The
Sacramento News & Review (SN&R), founded in 1989, was the largest of the three News & Review papers prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, with a cumulative readership of roughly 330,000 people, according to the Winter 2015 Media Audit Report, run by
International Demographics. The founding editor was Melinda Welsh; Scott Anderson is currently acting news editor. Its most well-known annual issues are: •
Best of Sacramento, annual issue with the results of a readers' poll and editors' choices of the best places, people and things in Sacramento •
Summer Guide & Winter Guide, seasonal guides about what to do during each season in and around Sacramento •
Sammies (Sacramento Area Music Awards), annual issue profiling the readers' and critics' choice for best bands and musicians These annual issues have been suspended in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. In 2013, a grant from the Sacramento Emergency Foodlink allowed the SN&R to conduct independent research, reporting and distribution of articles on the subject of poverty in the Sacramento region from November 2012 to October 2013. The paper is noted as the last place of employment of investigative journalist
Gary Webb, who began working at the paper after the
Dark Alliance scandal. Webb allegedly
committed suicide while working for the paper.
Events Sacramento Area Music Awards In 1992, the
Sacramento News & Review started the
Sacramento Area Music Awards (SAMMIES) to honor and promote the growing music scene in Sacramento. Winners are selected by SN&R readers in a list of musical genres, including
Folk rock,
Funk,
Hard rock,
Blues,
Punk and many more. Critics vote for winners in more specific areas, e.g. Male/Female vocalist, Keyboardist, Bassist, etc. Winners of the SAMMIES include
Cake (band),
Deftones,
Oleander (band) and others.
Interfaith On the first anniversary of
September 11, the Sacramento News & Review brought together musical acts from different faith groups around Sacramento for a Call For Unity Event to symbolize the city's acceptance of racial and religious diversity. Every year someone in the region was honored with a Building Unity Award for their interfaith work in Sacramento, until 2008, when the last Call for Unity event was held. In December 2015, the News & Review, in partnership with Sacramento's local
Habitat for Humanity, began a Build for Unity project, where Muslims, Christians, and other faith groups came together to build Habitat houses, in part as a response to the anti-Muslim rhetoric of national politics. The project was funded in large part by generous donations from a wide range of faith groups.
Noted stories •
Heart of the (Gray) Matter, 2004: Joel Davis was diagnosed with
Parkinson's disease, and wrote an award-winning first-person account of the brain surgery he underwent while conscious •
Breaking Away, 2002: News & Review led 30 weeklies in a national effort to cover the issue of priests who leave the Catholic Church because they can no longer live with the celibacy requirements •
Poor America, 1997: News & Review led a national effort of 90 weekly newspapers around the country in a conversation about welfare reform and extreme poverty in the nation •
Mainstream Newspapers, R.I.P., 1996: Cover story predicting the decline of daily newspapers by 2006, a prediction which has largely come true • '''What's Up Chuck,''' 1996: Award-winning investigative story about the curious relationship between big insurance and the California Insurance Commissioner
Chuck Quackenbush An attorney for the city deemed the emails public property, but instead of handing them over, the Mayor moved to sue the Sacramento News & Review and the
city of Sacramento. In response to the lawsuit, the Sacramento News & Review published a cover story where, according to their statement, a cartoon depicts
Kevin Johnson as "sweaty and nervous while reading about his lawsuit against this paper and allegations of email misuse." Betty Williams, the former president of Sacramento's local
NAACP and a longtime associate of
Kevin Johnson, released a statement criticizing the paper for its "racially biased news coverage" of the mayor, mainly referring to the cartoon portrayal of the mayor. The lawsuit and the allegations of racially biased news coverage attracted the attention of
Deadspin who began covering the story, bringing national attention to the many allegations against
Kevin Johnson, including allegations of sexual assault and harassment. This national attention put pressure on
ESPN to not air a film praising
Kevin Johnson's work in
Sacramento with the
Sacramento Kings and their new downtown arena. Almost immediately after
ESPN pulled the film,
Kevin Johnson announced that he would not be seeking another term as
Mayor of the City of Sacramento. In March 2016, the News & Review was recognized by the
James Madison Freedom of Information Awards for its significant contributions to advancing freedom of information for this legal battle to obtain Sacramento Mayor
Kevin Johnson's emails.
Solving Sacramento collaborative In June 2022, the
Sacramento News & Review, along with the
Sacramento Observer, brought together seven Sacramento news organizations into a collaborative called Solving Sacramento. The
Sacramento Business Journal, Russian American Media (a three-publication media company),
Outword Magazine (an LGBTQ+ publication),
CapRadio, and Univision Sacramento also joined the collaborative effort, working together to produce and share local news stories. The initial focus was on affordable housing and rebooting the arts. This collaborative was initially funded through a grant from Solutions Journalism Network, and is fiscally sponsored by Local Media Foundation. ==
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