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Metro Silicon Valley

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Weekly newspaper in California, US
Metro Silicon Valley
The July 11, 2012 issue ofMetro
TypeAlternative weekly
FormatTabloid
OwnerWeeklys
Editor-in-chiefDan Pulcrano
Founded1985; 40 years ago (1985)
Headquarters380 South First Street
San Jose, California, United States
Circulation50,000[1]
Sister newspapersGood Times,North Bay Bohemian,Pacific Sun
ISSN0882-4290
OCLC number11831028
Websitemetrosiliconvalley.com

Metro, also known asMetro Silicon Valley, is a free weekly newspaper published by theSan Jose, California-basedWeeklys media group for four decades, a period during which its readership area became known asSilicon Valley.

Metro was one of the earliest publishers to enter the digital media revolution, adding voice messaging to its classified advertising in the 1980s and free online access in 1993. It was the first newspaper to offer a downloadablePDF edition, with the launch of MetroPDF.com in 2003.[2][3]

The newspaper has been published since 1985 and its principal distribution area encompasses the cities of San Jose,Los Gatos,Campbell,Saratoga,Santa Clara,Sunnyvale,Cupertino,Milpitas,Mountain View,Los Altos andPalo Alto.

The publication’s investigative journalism is responsible forSanta Clara County’s only felony political corruption conviction.[4] Its reporting also contributed to the defeat of eight-term incumbent congressmanMike Honda byRo Khanna[5][6]and a gun permit scandal that led to the removal of Santa Clara County sheriff Laurie Smith.[7]

Entertainment and investigative journalism

[edit]

Metro is largely read for its coverage of the San Jose region's culture and entertainment scene. It publishes an exhaustive arts section, which includes calendar listings, music reviews, critical coverage of the performing and visual arts, as well as movie reviews and information. The newspaper employed well-regarded film critic Richard von Busack from 1985 until the pandemic.Steve Palopoli edited the publication from March 2005 until December 2008.

In 1986, Metro published the last interview withDon Hoefler, the man credited with naming Silicon Valley.[8]Metro has scooped the daily press on a number of major stories, including the office romance[9] of San Jose MayorRon Gonzales in 2000[10] and the Santa Clara County Grand Jury's plans to indict Gonzales in June 2006.

In 1996, Metro's "Public Eye" column scooped Apple's December 20 announcement of a deal betweenSteve Jobs'NeXT Inc. andApple Inc. that led to Jobs' return to Apple.[11]

In 2007,Metro and its sister publicationNorth Bay Bohemian prompted Sen.Dianne Feinstein's resignation from the U.S. Senate's Military Construction Appropriations subcommittee after the two papers published an exposé by Peter Byrne documenting Feinstein's conflicts of interest related to husband Richard C. Blum's ownership interest in two major defense contractors, firms that received billions of dollars in contracts for military construction projects that were approved during Feinstein's tenure on the subcommittee.[12][13][14]

In 2012,Metro published a series of articles on Santa Clara County Board of Supervisors chair George Shirakawa, Jr., who had failed to file legally required campaign disclosure statements and had not turned in receipts for 175 taxpayer-underwritten meal charges.[15] The disclosures resulted in an investigation by the Fair Political Practices Commission and the Santa Clara County District Attorney's office. Shirakawa pleaded guilty on March 1, 2013, to five felonies and seven misdemeanors and resigned his office. Assistant District Attorney Karyn Sinunu Towery creditedMetro's reports with prompting the criminal investigation at the press conference announcing the plea and resignation.[16] The House Committee on Ethics investigated Rep.Mike Honda following revelations in Metro that contributors were receiving favors from the congressman's office.[17]

Notable alumni

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The newspaper has helped launch the careers of several notable writers, including British television journalistLouis Theroux, authorJonathan Vankin, author and educatorGordon Young (Journalist), Vietnamese-American authorAndrew Pham, Obama administration education advisorHal Plotkin, News Director of Vice News Michael Learmonth, and film producerZack Stentz[18] It also published the early writings of New York Times editorial board memberMichelle Goldberg, as well as six-word memoiristLarry Smith andDave Eggers before they became published authors. It was also one of the first newspapers to publishMatt Groening'sLife in Hell long before he createdThe Simpsons.[19]

Community involvement

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In 1986,Metro executive editorDan Pulcrano co-founded with Ray Rodriguez the San Jose Downtown Association[20] and led the effort to start Music in the Park, a public music festival that was free in its early days and has staged performances by such groups as the Beach Boys, Maroon 5, Billy Preston, Cuco and Tower of Power.[21]

The San Jose Jazz Society was started byMetro jazz writer Sammy Cohen and headquartered in Metro's office. The outgrowth was the annual San Jose Jazz Festival.[22]

During the 1990s,Metro purchased community newspapers from companies such as the Tribune Company and established Silicon Valley Community Newspapers, which it sold in 2001.

Metro was the first to call for a Sunshine Ordinance during the 1998 mayor's race. An ordinance was passed in 2009.[23]

In explaining the newspaper's mission on its 20th anniversary, executive editor Pulcrano said, "We have championed independent businesses and small theaters in an effort to help the valley establish its own cultural identity. We have pushed for preservation of historic buildings and agricultural lands that represent the valley's heritage and soul. And we have promoted sensible, pedestrian-oriented development that gets people out of their cars so they can get to know one another. A newspaper at its best should be a community-builder."[24]

In 2012,Metro sponsored the Silicon Valley Sound Experience, a multi-venue music festival, which led to the establishment of Creative Convergence Silicon Valley, orC2SV, the following year. The 2013 event included performances by Iggy and The Stooges and a three-day technology conference with appearances bySteve Wozniak,Nolan Bushnell andJohn McAfee.[25] The 2015 C2SV brought camera phone inventorPhilippe Kahn to the stage of the California Theatre.[26]

Early online player

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Metro was an early participant in the online publishing revolution, launching the Livewire online service in 1993, one of the first online efforts by a non-daily newspaper publisher. The service offered free email accounts, online commerce, chats, posting forums and online articles.

