Media in San Diego

The San Diego Union-Tribune Building, 2018

This is a list of media outlets based in the city of San Diego. People in San Diego are also able to receive media from Tijuana, Mexico.

Print

Newspapers

  • The San Diego Union-Tribune is the city's primary newspaper, published daily. The Union-Tribune was formed in 1992 through a merger of the San Diego Union (established 1868) and the San Diego Evening Tribune (established 1881). The newspapers hald been under common ownership since 1901. The Evening-Tribune was the evening paper, while the Union was the morning paper; the Union-Tribune is a morning paper. As of 2015, the Union-Tribune had won four Pulitzer Prizes and was the oldest company in continuous operation in San Diego. In 2015, Tribune Publishing, which operates the Los Angeles Times and other major U.S. daily newspapers, purchased the newspaper in an $85 million deal. The purchase ended 146 years of private local ownership for the paper.

Other papers and news outlets published in the city include:

Neighborhood newspapers include:

Magazines

Magazines published in San Diego include:

Online

Online-only media in San Diego include:

  • Fresh Brewed Tech, a local tech news website
  • Patch, a national network of local news sites, operates in San Diego
  • San Diego Story, an arts review website
  • The Times of San Diego is a web-based news outlet founded in 2014 that features local news daily for the city and surrounding area. It has earned acclaim as a small business with a booming readership. Currently the site reaches over 1 million unique users every month, according to its published reports. The audience is young, with readers aged 18 to 44 constituting the largest segment. Nearly 60 percent of reading sessions are from Southern California. At the height of the COVID-19 pandemic in April 2020, the site reported 1.53 million unique users. The Times of San Diego differs from other recent local-media startups in providing full daily coverage of news in a large metro area, rather than infrequent in-depth articles. It differs in this regard from Voice of San Diego, a 15-year-old startup, and has passed that website in audience size. The Times of San Diego's contributing editors have been featured on local radio programs and have led training sessions for local journalists. The Times of San Diego has been named "best news site" four years in row by the San Diego Press Club, and the site's editors took home 23 other awards in 2019. The site received a grant from Google in June 2020 to expand coverage of the local impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • Voice of San Diego (Voiceofsandiego.org) is a non-profit news outlet in San Diego that reports on the city. A Web-only local outlet, Voice of San Diego was founded in 2005, it was one of a number of such publications that emerged around that time in responsive to cutbacks in traditional local print newspapers. The site is known for both its news coverage and local investigative reporting. The website is partially funded by grants, but is financed primarily on a paid membership model. In 2016, Voice of San Diego launched the News Revenue Hub, a pilot project aimed at helping other nonprofit news organizations adopt its model. Members of the pilot include Honolulu Civil Beat, InsideClimate News, The Lens, and New Jersey Spotlight. It has won a variety of local journalism awards from the San Diego chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists (for reports exposing corruption at San Diego Unified School District) and from the San Diego Press Club.
  • inewsource, a nonprofit newsroom
  • Vanguard Culture, a nonprofit arts and culture website
  • Water News Network, a specialized newsroom operated by the San Diego County Water Authority.

Radio

San Diego is a principal city of the San Diego radio market. In its Fall 2013 ranking of radio markets by population, Arbitron ranked the San Diego market 17th in the United States. The market only covers San Diego County.

The following is a list of radio stations which broadcast from and/or are licensed to San Diego:

AM

FM

Television

The San Diego television market only includes San Diego County. The city is the headquarters of the privately held Herring Networks, which owns the AWE Network and One America News Network cable channels.

The following is a list of television stations that broadcast from and/or are licensed to San Diego.

References

Uses material from the Wikipedia article Media in San Diego, released under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.