KNIGHT RIDDER

:''For the unrelated television series, see ''Knight Rider.
The Knight Ridder building in downtown San Jose, California.

'Knight Ridder' () was an American media company, specializing in newspaper and Internet publishing. Until it was bought by The McClatchy Company on June 27, 2006, it was the second-largest newspaper publisher in the United States, with 32 daily newspapers.

Contents
History
Pre-Iraq War Reporting
List of newspapers
Knight Ridder Owned Companies
Knight Ridder-Owned Television Stations
Trivia
External links
Reference

History


The corporate ancestors of Knight Ridder were Knight Newspapers, Inc. and Ridder Publications, Inc. The first company was founded by John S. Knight upon inheriting control of ''The Akron Beacon Journal'' from his father, Charles Landon Knight, in 1933; the second company was founded by Herman Ridder when he acquired the German language ''Staats-Zeitung'' newspaper in 1892. As anti-German sentiment increased between the two world wars, Ridder successfully transitioned into English language publishing by acquiring the ''Journal of Commerce'' in 1926.
Both companies went public in 1969 and merged in 1974. For a brief time, the combined company was the largest newspaper publisher in the United States.
Knight Ridder had a long history of innovation in technology. It was one of the first newspaper publishers to experiment with videotex when it launched its Viewtron system in 1982, was one of the first to actively develop newspaper content for America Online in 1993, and joined the ill-fated New Century Network project in 1994.
Its flagship newspaper, ''The San Jose Mercury News'', was one of the first daily newspapers to regularly publish its full content to the World Wide Web. Around 2000, KR moved its headquarters from Miami to be closer to its rising star in San Jose (although it chose to rent a sleek downtown high-rise rather than build new office space).
Many argue that the quality of Knight Ridder newspapers had suffered in recent years as its president, Tony Ridder, forced by shareholder demands, cut staff and budgets to achieve a profit margin of more than 20 percent.
In November of 2005, the company announced plans for "strategic initiatives," which involved the possible sale of the company. This came after major shareholders publicly said the company was worth less than the sum of its parts and urged management to put the company up for sale. The Newspaper Guild tried to work with an investment firm to take control of the Knight Ridder papers where it represented the journalists. Knight Ridder said it would only sell the company as a whole, not individual papers, and the Guild responded that if that happened, the investment group would try to buy some of the papers from the new owner.
On March 13, 2006, The McClatchy Company announced its agreement to purchase Knight Ridder for a purchase price of $6.5 billion in cash, stock and debt. The deal gave McClatchy 32 daily newspapers in 29 markets, with a total circulation of 3.3 million. However, for various reasons, McClatchy decided to immediately resell twelve of these papers. [1]
On April 26, 2006, it announced that the ''San Jose Mercury News'', ''Contra Costa Times'', ''Monterey Herald'', and ''St. Paul Pioneer Press'' (for antitrust reasons) would be sold to MediaNews Group (with backing from the Hearst Corporation) for $1 billion. [2]

Pre-Iraq War Reporting


Knight-Ridder reporters were some of the few journalists that questioned the basis of the 2003 invasion of Iraq, as discussed in the episode of ''Bill Moyers Journal'' entitled "Buying the War". However, due to the lack of presence of Knight Ridder reporting in the newspapers of major media cities such as New York and Washington, DC, their reporting did not have as much of an impact as it would have had it come from ''The New York Times'' or ''The Washington Post.''

List of newspapers


Daily newspapers owned by Knight Ridder and its predecessors included:

★ ''American News'' (Aberdeen, South Dakota), 1928-2006
★ ''Akron Beacon Journal'' (Akron, Ohio), 1903-2006
★ ''Belleville News-Democrat'' (Belleville, Illinois), 1997-2006
★ ''The Bellingham Herald'' (Bellingham, Washington), 2005-2006
★ ''Sun Herald'' (Biloxi, Mississippi), 1986-2006
★ ''Boca Raton News'' (Boca Raton, Florida), 1969-1997
★ ''The Daily Camera'' (Boulder, Colorado), 1969-1997
★ ''The Herald (Bradenton)'' (Bradenton, Florida), 1973-2006
★ ''The Idaho Statesman'' (Boise, Idaho), 2005-2006
★ ''Chicago Daily News'' (Chicago, Illinois), 1944-1959
★ ''The Charlotte Observer'' (Charlotte, North Carolina), 1955-2006
★ ''The State'' (Columbia, South Carolina), 1986-2006
★ ''Columbus Ledger-Enquirer'' (Columbus, Georgia), 1973-2006
★ ''Contra Costa Times'' (Walnut Creek, California), 1995-2006
★ ''Detroit Free Press'' (Detroit, Michigan), 1940-2005
★ ''Duluth News Tribune'' (Duluth, Minnesota), 1936-2006
★ ''Fort Worth Star-Telegram'' (Fort Worth, Texas), 1997-2006
★ ''The Post-Tribune'' (Gary, Indiana), 1966-1998
★ ''Grand Forks Herald'' (Grand Forks, North Dakota), 1929-2006
★ ''The Kansas City Star'' (Kansas City, Missouri), 1997-2006
★ ''Lexington Herald-Leader'' (Lexington, Kentucky), 1973-2006
★ ''Long Beach Press-Telegram'' (Long Beach, California), 1952-1997

