Media
Related: About this forumSix months later found out that the OC Weekly ended up publication
And even before the virus.
One more sad commentary about the demise of print media.
(snip)
The newsweekly, which was founded in 1995, had been offloaded from Voice Media Group to local publisher Duncan McIntosh in 2016. The next year, OC Weeklys editor Gustavo Arellano, who is now a features writer for The Times, very publicly resigned.
Arellano, who had long served as the public face of the outlet, said that he had quit rather cut half the papers staff, which he said he had been asked to do. But even in its reduced form, OC Weekly remained the leading alternative voice in the region. And the digging that previously exposed misconduct at the Orange County Sheriffs Department and the Orange County District Attorneys Office continued.
More than anything, it held a mirror to the culture, chaos and complexities of a metropolitan area that is home to more than 3 million people and has been majority-minority since 2004. Theirs was not the Orange County of Nixon or Newport, or even the place reflected in the Orange County Register.
The OC Register was always a chronicler of the official Orange County: White, rich, Republican, suburban, said Arellano, who is himself an Orange County native. The OC Weekly was a chronicler of everything else. And really, the freaks and geeks, which in this case is the Mexicans, the Muslims, the Vietnamese, the young people, the LGBT folks all of these communities that did not belong in Orange County according to its lords found a home in the pages of the OC Weekly.
More..
https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2019-12-08/column-why-the-death-of-oc-weekly-matters
jimfields33
(18,554 posts)question everything
(48,721 posts)and a partner in several local battles. I knew several of the writers and on occasions provided material, even after I left.
But I slowly lost touch, the local stories no longer mattered to me.
jimfields33
(18,554 posts)Hopefully an online version will show up someday.