List_of_Nashville_media

Media in Nashville, Tennessee

Media in Nashville, Tennessee

Overview of mass media in Nashville, Tennessee, United States


Nashville, Tennessee is the 29th largest media market in the United States with roughly 966,000 homes, 0.8% of the country's media market.[citation needed]

Print

Daily newspapers

Weekly newspapers

Monthly newspapers

Monthly magazines

Defunct newspapers

  • All The Rage entertainment and events
  • The City Paper (general news and opinion; originally Monday-Friday, later twice weekly, and then weekly; published November 1, 2000 — August 9, 2013)
  • The Daily American, (18761894) and The Nashville American (1894September 25, 1910); merged into The Tennessean[1]
  • The Labor Advocate (weekly 19021939)
  • Nashville Banner (ceased publication February 20, 1998)
  • Nashville Business in Review (19951997); later published as In Review (19971999) alternative weekly (later biweekly) tabloid
  • Nashville Globe and Independent African-American weekly (ceased publication in July 1960)
  • Nashville Times (weekly November 11, 1937May 26, 1938, then daily; ceased publication July 28, 1940)[1]

Defunct magazines

  • Advantage, The Nashville Business Magazine (monthly, 19781989, published by Advantage, Inc.)
  • Aluminum Magazine (monthly, June 1999 to August 1999)
  • Nashville (monthly, January 1963April 1970)[1]
  • Nashville (monthly, approx. 19781990, published by Advantage Publications Inc.)
  • Nashville Life (bimonthly, 19941999, published by Eagle Communications Inc.)
  • Tag Magazine (monthly)

Online news and blogs

Television

Broadcast

Nashville is home to the nation's 30th largest television market, covering all of Middle Tennessee and parts of south central Kentucky.[citation needed] This list includes full-power TV stations in the market, as well as low power television stations licensed for Nashville itself:

More information Analog, Digital ...
* indicates construction permit for LD (low-power digital TV)

Cable

Cable stations based in Nashville include Country Music Television and NRB Network. The Nashville Network was also based in Nashville until it closed in 2000.

Radio

Nashville is ranked by Arbitron as the 44th-largest radio market in the United States and its territories.[citation needed]

Its stations, licensed to Nashville and surrounding cities, include:

AM

More information kHz, Call ...

FM

More information MHz, Call ...

See also


References

  1. OCLC WorldCat library database

Bibliography

  • "History of the Nashville Press". Nashville City and Business Directory, For 1860–61. Vol. 5. Nashville, Tennessee: L.P. Williams & Co. 1860. p. 90. hdl:2027/hvd.hn4gyr.
  • D.E. Sumner (1991). "Clash over Race: Tennessee Governor Ellington versus CBS, 1960". Journalism Quarterly. 68 (3): 541–547. doi:10.1177/107769909106800326. S2CID 143058804.

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