Everything about El Paso Times totally explained
The
El Paso Times is the primary
English-language newspaper for the
U.S. city of
El Paso, Texas. The paper was founded in
1881 by Marcellus Washington Carrico. It originally started out as a weekly but within a year's time, it became the daily newspaper for the
frontier town.
The newspaper has a daily circulation of 73,172 and 88,410 on Sundays. In December 2005, Gannett became a minority partner in the
El Paso Times, handing the majority of the partnership and management to Denver-based MediaNews.
The paper is currently the only English-language daily in El Paso, but often competes with the Spanish-language
El Diario de El Paso, an offshoot of
El Diario de Juárez.
Because of declining newspaper circulations nationwide, the
El Paso Times has recently expanded its online capabilities and introduced continuous online updates.
Sections
The El Paso Times prints news in several sections:
•A-section: all-local news cover page, with national, Mexico and international news in the inside pages.
•Borderland: the metro news page has an all-local cover page as well as neighborhood, New Mexico and Texas news.
•Sports: local and national sports, with an emphasis in high-school and
UTEP coverage.
•Business: local and national business news.
•Living: local and national feature stories including rotating sections covering seniors, religion, pop culture, the arts, books, health, home decor, entertainment news, local music and fashion.
•Tiempo: weekly entertainment guide published on Fridays. It includes concerts, movies, galleries, restaurant reviews and other entertainment related stories.
Other publications
The El Paso Times publishes several other weekly, biweekly and monthly publications.
•El Paso y Más: bi-weekly Spanish news coverage.
•TV y Más: weekly television guide and Spanish entertainment magazine.
•Autos y Más: weekly auto trader guide.
Reporters
The Times, as the paper is known in the city, has reporters covering several beats:
•
Brandi Grissom, state politics
•
Daniel Borunda, cops
•
Darren Meritz, El Paso's Lower Valley
•
Chris Roberts, Fort Bliss and the military
•
Gustavo Reveles Acosta, city hall
•
Stephanie Sanchez, health/general assignment
•
Erica Molina Johnson, El Paso County and higher education
•
Ramon Renteria, enterprise
•
Ramon Bracamontes, enterprise
•
Adriana M. Chávez, El Paso's West Side and Northeast/Central
•
Michael D. Hernandez, El Paso's East Side
•
Zahira Torres, education
•
Dave Burge, business
•
Vic Kolenc, business
•
Maribel Villalva, arts and culture
•
Maria Cortes Gonzalez, home decor and religion
•
Victor Martinez, features
•
Diana Washington-Valdez, general assignment
•
Matt Johnson, high school sports
•
Bill Knight, UTEP basketball
•
Lenny Jurado, high school sports
•
Bret Bloomquist, UTEP football
•
Doug Pullen, music and features
Photographers
•
Ruben Ramirez, editor
•
Mark Lambie
•
Rudy Gutierrez
•
Victor Calzada
•
Vanessa Monsisvais
•
Adriane JaeckleFurther Information
Get more info on 'El Paso Times'.
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