- Florida Keys Keynoter
Infobox Newspaper
name =
type = Bi-weeklynewspaper
format =Tabloid
owners =The McClatchy Company
political =
headquarters =Marathon, Florida
editor = Larry Kahn
publisher = Wayne Markham
foundation = February 19, 1953
founder = Edgar Seney Jr.
circulation = 20,000
website = [http://www.keynoter.com www.keynoter.com]"The Florida Keys Keynoter" is a twice-weekly tabloid format
newspaper owned byThe McClatchy Company and is a sister newspaper to theMiami Herald . It primarily serves Monroe county in theU.S. state ofFlorida . In addition to publishing regular issues on Wednesday and Saturday, the Keynoter also publishes the weekend magazine [http://www.keynoter.com/lattitudes L'Attitudes] and the bi-monthly [http://www.keynoter.com/special_section/1/ Fishing the Florida Keys] magazine. The Keynoter is also a partner of the Upper Keys Reporter, which specializes in coverage of the UpperFlorida Keys , includingKey Largo .Overview
The newspaper employs approximately three dozen people in three bureaux across Monroe County. The bureaus, located in
Key West , Marathon, and Tavernier, also work with the Miami Herald and Upper Keys Reporter to provide complete coverage of the Florida Keys and southern Florida. The newspaper has been continually among the best in the state, repeatedly earning awards from theFlorida Press Association for design and newswriting. The newspaper's coverage of fishing in the Florida Keys and surrounding waters has been repeatedly praised, and special fishing sections regularly feature columns and tips from local fishermen.History
The Keynoter was founded by Edgar Seney Jr. on February 19, 1953. Seney, a regular vacationer from his home state of Michigan, felt the Keys were missing a platform to inform residents about happenings and issues affecting the Florida Keys. Until that point, the only daily newspaper in the Florida Keys had been the
Key West Citizen , which was and still is primarily concerned with events in Key West. Upon moving to the Florida Keys on a permanent basis, Seney began work on a newspaper that would eventually become the Keynoter.The first issue was published from a small Marathon office operated by Seney, his wife, and a half a dozen other workers. Initially published on a weekly basis, Seney accepted a college fellowship in 1955, selling the newspaper to Nicholas Mitchell, associate editor of the Greenville, South Carolina newspaper.
In 1956,
James L. Knight , one of the founders of theKnight-Ridder newspaper group, purchased the Keynoter. The Keynoter would remain a Knight-Ridder newspaper until 2006, when Knight-Ridder was purchased by rival newspaper groupThe McClatchy Company .The Keynoter didn't come into its own, however, until
Hurricane Donna ravaged the Florida Keys in September 1960. In the wake of the destruction caused by the hurricane, and to better provide coverage of the devastation, the Keynoter temporarily merged resources with the Florida Keys Sun, a weekly newspaper based inIslamorada . The two newspapers published joint editions for three weeks until splitting once more. After only one month of separate operation, however, the two papers merged permanently under the Keynoter name.The post-merger Keynoter operated an Upper Keys bureau in the former Sun offices until 1977, when the bureau was moved to Key Largo, where it today occupies the second floor of the Upper Keys Reporter building. In 1984, the Keynoter switched to a twice-weekly Wednesday and Saturday publication schedule under the motto "Everyone needs it twice a week." The Keynoter continues to use this publication schedule and motto today.
In 2000, the bi-weekly schedule was bolstered by the addition of L'Attitudes, a weekly arts and entertainment insert included in the Saturday edition of the Keynoter. Also in 2000, the Keynoter launched the Key West Keynoter, a Key West-oriented edition of the Keynoter, specifically written and designed to appeal to readers in Key West, the most populous city in the Florida Keys.
Awards
In 2007, the "Keynoter" received several awards from the Florida Press Association. In the categories of "special section" and "serious column," the Keynoter earned second place in the 7,000 - 15,000 circulation division. It earned third place in the website and community service categories, also in the 7,000 - 15,000 division.
These awards followed on the heels of its 2006 first-place finishes in the categories of general excellence, hurricane coverage, opinion section, web site, environmental writing, and sports column. In all of these categories, the Florida Press Association declared the "Keynoter" the best newspaper in the state of Florida in the 7,000 - 15,000 circulation division. That year, the "Keynoter" also received awards for in-depth reporting (2nd), outdoors reporting (2nd), obituary writing (3rd), editorial (2nd), serious column (3rd), and news story (honorable mention).
In 2006 and 2007, "Florida Monthly" magazine named the "Keynoter" the best weekly newspaper in the state of Florida. ["Florida Monthly" magazine, September 2006.] ["Florida Monthly" magazine, September 2007.]
The Florida Keys Keynoter is also the only Florida newspaper, daily, weekly, or otherwise, to win the First Amendment Defense Award three separate times. [Florida Keys Keynoter, July 11, 2007, pg. 32.]
External links
[http://www.keynoter.com Official Site]
References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.