AltWeeklies Wire
The Louisiana Newspaper War of 2013new

What the sale of The Advocate in Baton Rouge could mean for New Orleans' Times-Picayune.
The Fight to Save The Times-Picayunenew

How New Orleanians came together in hopes of saving a paper that had no intention of being saved.
Tags: Newspaper, Times-Picayune
Why Beat Reporters Matternew

What's being lost as newspapers cut back.
Tags: Newspapers, Times-Picayune
After the Cuts at The Times-Picayunenew

Besides the newsroom slashing, the paper's entire marketing department was fired save one person. All special sections employees, the library staff and human resources employees were also presented with severance papers.
The Axe Prepares to Fall at The Times-Picayunenew

Individual meetings between Times-Picayune employees and managers are set to begin early Tuesday morning. The meetings will spell out job offers and severances.
After the Newsnew

When the word came down that The Times-Picayune would no longer be a daily newspaper, it wasn't from the paper's owners, Advance Publications. Nor was it from senior management or newsroom officials. It came as a brief item on The New York Times' "Media Decoder" blog, written by David Carr, and sent out over Twitter at 10:33 p.m., when the newsroom was largely empty.
Tags: Times-Picayune
Times-Picayune Employees in Shock as Extent of Cuts Emergesnew

Employees of The Times-Picayune gathered to collectively absorb the shock of a New York Times report that the paper is about to undergo a massive restructuring that will leave New Orleans without a daily published newspaper.
Your (Hyper)local Newsnew

Uptown Messenger, an online newspaper, is bringing professionally sourced news to a highly targeted audience. "Micronews" websites, tailored to readers by neighborhood, are a hot trend in journalism -- even if the long-term financial picture is unclear
Tags: Micronews, Uptown Messenger
History of the Rex Bulletinnew

In the mid-1870s, newspaper coverage of the Carnival season began to augment descriptions of the pageants with small, black-and-white engravings of the float designs. The evolution of these printed images magically paralleled the increasing grandeur of their subjects, and in 1882, the first "broadside" sheets appeared.
Tags: Mardi Gras, Rex Bulletin
30 Years of Reportingnew

Over the last three decades, Gambit has covered New Orleans in its own way -- sometimes seriously, sometimes irreverently. But the paper has always been there for the big (and small) stories.