★ ''The Telegraph'' (Macon, Georgia), 1969-2006
★ ''The Miami Herald'' (Miami, Florida), 1937-2006
★ ''El Nuevo Herald'' (Miami, Florida), 1977-2006
★ ''Monterey County Herald'' (Monterey, California), 1997-2006
★ ''The Sun News'' (Myrtle Beach, South Carolina), 1986-2006
★ ''The News-Sentinel'' (Fort Wayne, Indiana), 1980-2006
★ ''The Olathe News'' (Olathe, Kansas), 2000-2006
★ ''The Olympian'' (Olympia, Washington), 2005-2006
★ ''Palo Alto Daily News'' (Palo Alto, California), 2005-2006
★ ''Pasadena Star-News'' (Pasadena, California), 1956-1989
★ ''Philadelphia Daily News'' (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania), 1969-2006
★ ''The Philadelphia Inquirer'' (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania), 1969-2006
★ ''Saint Paul Pioneer Press'' (St. Paul, Minnesota), 1927-2006
★ ''San Jose Mercury News'' (San Jose, California), 1952-2006
★ ''The Tribune'' (San Luis Obispo, California), 1997-2006
★ ''Starkville Daily News'' (Starkville, Mississippi), 1986-1987
★ ''Centre Daily Times'' (State College, Pennsylvania), 1979-2006
★ ''Tallahassee Democrat'' (Tallahassee, Florida), 1965-2005
★ ''The Daily Times-Leader'' (West Point, Mississippi), 1986-1987
★ ''The Wichita Eagle'' (Wichita, Kansas), 1973-2006
★ ''The Times Leader'' (Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania), 1997-2006

Knight Ridder Owned Companies


A list of companies that were at one time or another owned by Knight Ridder:

★ ''Presslink'' - ??-1996, Later became MediaStream

★ ''MediaStream'' - 1996-2001, Acquired by NewsBank

★ ''VuText''

Knight Ridder-Owned Television Stations


From 1956 to 1962, Knight Newspapers, Inc. co-owned a then-NBC affiliate, WCKT in Miami, Florida, with the Cox publishing family.
In 1977, Knight Ridder entered broadcasting with the acquisition of Poole Broadcasting, which consisted of WJRT-TV in Flint, Michigan, WTEN in Albany, New York and its satellite WCDC in Adams, Massachusetts, and WPRI-TV in Providence, Rhode Island. Immediately after the acquisition of these stations was finalized, Knight Ridder cut a corporate affiliation deal with ABC, switching then-CBS affiliates WTEN/WCDC and WPRI (the latter of which eventually rejoined CBS) to ABC (WJRT was already affiliated with ABC when the affiliation deal was made). Knight Ridder would acquire several television stations in medium-sized markets during the 1980s, including three stations owned by ''The Detroit News'' which the Gannett Company (which purchased the newspaper in 1986) could not keep due to Federal Communications Commission regulations on media cross-ownership and/or television duopolies then in effect. (Interestingly, none of Knight Ridder's later acquisitions changed their network affiliations under Knight Ridder ownership; for example, then-NBC affiliate WALA-TV in Mobile, Alabama remained an NBC affiliate when it was owned by Knight Ridder and would switch to Fox several years after Knight Ridder sold the station.) In early 1989, Knight Ridder announced its exit from broadcasting, selling all of its stations to separate buyers; the sales were finalized in the summer and early fall of that year.
'Current DMA#' 'Market' 'Station' 'Years Owned' 'Current Affiliation/Owner'
16. Miami, Florida 'WCKT 7'
(now WSVN)
1956-62

'Fox' affiliate owned by Sunbeam Television
30. Nashville, Tennessee 'WKRN-TV 2' 1983-89 'ABC' affiliate owned by Young Broadcasting
42. Norfolk, Virginia 'WTKR 3' 1981-89 'CBS' affiliate owned by Local TV
45. Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 'KTVY 4'
(now KFOR-TV)
1986-89 'NBC' affiliate owned by Local TV
52. Providence, Rhode Island 'WPRI-TV 12' 1977-89 'CBS' affiliate owned by LIN Television
56. Albany, New York 'WTEN 10' 1977-89 'ABC' affiliate owned by Young Broadcasting
Adams, Massachusetts 'WCDC 19'
''(satellite of WTEN)''
1977-89 'ABC' affiliate owned by Young Broadcasting
61. Mobile, Alabama - Pensacola, Florida 'WALA-TV 10' 1986-89 'Fox' affiliate owned by LIN Television
66. Flint, Michigan 'WJRT-TV 12' 1977-89 'ABC' owned-and-operated (O&O)
68. Tucson, Arizona 'KOLD-TV 13' 1986-89 'CBS' affiliate owned by Raycom Media



''This station was co-owned by Knight Newspapers and Cox Newspapers, long before Knight's merger with Ridder Publications.''

Trivia



★ The Dutch name "Ridder" is closely related to the German name "Ritter." Both names mean "knight."

External links



Knight Ridder corporate website

Knight Ridder Washington Bureau

Reference



Knight Ridder Newspaper Chain Agrees to Sale Katharine Q. Seelye

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