El Paso Times

The El Paso Times is the newspaper for the U.S. city of El Paso, Texas. The paper was founded in 1881 by Marcellus Washington Carrico. The Times first published April 2, 1881. 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 an approximate daily circulation of 65,000 and 125,000 on Sundays.

El Paso Times
TypeDaily newspaper
FormatBroadsheet
Owner(s)Gannett
EditorTim Archuleta
Founded1881
Headquarters500 W. Overland St Suite 150
El Paso, TX 79901
United States
Circulation65,247 daily
125,317[1]
ISSN0746-3588
Websiteelpasotimes.com

The paper is the only English-language daily in El Paso (when the El Paso Herald-Post, an afternoon paper, closed in 1997), but often competes with the Spanish-language El Diario de El Paso, an offshoot of El Diario de Juárez which is published across the Rio Grande in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico. Because of declining newspaper circulations nationwide, the El Paso Times has recently expanded its online capabilities and introduced continuous online updates.

History

El Paso Times former logo until 2020.

Gannett bought the Times in 1972.[2] In 2003, Gannett and MediaNews Group formed a partnership between the Times and MediaNews' New Mexico papers, with Gannett as the managing partner.[3] 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 Group.[4] In 2015, Gannett acquired full ownership of the Texas-New Mexico Newspapers Partnership from MediaNews successor Digital First Media.[5] Later that year, Gannett split into two, with one having broadcasting and digital properties (Tegna) and another with newspapers (the new Gannett). The latter retained the Times.

Barbara Funkhouser served as editor of the El Paso Times from 1980 to 1986, the first woman to hold that position.[6] Zahira Torres became the editor of the paper in 2017, making her the second woman and first Latina to lead the El Paso Times. [7]

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.
  • Hot Ticket: published every Wednesday.

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.
  • Cars & Trucks: weekly auto trader guide.

Reporters

The Times, as the paper is known in the city, has reporters covering several beats:

  • Trish Long, Archives
  • Aaron Martinez, Courts
  • Daniel Borunda, Police beat
  • Molly Smith Education
  • Vic Kolenc, Business
  • Maria Cortes Gonzalez, Religion/Entertainment
  • Felix Chavez, high school sports
  • Bret Bloomquist, UTEP sports
  • Lauren Villagran, Immigration

Photographers

  • Mark Lambie
  • Briana Sanchez

Digital producers

  • Sarah Ann Dueñas
  • Aaron Bedoya

Former staff

  • W. E. "Pete" Snelson, sports editor (1940-1943), later member of both houses of the Texas State Legislature from Midland[8]
  • Steve Almond, American short story writer and essayist.
  • Paul Salopek, American journalist and writer.

Prices

Times prices are $1.50 daily, $2 Sunday & $5 Thanksgiving Day/Black Friday Ads edition.

gollark: They postponed it for some reason in any case.
gollark: The UK's tried, but I assume they will fail horribly.
gollark: What? How would that work?Also you could detect the suspicious mirrory behavior.
gollark: Totally worth it!
gollark: Just surgically implant cameras in their forehead and monitor the streams at 3x speed or something so you can continuously monitor them.

References

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