Dan Pulcrano

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Dan Pulcrano (born c. 1959) [1] is a journalist, editor, publisher and newspaper group owner in Northern California. He is CEO and executive editor of Metro Silicon Valley , Silicon Valley's alternative newsweekly, as well as its sister publications around the Bay Area; Good Times , the North Bay Bohemian and the Pacific Sun and East Bay Express. The group also publishes ten community newspapers, as well as magazines and related digital titles. [2] [3] [4]

Contents

Early life

Born in suburban New Jersey, where his parents were school teachers, Pulcrano entered the publishing field while still in junior high, when he produced an underground newspaper at the Wardlaw Country Day School in Plainfield. He was asked to leave the school as a result and attended public schools afterwards, graduating at 16 and joining the staff of the San Diego Reader . At age 19, he went to Los Angeles to help publisher Jay Levin launch the LA Weekly . [5]

Career

Weekly newspapers

After graduating from University of California at Santa Cruz, Pulcrano founded the Los Gatos Weekly in the Silicon Valley community of Los Gatos. Pulcrano served as publisher, editor and owner. [6] In 1990, it merged with the Times-Observer into the Los Gatos Weekly-Times . [7]

Three years after founding the Los Gatos Weekly, Pulcrano expanded his efforts into the greater Silicon Valley region with the launch of Metro Silicon Valley . Inspired by Levin's LA Weekly and the alt-weeklies that were then appearing in major American cities, [8] Metro offers political reporting as well as calendar listings, music reviews and critical coverage of the performing and visual arts, as well as movie reviews. Based in downtown San Jose, which had been in a state of decline for two decades, Metro championed arts, independent cinema, small theater and retail revitalization in the city's core. Metro's investigative journalism was responsible in 2013 for the prosecution and conviction of Santa Clara County Supervisor George Shirakawa Jr. on multiple felony corruption charges. [9] The newspaper also sparked state Fair Political Practices Commission and Grand Jury investigations of San Jose City Councilman Xavier Campos' campaign activity [10] and has reported over the past decade on the financial relationship between the nonprofit Working Partnerships USA and the South Bay Labor Council. [11] [12] The investigative reports were followed by attacks posted to an anonymous attack web site [13] and on the day that Metro published an exposé on the use of monies raised for low income children's health care premiums to fund political campaigns, [14] [15] [16] at a press conference which highlighted hyperlinks from Metro's web site to an adult ad web site. [17] [18]

Over the next decade, Pulcrano oversaw the purchase and startups of five more community weekly newspapers in Santa Clara County, including the Saratoga News, Cupertino Courier, Sunnyvale Sun, Willow Glen Resident and Campbell Reporter. In 1999, these newspapers and the Los Gatos Weekly-Times, were spun off as the Silicon Valley Community Newspapers group and sold in December 2002 to a Metro executive who sold them to Knight-Ridder in 2005, the year before the sale of its Bay Area newspapers to Dean Singleton's MediaNews Corp., now known as Digital First and controlled by Alden Global Capital. [19] In 1994, Pulcrano returned to his college town of Santa Cruz to launch Metro Santa Cruz and purchased the Sonoma County Independent. In 2000, he rebranded the publication North Bay Bohemian to support the Santa Rosa paper's expanded coverage of Napa and Marin counties. Metro Santa Cruz was renamed Santa Cruz Weekly in 2009. Santa Cruz Weekly ended its run in April 2014 when Metro purchased its weekly competitor Good Times, along with three community weeklies south of Silicon Valley: the Gilroy Dispatch , Morgan Hill Times and Hollister Free Lance . [20] [21]

In May 2015, Pulcrano negotiated the purchase of the oldest alternative weekly in the Western U.S., the Pacific Sun, and told the Silicon Valley Business Journal that the group's circulation had grown from 110,000 to 190,000 over a 14-month period. [22]

In 2020, the company was rebranded Weeklys and purchased the East Bay Express. [23] Shortly after that purchase, Weeklys launched a bi-monthly magazine home-delivered to neighborhoods in the Berkeley and Oakland hills and Piedmont. [24]

Later in 2020, Weeklys purchased the Scotts Valley-based Press Banner. [25]

In 2021, the group grew to 14 publications with the startup of the Los Gatan, a home-delivered weekly published for residents of Los Gatos and Monte Sereno, California. [26] [27]

On May 3, 2022, Weeklys purchased the 157-year-old Healdsburg Tribune after its shutdown, which its non-profit owners had announced "is ending its coverage of the community, ceasing all newsgathering activities and closing its downtown office, effective immediately." Pulcrano's team published a revived edition days later, which one writer described as "a crazy-quick, totally-out-of-the-blue sale and turnaround of our beloved local paper." [28] [29] [30] "We are surprised, gratified and a little astonished," said Nancy Dobbs, president of the board of directors of Sonoma County Local News Initiative, which sold the newspaper's assets to Weeklys. [31]

Online entrepreneurship

As the newspaper group flourished, Pulcrano launched one of Silicon Valley's first online community portals. In 1993, as a board member of the Association of Alternative Newsweeklies, he wrote a paper "The Alternative Press at the Crossroads: Will We Be Players in the New Information Age Or Road Kill on the Digital Highway?" That same year, he launched LiveWire, an early online player offering email, newsgroups, networking and live chatrooms.

