about  /   archives  /   contact  /   subscribe  /   twitter    
Key links:
Primary website:
tribpub.com
Primary Twitter:
@tribpub

Editor’s Note: Encyclo has not been regularly updated since August 2014, so information posted here is likely to be out of date and may be no longer accurate. It’s best used as a snapshot of the media landscape at that point in time.

Tribune Publishing is a Chicago-based media company, the United States’ second-largest newspaper publisher. It was formerly part of the Tribune Company.

Tribune Publishing owns 10 daily newspapers, including its flagship, the Chicago Tribune, and the Los Angeles Times, Baltimore Sun and Hartford Courant. As part of the Tribune Co., it had owned 42 television stations, along with the cable network WGN and the digital music company Gracenote, which it bought in 2014.

In 2013, it announced it would split off its publishing properties from its broadcasting properties, spinning its newspapers into Tribune Publishing and retaining the broadcasting assets as part of Tribune Media, though some expressed concern that such an arrangement would threaten the papers’ survival. The split was completed in August 2014. Tribune Publishing’s value was estimated at $635 million, and it carried at least $325 million in debt going into its split. Three investment firms own a total of 40% of Tribune Publishing and control the company.

The company was born in 1847 with the launch of the Chicago Tribune and went public in 1983. The Tribune doubled its size in 2000 by buying the Times Mirror Co., which published the Los Angeles Times and Newsday.

Real estate magnate Sam Zell took control of the Tribune in 2007, making it private in an $8.2 billion deal that Zell later said he regretted. Zell quickly drew attention for his fiery personality and harsh style: Under Zell, the Tribune sold off Newsday in 2008 to pay off debt and made deep staff cuts at several of its papers, running out several newspaper executives when they refused to comply. Zell’s leadership was heavily criticized in the light of those moves and the company’s struggles.

The company began posting losses in 2008 and filed for bankruptcy later that year, the first major newspaper company to go bankrupt in more than 70 years. The paper emerged from bankruptcy on the last day of 2012 under the ownership of various creditors led by the Los Angeles hedge fund Oaktree Capital Management. The Tribune sold off majority ownership of the Chicago Cubs as part of bankruptcy proceedings in 2009. As it prepared to exit bankruptcy in July 2012, documents filed earlier that year indicated it planned to spin off many of its newspaper and broadcast units into separate subsidiaries, and it was reported in early 2013 to have hired bankers to sell its papers. Reportedly interested buyers included Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp. and the conservative billionaire brothers Charles and David Koch, though the latter backed out of the process. The Tribune announced a plan in late 2013 to cut 700 jobs across the company.

In 2008, Zell hired former XM Radio executive Lee Abrams as the company’s chief innovation officer. Abrams helped engineer several redesigns at the Tribune’s papers, though his breathless memos drew criticism in journalism circles.

Recent Nieman Lab coverage:
July 17, 2023 / Joshua Benton
The Los Angeles Times is definitely either for sale or not for sale — The Los Angeles Times is the largest and most important news organization in America’s largest and most important state. And it might soon have new ownership. The Times suffered under a series of lackluster-to-wors...
Sept. 1, 2021 / Julie Reynolds
The “shadow bank” that — with the help of public pension funds — is aiding the destruction of local news — To the ancient Greeks, Cerberus was the hound of Hades, a multi-headed dog with a serpent’s tail who kept souls from escaping the underworld. His eyes burned with fiery lava and he vomited bile. The canine’s namesake...
July 1, 2020 / Joshua Benton
Tribune can buy more time by selling more control to Alden Global Capital — We’ve been telling you for months now that June 30 was going to be a big day for American newspapers. That was the day that Tribune Publishing — owner of big dailies in Chicago, Baltimore, New York, Orlando, Hart...
Feb. 3, 2020 / Joshua Benton
A “management transition” is the latest gloomy sign to come out of Tribune Publishing — The gutting of a newspaper company can happen with alarming speed. It was less than three months ago that Alden Global Capital, the gelatinous cube scouring the news industry’s dungeon, bought up about 32 percent o...
Jan. 14, 2020 / Ken Doctor
Newsonomics: Worried about Alden taking control of Tribune? It’s already pulling strings inside — Missiles and drone strikes may have temporarily driven everyone’s eyes elsewhere — including those in the news industry — but the new decade’s big story in the news business looks a lot like the old one&#...

Recently around the web, from Mediagazer:

Primary author: Mark Coddington. Main text last updated: September 11, 2014.
Make this entry better
How could this entry improve? What's missing, unclear, or wrong?
Name (optional)
Email (optional)
Explore: The UpTake
UpTake logo

The UpTake is a nonprofit user-driven video news site based in St. Paul, Minn. The site trains people in video-based journalism and publishes their work, often using crowdsourced assignments. It was founded in 2007 by Chris Dykstra, Jason Barnett and Chuck Olsen. The UpTake receives its revenue from donations, as well as video licensing and…

Put Encyclo on your site
Embed this Encyclo entry in your blog or webpage by copying this code into your HTML:

Encyclo is made possible by a grant from the Knight Foundation.
The Nieman Journalism Lab is a collaborative attempt to figure out how quality journalism can survive and thrive in the Internet age.
Some rights reserved. Copyright information »