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Houston Press

Houston Press
Type Alternative weekly
Format Tabloid
Owner(s) Voice Media Group
Publisher Stuart Folb
Editor Margaret Downing
Founded 1989
Headquarters Houston, TX
Circulation 43,810 (June 2016)
Website houstonpress.com

The Houston Press is an alternative weekly newspaper published in Houston, Texas, United States. It is headquartered in the Midtown area.

The paper is supported entirely by advertising revenue and is free to readers. The newspaper reports a monthly readership of more than 200,000 print readers and 1.6 million online users. The Press can be found in restaurants, coffee houses, and local retail stores. New weekly editions are distributed on Thursdays.

The weekly Houston Press was founded in 1989. Chris Hearne (founder of Austin's Third Coast Magazine) and Kirk Cypel (a Vice President of a Houston-based investment group) conceived of this news and entertainment weekly after rejecting a business plan to relaunch Texas Business Magazine. Hearne was the paper's first publisher and Cypel served as the organization's business advisor. Although the paper faced early challenges, the landscape changed when Hearne and Cypel engineered a buyout of 713 Magazine, a key competitor. Once in control of 713, they stopped its publication and converted advertisers to the Houston Press. Thereafter, the Houston Press's advertising and circulation grew dramatically.

For the newspaper's first five years, Niel Morgan served as the investor. It was bought out by New Times Media in 1993. In 2005, New Times acquired Village Voice Media, and changed its name to Village Voice Media. In September 2012, Village Voice Media executives Scott Tobias, Christine Brennan and Jeff Mars bought Village Voice Meda's papers and associated web properties from its founders and formed Voice Media Group.

The headquarters of the Houston Press are located in Midtown Houston on LaBranch Street.

Prior to 1998, the Houston Press was located in Suite 1900 of the 2000 West Loop South building in Uptown Houston, off of the 610 Loop West Loop. In 1998, it moved to a new location in Downtown Houston, which became the Houston Press building and was originally built in 1927. That building is in close proximity to the ExxonMobil Building.


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