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Media in Baltimore
Print, broadcast, and online media in greater Baltimore, Maryland, U.S. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Baltimore is a major media market, even though the city is only a 45-minute drive northeast of Washington, D.C.
The city's primary daily newspaper, The Baltimore Sun, and other Baltimore-area affiliated newspapers are property of David Smith, executive chairman of Sinclair Broadcast Group, who owns more than 200 television stations, including Fox 45.[1] Baltimore is the 24th largest television market and 21st largest radio market in the country.[citation needed]
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Newspapers
Digital newspapers
- Baltimore Banner
- Baltimore Brew
- Baltimore Fishbowl
- The Real News Network
- Technical.ly Baltimore
- Wide Angle Youth Media
Defunct newspapers
- Baltimore Banner (1965; restarted digitally 2022 )
- Baltimore City Paper (1977–2017)
- The Baltimore Examiner (2006–2009)
- Baltimore Daily Commercial (1865–1867)[2]
- The Baltimore Guide
- Baltimore Morning Herald
- Baltimore News-American
- Baltimore Wecker
- The Catholic Mirror
- Gay Life (1979–2016)
- Herald of Freedom and Torch Light
- Telegraf
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Television
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The Baltimore television market includes the city and ten counties in northeastern Maryland.[3] Due to Baltimore's proximity to Washington, D.C., local viewers can also receive the signal of most television stations broadcasting in the Washington television market.[4]
The following is a list of television stations licensed to and/or broadcasting from Baltimore, with network owned-and-operated stations highlighted in bold:
Two other stations broadcasting from the greater Baltimore Metropolitan Area include: WMJF-CD, an Ion Television affiliate which transmits on Channel 39 (with additional subchannels) from Towson University campus in Towson, Maryland; (Baltimore County), and
WQAW-LD, a ShopHQ affiliate broadcasting on Channel 69, (also with additional subchannels) in Lake Shore, Maryland (Anne Arundel County).[5]
Cable channels based in the Baltimore area include:
- Mid-Atlantic Sports Network
- Public, educational, and government access (PEG) channels
- Public-access television, channel 75
- Educational-access television, channel 76
- Government-access television (GATV), channel 25
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Radio
Magazines
- Baltimore magazine
- Baltimore SmartCEO[8]
- Inside Lacrosse
- Grub Street (literary magazine)
- 32 Poems
- Welter
- Smartish Pace
- Where What When
- The Wine Advocate
- B Woman
Defunct magazines
- Baltimore Saturday Visiter
- The Portico
- The Accountant and Advertiser
- Rural Gentleman and Ladies' Companion
- The Southern Review
- Dirty Linen
See also
References
External links
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