C-Ville Weekly

Alternative newspaper in the U.S. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

C-VILLE Weekly is an alternative weekly newspaper distributed around Charlottesville, Virginia. Dubbing itself "Charlottesville's News & Arts Weekly," in 2001, the newspaper made over $100,000 in profits.

FormatBerliner
PublisherPortico Publications Ltd
EditorCaite Hamilton[1]
Quick facts Type, Format ...
C-VILLE Weekly
TypeAlternative weekly
FormatBerliner
PublisherPortico Publications Ltd
EditorCaite Hamilton[1]
Staff writers24+
Founded1989
HeadquartersC-VILLE Weekly
PO Box 119
Charlottesville, Virginia
Circulation24,000[2]
PriceFree
OCLC number31820304
Websitec-ville.com
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In 2013 C-VILLE Weekly and other local news outlet Charlottesville Tomorrow entered a content sharing agreement with intent to improve journalism on education.[3]

In June 2020 the newspaper laid off staff.[4] The remaining journalism team was two reporters, a part-time editor, and a budget to hire a copy editor as needed.[5][6]

History

Hawes Spencer and Bill Chapman founded the paper as a bi-weekly in 1989.

In January 2002 newspaper owners Bill Chapman and Rob Jiranek dismissed Hawes Spencer as editor of C-VILLE Weekly.[7] In response Spencer and some other C-VILLE Weekly staff founded competing newspaper, The Hook.[7] Cathryn Harding became editor in January 2002.[8]

In 2011 the parent companies that owned C-VILLE Weekly and the Hook merged, re-uniting publications which had common origins.[9]

In 2018 the arts and living reporter for C-VILLE Weekly remarked that after the 2017 Unite the Right rally, there was more community support for journalism on local people of color.[10]

References

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