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Creative Loafing

Creative Loafing is an Atlanta-based publisher of a monthly arts and culture newspaper/magazine. The company publishes a 60,000 circulation monthly publication which is distributed to in-town locations and neighborhoods on the first Thursday of each month. The company has historically been a part of the alternative weekly newspapers association in the United States.

Company type

Private

Publishing

1972 (1972)

Sold to Ben Eason in February, 2017 by SouthComm Publishing following a brief ownership by hedge fund Atalaya

,
United States
    • Deborah and Chick Eason (1972–2000)
    • Ben Eason (2000–2009)
    • Atalaya Capital Management (2009–2012)
    • SouthComm (2012–2017)
    • Ben Eason (2017–)

Creative Loafing began as a family-owned business in 1972 by Deborah and Chick Eason, expanding to other cities in the Southern United States in the late 1980s and 1990s. In 2007 it doubled its circulation with the purchase of the Chicago Reader and Washington City Paper; the $40 million debt it incurred, along with an economic recession, forced the company into bankruptcy one year later. The parent company, Creative Loafing, Inc. was dissolved and Atalaya sold off the Chicago Reader. In 2012, SouthComm purchased all of the properties and then sold off each of the papers to other publishers in 2018.


The Atlanta Creative Loafing launched the career of many writers and has been an institution in Atlanta's cultural scene. The Parrotheads of Jimmy Buffett fame were launched from an ad in Creative Loafing in the 1990s. Best-selling author and American humorist Hollis Gillespie by debuting her weekly column "Moodswing," which first appeared in 2001 and ran for eight years. Jill Hannity, the wife of Sean Hannity, was the managing editor of the newspaper 1993–1996 until their move to New York City, which commenced Sean Hannity's television career.

of Atlanta, Georgia, sold in July 2012 to SouthComm Communications[2]

Creative Loafing (Atlanta)

of Chicago, Illinois, sold in May 2012 to Wrapports[3]

Chicago Reader

Creative Loafing Charlotte of Charlotte, North Carolina, sold in October 2011 to SouthComm, sold in August 2014 to Womack Newspapers[5]

[4]

Creative Loafing Sarasota of Sarasota, Florida, sold in December 2010 to the , merged into Ticket [6]

Sarasota Herald-Tribune

Creative Loafing Tampa of Tampa, Florida, sold in October 2011 to SouthComm

[4]

Washington City Paper of Washington, D.C., sold in July 2012 to SouthComm

[2]

Creative Loafing filed for Bankruptcy protection in 2008 during the crash. At the time it declared bankruptcy, Creative Loafing owned six alternative weeklies and was the nation's 2nd largest publisher of alternative weeklies behind the Village Voice Company.

Creative Loafing, LLC is the name of the Publishing Company that owns Creative Loafing. Creative Loafing, LLC purchased the assets of Creative Loafing Atlanta from SouthComm in February 2017, which put the paper back into the Eason Family's hands.


Other newspapers the company published over its 40-year history included:

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Official website