Some alternative newspapers are independent. However, due in part to increasing
concentration of media ownership, many have been bought or launched by larger
media conglomerates. The
Tribune Company, a multibillion-dollar company that owns the
Chicago Tribune, owns four
New England alternative weeklies, including the
Hartford Advocate and
New Haven Advocate. Creative Loafing, originally only an
Atlanta-based alternative weekly, grew into Creative Loafing, Inc. which owned papers in three other
southern U.S. cities, as well as the
Chicago Reader and
Washington City Paper.
Village Voice Media and
New Times Media merged in 2006; before that, they were the two largest chains. The pre-merger Village Voice Media, an outgrowth of New York City's
Village Voice, included
LA Weekly,
OC Weekly,
Seattle Weekly,
Minneapolis City Pages, and
Nashville Scene.
New Times Media included at the time of the merger
Cleveland Scene,
Dallas Observer,
Westword,
East Bay Express,
New Times Broward-Palm Beach,
Houston Press,
The Pitch,
Miami New Times,
Phoenix New Times,
SF Weekly and
Riverfront Times. In 2003, the two companies entered into a non-competition agreement which stated that the two would not publish in the same market. Because of this, New Times Media eliminated
New Times LA, a competitor to Village Voice Media's
LA Weekly, and Village Voice Media ceased publishing
Cleveland Free Times, a competitor to New Times Media's
Cleveland Scene. The
US Justice Department launched an
antitrust investigation into the agreement. The case was settled out of court with the two companies agreeing to make available the publishing assets and titles of their defunct papers to potential competitors. The
Cleveland Free Times recommenced publication in 2003 under the publication group Kildysart LLC, while the assets of
New Times LA were sold to
Southland Publishing and relaunched as
LA CityBeat. On October 24, 2005, New Times Media announced a deal to acquire Village Voice Media, creating a chain of 17 free weekly newspapers around the country with a combined circulation of 1.8 million and controlling a quarter of the weekly circulation of alternative weekly newspapers in North America. The deal was approved by the Justice Department and, on January 31, 2006, the companies merged into one, taking the name Village Voice Media.
Phoenix Media/Communications Group, owner of the popular
Boston alternative weekly the
Boston Phoenix, expanded to
Providence, Rhode Island in 1988 with their purchase of
NewPaper, which was renamed the
Providence Phoenix. In 1999, PM/CG expanded further through
New England to
Portland, Maine with the creation of the
Portland Phoenix. From 1992 through 2005, PM/GC owned and operated the
Worcester Phoenix in
Worcester, Massachusetts, but PM/GC folded that branch because of Worcester's dwindling art scene. Nonetheless, a number of owner-operated, non-chain owned alternative papers survive, among them
Metro Silicon Valley in
San Jose,
Pittsburgh City Paper in
Pittsburgh,
Salt Lake City Weekly, the
Pacific Sun, the
Bohemian in California's Sonoma and Napa counties, the
San Diego Reader,
Isthmus in
Madison, Wisconsin,
Flagpole Magazine in
Athens, Georgia, the
Boulder Weekly,
Willamette Week in
Portland, Oregon,
Independent Weekly,
Yes! Weekly,
Creative Loafing, and
Triad City Beat in
North Carolina, the
Austin Chronicle in
Texas,
The Stranger in
Seattle, Washington,
Artvoice in
Buffalo, New York, the
Aquarian Weekly in
North Jersey, the
Colorado Springs Independent, the
Good Times in
Santa Cruz, California,
New Times in
San Luis Obispo and the
Sun in Northern
Santa Barbara County, California. In 2026, a group of employees at Creative Loafing Tampa Bay and two local partners purchased the newspaper, making the paper locally-owned for the first time since 2009. Canadian examples of owner-operated, non-chain owned alternative papers include Vancouver's
The Georgia Straight, Toronto's
NOW Magazine, Edmonton's
Vue Weekly and Halifax's
The Coast. Examples outside the United States and Canada include Barcelona's
BCN Mes. ==See also==