United Media, publisher of the '' Southern Voice'' in Atlanta, and the Washi ...
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Atlanta History (journal)
''Atlanta History: A Journal of Georgia and the South'' was a publication of the Atlanta Historical Society. It was established in 1927 with one issue per year as the ''Atlanta Historical Bulletin''. In 1937, the journal began publishing three or four issues annually. At least one issue per year was published during World War II World War II or the Second World War, often abbreviated as WWII or WW2, was a world war that lasted from 1939 to 1945. It involved the vast majority of the world's countries—including all of the great powers—forming two opposing .... By the middle 1950s, the publication again failed to have issues available each year. There were no issues between 1957 and 1965, with nearly a decade represented by Vol. X. Things proceeded smoothly from 1966 until the 1990s, except for no issues during the year 1974. There were occasional combined issues (1-2 or 3-4) too, and Volume XLV is particularly spotty signaling a major slowdown. The issue dated ...
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Atlanta (magazine)
''Atlanta'' is a monthly general-interest magazine based in Atlanta, Georgia, and owned by Hour Media Group, LLC. Its staff has featured notable writers such as Hollis Gillespie, Anne Rivers Siddons, and William Diehl, and it has included contributions from Pat Conroy, Rebecca Burns, Terry Kay, and Melissa Fay Greene.About Us
" ''Atlanta''. Retrieved June 10, 2009.
It is a member of the (CRMA).


History

The Atlanta Chamber of Commerce founded the ma ...
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Art Papers
''ART PAPERS'' is an Atlanta-based bimonthly art magazine and non-profit organization dedicated to the examination of art and culture in the world today. Its mission is to provide an independent and accessible forum for the exchange of perspectives on the role of contemporary art as a socially relevant and engaged discourse. This mission is implemented through the publication of ''ART PAPERS'' magazine and the presentation of public programs. History and profile ''ART PAPERS'' was established in 1976 as the internal newsletter (originally known as ''Atlanta Art Workers Coalition Newspaper'') of the Atlanta Art Workers Coalition. The AAWC was formed in 1976 under the premise to “promote, protect, and aid the visual artists of Atlanta through programs focused on the need of individual artists and art groups.” In addition to the newspaper, the coalition maintained other programs and publications: an Information Resource Center; the Coalition Gallery; and the Metro Atlanta Direct ...
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The Sunny South (magazine)
''The Sunny South'' was a weekly literary magazine published in Atlanta from 1874 to 1907. Colonel John H. Seals began publishing the ''Sunny South'' on November 7, 1913. The paper featured prominent poetry and fiction, and covered news stories throughout Georgia. Clark Howell, C.C. Nicholls, and James K. Holliday purchased the paper in April 1892. The following year, the paper was published as supplement to the Sunday editions of the ''Atlanta Constitution''. In 1895, ''the Sunny South'' became the first publication in Atlanta to endorse the cause of suffrage for women.Stanton, et al., vol. 4, p. 582 author Joel Chandler Harris Joel Chandler Harris (December 9, 1848 – July 3, 1908) was an American journalist, fiction writer, and folklorist best known for his collection of Uncle Remus stories. Born in Eatonton, Georgia, where he served as an apprentice on a planta ... absorbed the ''Sunny South'' into his new publication, the ''Uncle Remus Magazine'', in May 1907. Notes ...
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Southern Voice (newspaper)
''Southern Voice'' (commonly known as ''SoVo'') was a lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender newspaper in Atlanta and the Southeast United States. It was founded by Atlanta native Christina Cash as an independent publication in 1988. It published until AUGUST, 1997 and was then purchased by Window Media, who also bought rights to the name. Window bought and then published several gay-oriented newspapers in the United States. It focused mainly on global and regional political issues concerning LGBT persons. ''Southern Voice'' was a member of the National Gay Newspaper Guild. ''Southern Voice'' claimed over 100,000 readers, the most widely read LGBT paper in the region. On November 16, 2009, ''Southern Voice'' and several related publications, including the ''Washington Blade'', were shut down as Window Media closed up shop. The US Bankruptcy Court in Atlanta auctioned the assets of ''Southern Voice'' in February 2010. The rights to the names, trademarks, and archives of ''Sout ...
