Newspapers
title | metro area | founded | website | notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
The Business Review | Albany, New York | albany | ||
Atlanta Business Chronicle | Atlanta, Georgia | atlanta | ||
Austin Business Journal | Austin, Texas | austin | ||
Baltimore Business Journal | Baltimore, Maryland | baltimore | ||
Birmingham Business Journal | Birmingham, Alabama | birmingham | ||
Boston Business Journal | Boston, Massachusetts | boston | ||
Buffalo Business First | Buffalo, New York | buffalo | ||
Charlotte Business Journal | Charlotte, North Carolina | charlotte | ||
Cincinnati Business Courier | Cincinnati, Ohio | 1984 | cincinnati | |
Columbus Business First | Columbus, Ohio | columbus | ||
Dallas Business Journal | Dallas, Texas | 1977 | dallas | |
Dayton Business Journal | Dayton, Ohio | dayton | ||
Denver Business Journal | Denver, Colorado | denver | ||
Triad Business Journal | Greensboro, North Carolina | triad | ||
Pacific Business News | Honolulu, Hawaii | pacific | started by entrepreneur George Mason and former Honolulu Star-Bulletin editor John Ramsey. In 1983 Mason sold the newspaper to ACBJ, though he continued to write a regular column for more than a decade after that. | |
Houston Business Journal | Houston, Texas | houston | Along with several other corporate sponsors, it coordinates the FastTech 50 Competition each year. The Houston Business Journal had occupied space in the Park Towers for a period of over 10 years. In 2012 the newspaper announced that it was moving to 5444 Westheimer Road effective November 5, 2012. | |
Jacksonville Business Journal | Jacksonville, Florida | jacksonville | ||
Kansas City Business Journal | Kansas City, Missouri | 1982 | kansascity | Co-founded by Michael K. Russell and William Worley in August 1982. |
L.A. Biz | Los Angeles, California | losangeles | ||
Business First of Louisville | Louisville, Kentucky | 1984 | louisville | |
Memphis Business Journal | Memphis, Tennessee | 1979-05-04 | memphis | Founded by Ward Archer as Mid-South Business, one of the first local business papers published in the United States. |
Milwaukee Business Journal | Milwaukee, Wisconsin | milwaukee | ||
Minneapolis / St. Paul Business Journal | Minneapolis–Saint Paul | twincities | ||
Nashville Business Journal | Nashville, Tennessee | nashville | ||
Orlando Business Journal | Orlando, Florida | orlando | ||
Philadelphia Business Journal | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | 1982-03 | philadelphia | |
Phoenix Business Journal | Phoenix, Arizona | phoenix | ||
Pittsburgh Business Times | Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania | pittsburgh | ||
Portland Business Journal | Portland, Oregon | portland | ||
Puget Sound Business Journal | Seattle, Washington | seattle | ||
Triangle Business Journal | Raleigh, North Carolina | triangle | ||
Sacramento Business Journal | Sacramento, California | sacramento | ||
St. Louis Business Journal | St. Louis, Missouri | stlouis | ||
San Antonio Business Journal | San Antonio, Texas | sanantonio | ||
San Francisco Business Journal | San Francisco, California | sanfrancisco | In 2008, East Bay Business Times merged with the San Francisco Business Times in 2008. | |
Silicon Valley / San Jose Business Journal | San Jose, California | sanjose | ||
South Florida Business Journal | Miami-Fort Lauderdale, Florida | southflorida | ||
Tampa Bay Business Journal | Tampa Bay, Florida | 1981 | tampabay | founded as Tampa Bay Business, renamed in the late 1990s as The Business Journal Serving Tampa Bay |
Washington Business Journal | Washington, D.C. | washington | ||
Wichita Business Journal | Wichita, Kansas | wichita |
Read more about this topic: American City Business Journals
Famous quotes containing the word newspapers:
“It takes twenty or so years before a mother can know with any certainty how effective her theories have beenand even then there are surprises. The daily newspapers raise the most frightening questions of all for a mother of sons: Could my once sweet babes ever become violent men? Are my sons really who I think they are?”
—Mary Kay Blakely (20th century)
“We might make a public moan in the newspapers about the decay of conscience, but in private conversation, no matter what crimes a man may have committed or how cynically he may have debased his talent or his friends, variations on the answer Yes, but I did it for the money satisfy all but the most tiresome objections.”
—Lewis H. Lapham (b. 1935)
“If words were invented to conceal thought, I think that newspapers are a great improvement on a bad invention.”
—Henry David Thoreau (18171862)