Virtual Valley, a similar service with an emphasis on covering Silicon Valley communities, was launched the following year and helped put the city governments of San Jose, Milpitas and Los Gatos online. Also in 1994, Metro established Boulevards, a network of city guides that pre-datedCitysearch and Microsoft's short-lived "Sidewalk" service.

In 1995,Metro launched the online version of the newspaper under the brand Metroactive.[27][28]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Metro Silicon Valley".Association of Alternative Newsweeklies. Archived fromthe original on 2007-02-17. Retrieved2007-02-23.
  2. ^"Metro Silicon Valley Launches PDF Download Edition". AAN. 29 September 2003.Metro was the first weekly to combine voice messaging technology with classified advertising in the mid 1980s and, in 1993, launched the pioneering free online service, LiveWire, which combined newspaper content with message boards, live chats and email.
  3. ^Metro Silicon Valley Launches PDF Download Edition, September 29, 2003, Metro Newspapers.
  4. ^"The Unraveling of George Shirakawa Jr". San Jose Inside. March 6, 2013. Retrieved2024-09-11.
  5. ^"Mike Honda Report: 'Substantial Reason to Believe' Congressman Mike Honda, Staff Broke House Rules". San Jose Inside. September 3, 2015. Retrieved2024-09-11.
  6. ^"Khanna Defeats Eight-Term Incumbent Honda For Congress". Associated Press. November 9, 2016. Retrieved2024-09-11.
  7. ^Salonga, Robert (2020-08-29)."Four indicted in Santa Clara County Sheriff concealed gun permit scandal".mercurynews.com. Mercury News. Retrieved2024-09-11.Rosen said his office began investigating Nielsen's donation after an inquiry by the Metro Silicon Valley weekly newspaper.
  8. ^"Metro's 20th Anniversary". Metro, Silicon Valley's Weekly Newspaper. 2005-03-09. Retrieved2016-02-29.
  9. ^"Metroactive News & Issues | Public Eye". Metroactive.com. Retrieved2012-01-07.
  10. ^Office Romance? No Comment.,Metro, Silicon Valley's Weekly Newspaper, September 7–13, 2000.
  11. ^"Accidental Billionaire". Metro Silicon Valley. December 19, 1996. Retrieved2018-03-26.
  12. ^Byrne, Peter (21 March 2007)."Feinstein Resigns—Senator exits MILCON following Metro exposé, vet-care scandal". Metroactive.com. Retrieved2016-12-18.
  13. ^Doyle, Michael (14 April 2007)."Feinstein under fire over defense ties".San Jose Mercury News. Retrieved2016-12-18.
  14. ^"McClatchy picks up DiFi story". San Francisco Peninsula Press Club. 19 April 2007. Retrieved2016-12-18.
  15. ^"King George". San Jose Inside. 2012-09-26. Retrieved2013-09-08.
  16. ^"Supervisor George Shirakawa Resigns". San Jose Inside. 2013-03-01. Retrieved2013-09-08.
  17. ^French, Lauren (2015-07-20)."Ethics panel weighs full probe of House Democrat Honda".Politico. Retrieved2016-02-29.
  18. ^Templeton, David (2003-03-13)."Too Weird: Dreaming of vampires, waking to nanobugs, writer Zack Stentz gets his first big-screen credit in 'Agent Cody Banks'". Metroactive. Retrieved2017-12-01.
  19. ^Richard von Busack, "Groening Pull,"Metro Silicon Valley, July 4, 2012.
  20. ^Herhold, Scott (2011-12-18)."The legacy of a generation of young Turks downtown".San Jose Mercury News. Retrieved2013-09-08.
  21. ^Harrington, Jim (2024-07-28)."TReview: The Beach Boys still going strong 60 years after monumental 1964".San Jose Mercury News. Retrieved2024-09-11.Music in the Park, which has completely bounced back from its COVID-era lull and has taken its place among the top summertime outdoor concert series in the Bay Area.
  22. ^Pulcrano, Dan (2009-08-30)."Sammy Cohen, Metro columnist and Jazz Society founder". Metro Silicon Valley. Retrieved2009-10-08.
  23. ^Pulcrano, Dan (2002-06-27)."Reinventing Ron--A Checklist". Metro Silicon Valley. Retrieved2009-10-09.
  24. ^"Metro Silicon Valley Turns 20". Association of Alternative Newsmedia. 14 March 2005. Retrieved2016-12-18.
  25. ^"Silicon Valley's answer to SXSW: Iggy Pop, Big Data, self-driving cars". Silicon Valley Business Journal. 2013-08-21. Retrieved2013-09-08.
  26. ^Swartz, Angela (October 8, 2015)."Oculus VR co-founder Jack McCauley on VR, AR and his creative new project". Silicon Valley Business Journal.
  27. ^"October 5 to October 11, 1995".MetroSiliconValley.com. Metro Silicon Valley. Retrieved2024-09-11.
  28. ^"MetroActive: News, Arts and Entertainment Around the San Francisco Bay Area". Boulevards. 1996-11-10. Archived from the original on 1996-11-11. Retrieved2024-09-11.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)

External links

[edit]
Alternative weeklies
Community papers
Magazines
  • Bay Area Parent
  • Bohéme - North Bay
  • Cannabis Chronicle
  • East Bay Magazine
  • South Valley Magazine
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