Knoxville Newspapers: Metro Pulse Offers Alternative

 Most major cities have a weekly or bi-weekly alternative paper meant to offer different perspectives on, and even dispute, the reporting of the major dailies. Knoxville's alternative paper is the Metro Pulse. Like so many great Knoxville ideas, the Metro Pulse was hashed out over pizza at The Tomato Head  in Market Square. Seeking first to provide an entertainment guide and calendar to the UT and downtown crowd, the Metro Pulse has evolved to include feature stories and quality news reporting with an alternative flair. With weekly columns such as Jack Neely’s Secret History, which offers an historic perspective on today's Knoxville, and the news and coverage sections such as Ear to the Ground, covering state and local political news, and Eye on the Scene, featuring entertainment news, the Pulse has carved out a steady and devoted Knoxville readership.

 

The Pulse entered the Knoxville media scene in 1991. It wasn't long, however, that one of Knoxville's two daily papers, the Knoxville Journal, foundered, leaving the Knoxville News Sentinel as the sole paper. (The Journal has since been brought back into publication.) People began to turn to the Pulse for its occasional reporting on local stories, creating a demand for a more. Whittle Communication’s 1994 layoffs provided quality writers to the Pulse, helping to expand coverage and capacity, and Joe Sullivan’s 1992 purchase of the paper (he once wrote for the Wall Street Journal) set the Metro Pulse up for a successful future. What started as a bi-weekly paper, the Metro Pulse moved to weekly publication in 1995, the year after it published its first Best of Knoxville survey, which has been conducted annually since. The paper's 1996 website launch expanded its readership and exposure to the world, generating email from "France, Hong Kong, even Iraq." Awards began to mount, along with the impressive careers of the staff writers and artists. Today, readership of 35,000 looks to the Metro Pulse for its "in-depth reporting, unrestrained critical writing, and simply the best arts and entertainment calendar in town." In 2007 Scripps, the owner of Knoxville News Sentinel, acquired Metro Pulse. Since that time, Metro Pulse has remained autonomous and loyal to its devoted readership.

Bloggers Abound in Knoxville!

People fall in love with Knoxville for many reasons, but it doesn't take long for the city to feel like home. Folks who leave Knoxville often save their moving boxes, suspecting that they'll soon return - and they frequently do. Others save the trouble of packing and settle in to become passionate about the city, like Brandon Clarke and Casey Peters at Knoxify. The two have dedicated themselves to blogging all things social, political, and cultural in and about Knoxville - interviewing county commissioners, reporting on local events, and offering advice on topics from where to get the best coffee to the best insurance deals. A recent post pays homage to their top ten favorite things about Knoxville - and readers followed up with top ten lists of their own. From past leadership to entertainment, dining, and the surrounding area, for an insider's uncensored take on what makes Knoxville great, I can offer no better source.

Knoxville at Night by dkolbay
Photo by dkolbay

But Knoxify isn't the only blog touting Knoxville's virtues. In fact, the area's lively and prolific blogging community is lively and vast, nicely reflecting the city's population, culture, and vitality. To get started, visit the Knoxville Blog Network which aggregates various blogs into one forum for a one-stop experience. Also, the local paper, The Knoxville News Sentinel, offers blogs written by News Sentinel employees on a variety of topics. Recently, a great News Sentinel article gave a quick run-down of the various blogs that are signed up on the Knoxville Blog Network, complete with links to the sites. The topics and titles of these blogs show what those of us who live here already know: The city is filled with creativity, wit, and a wide range of interests. Thinking about moving to Knoxville? Browsing the area's blogs is a great way to learn more about our wonderful city!