Competition
''RedEye'' was created because of the ''Chicago Tribune'' and other major newspapers' loss of readership among young people. Tribune Company began publishing the ''RedEye'' in an effort to pull readers back into readership and eventually migrate them into the big edition (''Tribune''). When ''RedEye'' appeared, it was in direct competition with another paper '' Red Streak'', which the ''Tribune's'' Chicago competitor the '' Sun-Times'' began publishing at the same time. Initially, both papers were handed out for free by " hawkers" on street corners, usually with one vendor from each paper directly next to each other. After about six months of the free papers, both companies placed vending boxes throughout the city with the papers thereafter costing 25 cents. At the end of 2005, the ''Sun-Times'' discontinued ''Red Streak''. According to ''Sun-Times'' publisher John Cruickshank, ''Red Streak'' was only launched "to stop he ''Tribune''from gaining a foothold in the paid tabloid market". Its only purpose was to undermine ''RedEyes attempt at drawing commuters, customers which have historically belonged to the ''Sun-Times''. At the beginning of 2006, ''RedEye'' became a free paper once again, with vending boxes being unlocked and coin slots covered over. In February 2007, after NewsCorp launched a late-night talk television program onContent
As compared with mainstream newspapers, ''RedEye'' strongly emphasizedPublication changes
After 15 years of daily distribution, ''RedEye'' shifted to a weekly format in 2017 before it stopped publishing in 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic.Notes and references
External links
* {{DEFAULTSORT:Redeye Free daily newspapers Chicago Tribune Newspapers published in Chicago Newspapers established in 2002 2002 establishments in Illinois