June 23, 2010 cover of the City Paper
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Type | Alternative weekly |
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Format | Tabloid |
Owner(s) |
Baltimore Sun Media Group (Tronc) |
Publisher | Trif Alatzas |
Editor | Karen Houppert |
Founded | 1977 |
Headquarters | 501 North Calvert Street Baltimore, MD 21278 United States |
Circulation | 52,000 (May 2016) |
ISSN | 0740-3410 |
Website | citypaper |
Baltimore City Paper is a free alternative weekly newspaper published in Baltimore, Maryland, founded in 1977 by Russ Smith and Alan Hirsch. Current owner Baltimore Sun Media Group purchased the paper in 2014 from Times-Shamrock Communications, which had owned the newspaper since 1987. It is distributed on Wednesdays in distinctive yellow boxes found throughout the Baltimore area.
Russ Smith and Alan Hirsch started the Baltimore City Paper in May 1977 while students at Johns Hopkins University. It was originally named the City Squeeze and Smith and Hirsch published it using the offices of the Johns Hopkins student newspaper. In 1978, they took the paper out of the University and started publishing it as the Baltimore City Paper. Smith said that he viewed the paper as an alternatively weekly similar to the Chicago Reader and the Boston Real Paper. The paper has been free, except for a time between 1979–81, where they charged .25 per issue. Charging a fee turned out to be mistake, as most of the paper's income came through advertising revenue and the fee led to a precipitous drop in circulation, and consequently advertising revenues.
It is best known for providing information on clubs, concerts, theater, and restaurants, but each issue also has one major article on a subject not usually being carried by the mainstream media. In each issue there are also several political and advice columns and numerous cartoons including the weekly comic DIRTFARM by Ben Claassen III.
The City Paper has broken several important stories in the Baltimore area, including a plagiarism scandal involving longtime Baltimore Sun columnist Michael Olesker.