Rock Creek Free Press
The Rock Creek Free Press | |
Type | Monthly newspaper |
---|---|
Format | Large format broadsheet |
Owner(s) | Independent |
Publisher | Matt Sullivan, Editor in Chief |
Founded | January 2007 |
Ceased publication | September 2011 |
Headquarters | Bethesda, Maryland |
Circulation | 20,000 |
ISSN | 1937-2663 |
Website |
rockcreekfreepress |
The Rock Creek Free Press was an American monthly alternative newspaper published in Washington, DC.
History
The Rock Creek Free Press was founded in Washington, DC, in 2007. The first issue was dated January 23, 2007, and was distributed at a large anti-war rally that day on the National Mall. The paper managed to publish only 5 issues in 2007 but began publishing monthly in December of that year. In 2008 The Rock Creek Free Press received a Project Censored award for publishing one of the 25 most censored stories of 2008.[1]
In September 2011, the staff of the Rock Creek Free Press announced that the paper would discontinue publication. [2]
Content and format
The Creek, as an alternative paper, was more focused on commentary and historical context than the reporting of day to day, or week to week events. Supporters of its editorial content described it as "anti-fascist". The paper's self-stated mission was to cover the stories it claimed the corporate-controlled media refuses to cover. The Creek frequently published stories regarding 'conspiracies' both current and historic. Topics covered included, the JFK assassination, the RFK assassination, the MLK assassination, the Gulf of Tonkin, Operation Gladio, 9/11 and other examples of what it claimed are False flag terrorism.
Format
Published every month as a large format broadsheet, usually eight pages, the paper contained an average of 20 articles per issue. Regular features included articles about corporate media propaganda, with historical examples relevant to today.
Circulation
The paper's circulation, of approximately 20,000 readers, made the Creek a mid-sized independent newspaper. Most of the paper's print run of over 13,000 copies was distributed free in and around Washington, DC. Publication of the paper was supported by more than 1,000 mail subscribers from all 50 states and over a dozen foreign countries.[3]
Website
The Creek offered a PDF on-line version of every issue as soon as that issue went to press.