and The Province'', are both headquartered at
Granville Square. Vancouver has two major
English-language daily newspapers,
The Vancouver Sun (a
broadsheet) and
The Province (a
tabloid). Both are published by
Postmedia Network. There are also two national newspapers distributed in the city:
The Globe and Mail, which began distribution of a "national edition" into B.C. in 1983, and in more recent years launched a three-page B.C. news section in an effort to increase its readership in the city. The
National Post, also owned by Postmedia, entered city markets only in the last few years but has very little British Columbia content. Vancouver has four
Chinese-language daily newspapers,
Ming Pao,
Sing Tao,
World Journal and
The Epoch Times.
Ming Pao and
Sing Tao cater to a Cantonese-speaking readership whereas
World Journal and
The Epoch Times target Mandarin speakers. Vancouver business publications include the following: •
BC Business Mag (monthly) •
Business Edge Vancouver (weekly) •
Business in Vancouver (weekly) •
Journal of Commerce BC (daily) •
Make It Business (monthly) •
Western Investor (monthly) One free daily newspaper,
Metro is published in the city from Monday to Friday. It contains a small number of local news stories.
The Georgia Straight is a weekly "alternative" newspaper, though in addition to left-leaning news and opinion it also features upscale advertising for products such as condominiums and has lifestyle articles on topics such as health and style. Its most extensive sections are focused on entertainment and music features and listings.
The Georgia Straight began as a counterculture newspaper in the 1960s, full of controversial politics and occasional "obscene" cartoons and pictures, including the hippie classic comic
Harold Hedd. During this period the
Straights owner and publisher, Dan MacLeod, was repeatedly harassed by the city and its anti-hippie mayor
Tom Campbell. During the 1970s MacLeod converted the publication to a much more entertainment-oriented publication, avoiding political content until the mid-1980s. The Post Group Multimedia publishes 3 weekly newspapers:
The Asian Pacific Post (Chinese),
South Asian Post (Indo-Canadian), and
The Filipino Post, for the three largest immigrant communities in the Lower Mainland.
The Express is the title used for an occasional union-published newspaper published by the press unions when they are on strike.
Neighbourhood newspapers ==Radio==