Western Weekender

Western Weekender
Owner(s) Kathryn Garton
Founder(s) Greg Evans
Publisher Western Sydney Publishing Group
Editor Troy Dodds
Staff writers Nathan Taylor, Emily Newton, Lauren Suttie, Alena Higgins
Founded 1991
Language English
Headquarters Suite 2, 42-44 Abel Street
Jamisontown NSW NSW 2750
Circulation 59,600
OCLC number 222030802
Website http://www.westernweekender.com.au/

The Western Weekender is a local newspaper servicing the region of Penrith, New South Wales. It is the most widely distributed newspaper in Penrith[1]

The Western Weekender is an independent newspaper, owned by Western Sydney Publishing Group.

The Western Weekender was first published in 1991.

It is issued on Fridays.

Editorial format

The Western Weekender features the following sections: Local News, Business, Entertainment, Your Life, Business Directory, Automotive and Sport, as well as special features.

During the rugby league season, The Western Weekender runs a weekly 16-page liftout called 'Extra Time' primarily focused on the Penrith Panthers.

Each week, a gloss A4 property magazine, 'Western Property', is delivered together with the newspaper.

Discontinued sections include View, FYI, Chill Out and West Life.

Journalists and columnists

The Western Weekender has a team of full-time and part-time journalists, as well as columnists.

The current news team includes: Troy Dodds (Editor), Emily Newton (Crime & Politics), Alena Higgins (Courts & Council), Lauren Suttie (General News) and Nathan Taylor (Sport).

Long-time columnists include Alex McKenzie (Finance) and Troy Dodds (opinion), but the newspaper runs between 10 and 15 columns across a range of subjects each week. High-profile columnists have in the past included Erin Molan, Peter Overton, Ray Hadley and Luke Priddis.

The Weekender's news team is based out of its Penrith office.

Rugby league

The Western Weekender has a strong connection to rugby league. It is a major sponsor of the Penrith Panthers NRL team, and previously had naming rights of the St Marys Leagues Club Stadium. It runs the biggest rugby league coverage in the Penrith area through its Extra Time publication, delivered weekly. The newspaper has not avoided controversy surrounding its rugby league coverage, however, and in the book 'Panthers, Passion & Politics', there is numerous references to the way the newspaper covered an inquiry into the club.[2]

2008 collapse and 2009 revival

The Western Weekender newspaper collapsed in 2008. It was widely reported that the collapse of the Sydney Spirit National Basketball Team was the cause of the newspaper's collapse.[3] Both were owned by the same company. The paper fell into receivership and published for what appeared to be the final time in January 2009. Two months later, The Western Weekender was revived under new ownership - Media View Pty Ltd. Troy Dodds was appointed as its new Editor, the first in a raft of changes to the publication.

The publication was purchased by Western Sydney Publishing Group in October 2015.

Expansion

At different times, The Western Weekender has had various sister publications, including the Inner City Weekender, Blue Mountains Record and Newcastle Post.

Awards

The Western Weekender received the Highly Commended Award in the Community Newspaper of the Year Awards at the 2014 PANPA Newspaper of the Year Awards

The Western Weekender was honoured for its netball coverage at the 2017 Netball NSW Awards [4]

References

  1. CAB Audit, March 2017
  2. http://www.whitenow.com.au/v3/rogercowanbook/fullsummary.htm
  3. http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/basketball-kick-in-almost-sank-paper/story-e6frg6o6-1111118629277
  4. bain, vic. "2017 State Dinner Winner Interviews | Netball NSW". nsw.netball.com.au. Retrieved 2018-01-15.
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