Tribune Publishing will stop producing Hoy, its
Spanish-language newspaper, the Chicago Tribune reported.
Print and
online production will cease Dec. 13, the company said.
In 2017, Hoy
switched from three days a week to weekly production. The paper was started in
2003, taking the place of Exito, which the Chicago Tribune launched in 1993,
the paper says.
The paper
has around a half-dozen staff members. All affected employees should have the
opportunity to take open positions inside the company, said a spokesman for
Chicago-based Tribune Publishing.
The Hoy
brand first emerged in New York
in 1998. In 2000, Tribune Co. bought Hoy New
York as part of the purchase of Times Mirror, which
also owned the Los Angeles Times, the Tribune reported. In 2007, Hoy New York was sold to
ImpreMedia. In 2018, Tribune Publishing, going by the name Tronc, sold Hoy Los
Angeles along with the Los Angeles Times to billionaire Patrick Soon-Shiong. Tribune’s
closing of Hoy Chicago doesn’t touch Hoy Los Angeles, the Tribune said.
Tribune
Publishing will grow Spanish-language content with the syndicated Tribune
Content Agency and is looking at other options to serve Hispanic readers, the
spokesman said.
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