The following year, he launched Boulevards New Media, with the stated intention of "inventing the local media of the future". The company is built around a Pulcrano's portfolio of "cityname.com" Web domains, including Seattle.com, SanFrancisco.com, LosAngeles.com, Philadelphia.com and more than 100 others – including 20 of the nation's top 30 markets. "Urbanview Closes, Staff Shifts to Boulevards". Altweeklies.com. AAN News. October 4, 2002. Retrieved November 29, 2013. Boulevards has never been sold, acquired, venture-funded or taken public.

Pulcrano served as chairman of the board of Associated Cities, LLC for two years in 2006 and 2007. He continues to write and oversee operations in both his newspaper and online ventures.

Other ventures

Pulcrano used SXSW as an inspiration for a technology and arts festival in Silicon Valley, C2SV. [32] [33] Pulcrano also chairs the San Jose Downtown Association's marketing, dining and arts committee, where he has sought to revitalize downtown San Jose. [34]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Los Gatos, California</span> City in California, United States

Los Gatos is an incorporated town in Santa Clara County, California, United States. The population is 33,529 according to the 2020 census. It is located in the San Francisco Bay Area just southwest of San Jose in the foothills of the Santa Cruz Mountains. Los Gatos is part of Silicon Valley, with several high technology companies maintaining a presence there. Notably, Netflix, the streaming service and content creator, is headquartered in Los Gatos and has developed a large presence in the area.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Santa Clara Valley</span> Valley in Northern California, United States

The Santa Clara Valley is a geologic trough in Northern California that extends 90 miles (140 km) south–southeast from San Francisco to Hollister. The longitudinal valley is bordered on the west by the Santa Cruz Mountains and on the east by the Diablo Range; the two coastal ranges meet south of Hollister. The San Francisco Bay borders the valley to the north, and fills much of the northern third of the valley. The valley floor is an alluvial plain that formed in the graben between the San Andreas Fault to the west and the Hayward and Calaveras faults to the east. Within the valley and surrounding the bay on three sides are the urban communities of San Mateo County, Santa Clara County, and Alameda County, while the narrow southern reaches of the valley extend into rural San Benito County to Hollister. In practical terms, the central portion of the Santa Clara Valley is often considered by itself, contained entirely within Santa Clara County.

<i>The Mercury News</i> Daily newspaper published in San Jose, California, US, since 1851

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<i>Metro Silicon Valley</i> Free weekly newspaper

Metro is a free weekly newspaper published by the San Jose, California, based Metro Newspapers. Also known as Metro Silicon Valley, as well as Metroactive online, the paper serves the greater Silicon Valley area. In addition to print form, Metro can be downloaded in PDF format for free from the publisher's website. Metro also keeps tabs on local politics and the "chattering" class of San Jose through its weekly column, The Fly.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Metro Newspapers</span> Newspaper company based in San Jose, California, US

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<i>Pacific Sun</i> (newspaper) Newspaper in San Rafael, California

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KLRK is a radio station in Los Gatos, California, United States, serving the San Jose and Santa Clara Valley area. It is owned by the Educational Media Foundation (EMF) and part of its K-Love network. The primary transmitter is on Blackberry Hill Road in Los Gatos. KLRK also has two booster stations on 95.3 MHz: KLRK-FM1 serving Scotts Valley and KLRK-FM2 at New Almaden.

<i>Santa Cruz Weekly</i> Newspaper in California, US

Santa Cruz Weekly was a free-circulation weekly newspaper published in Santa Cruz, California. It began publishing under its current name on May 6, 2009; publication ceased when operations were merged with the competing Good Times weekly on April 2, 2014, with the merged company continuing as Good Times. Formerly known as Metro Santa Cruz, the alternative weekly covered news, people, culture and entertainment in Santa Cruz County, a coastal area that includes Capitola, Aptos, Boulder Creek, Scotts Valley and Watsonville.

Good Times is a free-circulation weekly newspaper based in Santa Cruz, California. Good Times is distributed in Santa Cruz County, a coastal area that includes Capitola, Rio del Mar, Aptos and Watsonville. It is owned by the Northern California-based Metro Newspapers. Dan Pulcrano is the CEO and executive editor.

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The Morgan Hill Times is a weekly newspaper in Morgan Hill, California. It is Morgan Hill’s oldest continually operating business, tracing its history back to the Morgan Hill Sun, founded by George Edes on April 12, 1894.

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References

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