business networking groups los angeles
Monday, November 1st, 2010
Media & Communications in Los Angeles, Ca
Media news service from Los Angeles large population of the city of West Coast. The Los Angeles Times is the major daily newspaper. The main document is the Spanish language La Opinion. The city also supports a wide variety of smaller regional newspapers, alternative weeklies and magazines, including Los Angeles Daily News, LA Weekly, Los Angeles CityBeat, Los Angeles Business Journal Los Angeles Daily Journal, The Hollywood Reporter and Variety.
In addition to the documents listed English and Spanish, a variety of local periodicals serve diverse communities healthy immigrants in their native language, including Japanese, Korean, Farsi and Russian.
A number of cities near Los Angeles have their own daily newspapers whose coverage and some are available in some neighborhoods of Los Angeles. Two examples of this are the Daily Breeze and The Long Beach Press-Telegram.
The waves, the Los Angeles metro a wide variety of local television stations and is the second largest market area Media in the United States, it is the only city to have all seven VHF allocations assigned. Other markets have the same number of credits, but they are divided between the cities of parts. For example, New York City has seven grants, but two of them are assigned to cities in neighboring countries New Jersey.
Interestingly, with Washington, DC, Los Angeles is one of only a very selective group of television markets that have no VHF allocation reserved for public broadcasting.
The principal subsidiaries of television networks include KABC-TV 7 (ABC) KCBS 2 (CBS), KNBC 4 (NBC), KTTV 11 (FOX), KTLA 5, KCOP 13 and KPXN 30. PBS has a number of surface stations: KVCR 24, KCET 28, 50 and Koce KLCS 58. World TV operates on two channels, KNET-LP 25 and LP-6 KSFV. TV networks speaking Spanish are also present, including KMEX 34 (Univision), KFTR 46 (Telefutura) KVEA 52 (Telemundo), and KAZA 54 (Azteca America).
There are several independent television stations in the region, including: KCAL 9 (owned CBS); KSCI 18 (Asian language programming); KWHY 22, 27 and LP-KNLA KRCA 62 (Spanish); KSMV KJLA-LP 33 and 57 (variety), KXLA 44 (classic programming) KDOC and 56 (local sports).
About the Author
Matt Paolini is an entertainment writer for CityBook.com, the family-safe Los Angeles Yellow Pages, which carries an extensive directory on Los Angeles communications.
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