New Jersey's media landscape is changing with the recent announcements that the Star Ledger would end its print edition along ...
Ledger, the state’s largest newspaper, will stop publishing its print edition. The Jersey Journal will shut down entirely ...
New Jersey's largest-circulation newspaper — and several other newspapers serving the Garden State will end print production ...
After serving Hudson County for 157 years, The Jersey Journal announced Wednesday that it will cease publication on Saturday, February 1.
The Star-Ledger will cease publishing a print newspaper and will close its Montville production facility in February 2025. The decision was made by the Star-Ledger’s owner, Newark Morning Ledger Co., ...
Sister newspapers the Times of Trenton, the South Jersey Times and the weekly Hunterdon County Democrat will also end their ...
The new 54,000-square-foot facility, situated on 10 acres, will allow the meat processor to increase its processing and ...
Newark’s Star-Ledger will stop printing on Feb. 2 after closing its Montville production facility. The move impacts other ...
The owner of New Jersey’s largest newspaper says it will stop publishing a daily print version of the paper early next year, but its online version will continue.
It is one of the first major papers to completely do away with print, after years of the industry edging more and more toward ...
Ending print publication is a "forward-looking" step to invest in digital journalism, said Steve Alessi, of NJ Advance Media.