In 1999, Del Favero and Dobie formed a group of investors and purchased Stern Publishing, then-owner of the
Village Voice and five other alternative newsweeklies across the nation. They named the new corporation Village Voice Media.
Village Voice publisher David Schneiderman, also one of the investors, became chief executive officer of the new venture. In late 2004, both Del Favero and Dobie resigned their positions as publisher and editor of the
Scene. The editor role was taken on by the
Scenes then-news editor Liz Garrigan.
Chris Ferrell was hired by Village Voice Media to assume the role of publisher at the beginning of 2005. In January 2006,
Village Voice Media was acquired by
New Times Media and kept the Village Voice Media name. On September 27, 2007, Ferrell announced his resignation as publisher of the
Nashville Scene and, two weeks later, was replaced by long-time
Scene retail sales account executive Mike Smith, who took the title of associate publisher in line with the post-merger title structuring of Village Voice Media. On May 6, 2008, Garrigan announced her resignation as editor on the
Nashville Scene blog Pith in the Wind. She characterized her departure as "anticlimactic" and "not a protest resignation, a corporate cost-cutting measure or a veiled firing." She added that she had imposed a five-year expiration date for herself as editor, and would be cutting that short because she felt she had accomplished what she set out to accomplish. Garrigan's last day as
Scene editor was slated for June 30, 2008. ==SouthComm Communications==