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The Great Speckled Bird (newspaper)
''The Great Speckled Bird'' was a counterculture underground newspaper based in Atlanta, Georgia from 1968 to 1976 and 1988 through 1990. Commonly known as ''The Bird'', it was founded by New Left activists from Emory University and members of the Southern Student Organizing Committee, an offshoot of Students for a Democratic Society. Founding editors included Tom and Stephanie Coffin, Howard Romaine and Gene Guerrero Jr. The first issue appeared March 8, 1968, and within 6 months it was publishing weekly. By 1970 it was the third largest weekly newspaper in Georgia with a paid circulation of 22,000 copies. The paper subscribed to Liberation News Service, a leftist news collective. The office of ''The Great Speckled Bird'' at the north end of Piedmont Park (240 Westminster Dr.) was firebombed and destroyed on May 6, 1972. In a letter to the editor of the ''New York Review of Books'', Jack Newfield et al. note that the bombing occurred after the paper published an exposé of the m ...
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Daily Intelligencer (Atlanta)
The ''Intelligencer'' was a weekly, and later daily newspaper first published in Atlanta on June 1, 1849 as ''The Weekly Intelligencer''. The founders were Benjamin Bomar, Zachariah A. Rice, Jonathan Norcross and Ira O. McDaniel. During the American Civil War, the newspaper had great trouble acquiring paper from its supplier, the paper mill at Sope Creek. In 1864, it was purchased by Jared Whitaker, who briefly moved it to Macon during the war. He moved it back to Atlanta after the war, and it was the only city paper to survive. John H. Steele served as its editor from 1860 until his death in January 1871. Captain Evan Howell was its city editor starting in 1868. The paper closed in April 1871, soon after Steele's death and after intense competition from the new Atlanta ''Constitution A constitution is the aggregate of fundamental principles or established precedents that constitute the legal basis of a polity, organisation or other type of entity and commonly d ...
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Daily Examiner
''The Daily Examiner'' is a daily newspaper serving Grafton, New South Wales, Australia. The newspaper is owned by News Corp Australia. At various times the newspaper was known as ''The Clarence and Richmond Examiner and New England Advertiser'' (1859–1889) and ''Clarence and Richmond Examiner'' (1889–1915). ''The Daily Examiner'' is circulated to Grafton, the Clarence Valley and surrounding areas from Woody Head in the north to Red Rock in the south. The circulation of ''The Daily Examiner'' is 5,571 Monday to Friday and 6,446 on Saturday. A major redesign of ''The Daily Examiner'' was highly commended in the PANPA 2002 Newspaper of the Year Awards for dailies and Sundays up to 20,000.About us
''The Daily Examiner''. Accessed 22 March 2009.
''The Daily Examiner'' was also awarded PANPA Newspaper of the Year 0 to 20,000 copies i ...
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Atlanta Southern Confederacy
The ''Atlanta Southern Confederacy'' was a strongly Democratic Southern newspaper during the American Civil War. The first issue was February 15, 1859, by Dr. James P. Hambleton. Historian Franklin Garrett explains its quick impact in that Hambleton was a "Fire-eater Fire eating is the act of putting a flaming object into the mouth and extinguishing it. A fire eater can be an entertainer, a street performance, street performer, part of a sideshow or a circus act but has also been part of spiritual traditi ... and his editorials were highly intemperate in tone." But he joined the Confederate Army in May 1861 and sold the paper to C.R. Hanleiter and George W. Adair, who merged it with their ''Gate City Guardian'', keeping the new name. By the time the paper stopped publication in 1865, Hanleiter had been replaced by J. Henley Smith. ReferencesLarge archive of articles
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