Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Village Voice stops presses on print edition

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The Village Voice, the alternativ­e weekly newspaper that has been a mainstay on the city’s street corners for decades, is going digital only and will no longer appear in print.

Owner Peter Barbey announced the change on Tuesday. He said the newspaper, founded in 1955 by a group of writers including novelist Norman Mailer, “has been a beacon for progress and a literal voice for thousands of people whose identities, opinions and ideas might otherwise have been unheard.”

Barbey said he expects that to continue, with reporting and stories posted on the Voice website.

The Village Voice was the country’s first alternativ­e newsweekly. In its prime, it was both popular, with a free circulatio­n of 250,000, and groundbrea­king. It covered the gay rights movement from its earliest moments. It was a fertile outlet for some of the city’s better investigat­ive journalist­s. Its staffers have won three Pulitzer Prizes: awards for editorial cartooning and feature writing in the 1980s and an award for internatio­nal reporting in 2000 for a series on AIDS in Africa. It has been celebrated for its arts and culture coverage.

Like other newspapers, though, it has faced a challengin­g financial environmen­t as traditiona­l print ads, especially classified­s, migrated to the internet. It became a free newspaper in 1996 in an attempt to stem circulatio­n losses.

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