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Las Vegas Weekly

Free alternative weekly newspaper in Henderson, Nevada


Free alternative weekly newspaper in Henderson, Nevada

FieldValue
nameLas Vegas Weekly
imageLas Vegas Weekly (cover).jpg
image_size200px
typeAlternative weekly
founded1998
ownersGreenspun Media Group
headquarters2275 Corporate Circle Drive
Third Floor
Henderson, NV 89074
United States
publisherMark De Pooter
editorSpencer Patterson
circulation42,000
circulation_date2022
circulation_ref
websitelasvegasweekly.com

Third Floor Henderson, NV 89074 United States Las Vegas Weekly is a free alternative weekly newspaper based in Henderson, Nevada, covering Las Vegas arts, entertainment, culture and news. Las Vegas Weekly is published by Greenspun Media Group.

History

The paper was founded in 1992 by James P. Reza, Greg Ryan and Robert Ringle as a free monthly publication called Scope Magazine covering Southern Nevada's culture, arts, music and lifestyle from a decidedly Generation X perspective.{{cite news

Distributed freely throughout the greater Las Vegas area at bars, cafes, record stores, and other retail outlets, Scope published its first monthly issue in April 1992, featuring a familiar format of band interviews, news features, columns, a venue guide, and a 30-day calendar of music and arts events, presented in the New Journalism style and geared toward alternative culture. The 2021 documentary Parkway of Broken Dreams (directed by Pj Perez) highlights the rise and fall of that alternative culture in Las Vegas, including interviews with Reza and multiple Scope staffers. In its first year, Scope's primary competitors were the similar free newsprint tabloids In Music, and later in 1992, the first version of Las Vegas Weekly (published by Patrick Gaffey, and independent of the Las Vegas Weekly discussed here). Both In Music and Gaffey's version of Las Vegas Weekly ceased publication in 1993.

Anticipating the forthcoming decline of "alternative culture" and wishing to broaden the paper's reach and coverage, in 1996 Reza partnered with Daniel Greenspun, forming a new company (Radiant City Publications LLC) to publish Scope. During this partnership, Reza continued on as Managing Editor, expanding the paper's coverage to a more traditional alternative newsweekly style, and accelerating the publishing schedule to biweekly. In 1998, Reza sold his remaining interest in Scope to The Greenspun Corporation, who soon retooled it, increasing the frequency to weekly and renaming it Las Vegas Weekly.{{cite news |access-date=2009-10-30

As of December 2009, Las Vegas Weekly had a circulation of 65,000.{{cite web |access-date=2010-08-26 |archive-date=July 8, 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110708214421/http://www.cvcaudit.com/media/pub_detail.aspx?rid=337 |url-status=dead

References

References

  1. "Greenspun Media Group - Las Vegas Weekly - Media Kit by Greenspun Media Group - Issuu".
  2. (8 October 2021). "'It shouldn't have ended': New doc captures the '90s heyday of Maryland Parkway". [[Las Vegas Review-Journal]].
  3. (2017-06-27). "Patrick Gaffey looks back on how Southern Nevada's cultural desert has bloomed".
  4. (2018-01-29). "The Sunday is gone, but its content carries on - Las Vegas Sun Newspaper".
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