AAN News

SF Weekly Responds to Bay Guardian Lawsuitnew

Editor John Mecklin takes aim at a "smelly BS-offensive emanating" from the San Francisco Bay Guardian, which, he says, contains "huge doses of distortion, some outright falsehood, and very little truth." Mecklin says the "capper" to this offensive is the predatory-pricing lawsuit that Bay Guardian filed last week against SF Weekly and its sister publication, East Bay Express. The Bay Guardian has long tried "to convince San Francisco of the dangerous evil that a New Times-owned SF Weekly represents," writes Mecklin. "Over that time, SF Weekly has sailed ahead, and the Bay Guardian has foundered." (Second item on linked page.) Also addressed: SF Weekly's response to Puni-comic controversy. (Main item on linked page.)
SF Weekly  |  10-28-2004  5:16 pm  |  Industry News

Bay Guardian Sues New Times for Predatory Pricingnew

The San Francisco Bay Guardian filed a lawsuit in the city's Superior Court against SF Weekly, East Bay Express and New Times Media, LLC, which owns the two weeklies. The suit alleges that New Times repeatedly sold ads at less than the cost of producing them and offered secret deals to advertisers to keep them from advertising in the Bay Guardian. Both activities would violate California law. New Times owns 11 alternative papers, all of which, like the Bay Guardian, are members of the Association of Alternative Newsweeklies.
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  10-20-2004  5:04 pm  |  Industry News

Activists Call SF Weekly Cartoon Offensive, Want Apologynew

San Francisco Latino and Mission District activist groups want a public apology from freelance cartoonist Dan Siegler, reports the San Francisco Examiner. Siegler's "Puni" cartoon in the Sept. 15 edition of SF Weekly is a parody of Mayor Gavin Newsom's "Mission Possible" effort to take back the Mission District's "Miracle Mile." The phony message from the mayor asks, "Who exactly are we taking back the Mission from?" and encourages readers to select "the groups that you want removed from the Mission" from a list of 35. Among the choices are "pregnant tweenage Mexicans," "geriatric tamale sellers," and "white dot-com leftovers."
San Francisco Examiner  |  09-28-2004  11:29 am  |  Industry News

New Times Dominates John Bartlow Martin Awardsnew

Two New Times investigative series were selected as winners in the 2002 John Bartlow Martin Awards, sponsored by Northwestern's Medill School of Journalism. First place went to "Fallout," a look at the U.S. Navy's radioactive legacy in the Bay Area by SF Weekly's Lisa Davis. Phoenix New Times staff writer Amy Silverman captured third place for her special series "Slammed," which exposed abuses in Arizona's juvenile justice system. Sandwiched between them was Katherine Boo, former managing editor of Washington City Paper, for her story in The New Yorker on welfare mothers.
Medill School of Journalism  |  04-25-2002  1:17 pm  |  Industry News

"Fallout" Takes Another Awardnew

Lisa Davis' "Fallout" series, which won a George Polk Award a few weeks ago, wins a 2002 IRE Award for investigative journalism. Investigative Reporters and Editors Inc. honors Davis and John Mecklin of the SF Weekly for “Fallout,” which reveals "how a Bayfront property about to be turned over to the city by the Navy may be far more contaminated with radioactive waste than current cleanup plans acknowledge." Other AAN members Phoenix New Times and New Times Los Angeles were the two finalists in the local circulation weekly division, giving New Times a lock on the division.
Investigative Reporters and Editors Inc.  |  03-15-2002  2:19 pm  |  Industry News

Bay Guardian Challenges SF Weekly Over "Anticompetitive Practices"new

In an article penned by Executive Editor Tim Redmond, the 35-year-old weekly announces that it has "launched the first stage of a legal offensive to stop" its New Times-owned competitor "from engaging in anticompetitive business practices that may violate federal and state (antitrust) laws." Redmond also details a settled lawsuit in which the Bay Guardian charged a sales rep who had decided to jump ship with secretly downloading over 1,000 pages of sales records and providing them to her then-new employer, SF Weekly.
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  03-11-2002  11:57 pm  |  Industry News

SF Weekly Reporter Wins George Polk Awardnew

Lisa Davis joins writers from The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and The New Yorker in winning a prestigious George Polk Award. Her two-part series, "Fallout", which won in the environmental reporting category, exposed mishandled radioactive waste at the San Francisco Naval Shipyard at Hunter's Point.
Associated Press  |  02-20-2002  2:31 pm  |  Industry News

In Defense of Bill Mahernew

SF Weekly  |  09-27-2001  8:38 am  | 

SF Examiner Hit with Lawsuitsnew

SF Weekly  |  09-27-2001  6:35 am  | 

Newsrack Follies Continue in S.F., Indy

When the going gets weird, the weird get pedmounts? (FULL STORY)
Patrick Sullivan  |  06-29-1999  11:50 am  |  Industry News

SF Weekly Pulls 'Yuppie Rights Rally' Hoax

Mainstream Press Buys Contrived Story Hook, Line and Sinker. (FULL STORY)
Patrick Sullivan  |  06-16-1999  11:50 am  |  Industry News

S.F. Newsrack Law Challenged

Six Publishers File First Amendment Suit Over Ordinance. (FULL STORY)
Randall Lyman  |  01-13-1999  11:51 am  |  Industry News

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