Everything about The New York Times Company totally explained
The New York Times Company is an
American media company. It is best known as the publisher of its namesake,
The New York Times.
Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, Jr. has served as Chairman of the Board since 1997.
Overview
The company was founded by
Henry Jarvis Raymond and
George Jones in
New York, New York. In its very first edition on
September 18,
1851, the paper read,
» "We publish today the first issue of the New-York Daily Times, and we intend to issue it every morning (Sundays excepted) for an indefinite number of years to come."
The company had 2005 revenues of $3.4 billion. It also owns
The Boston Globe, the
International Herald Tribune, almost two dozen other regional newspapers in the United States (15 of which publish daily), and one New York City
radio station, the legendary
WQXR. In 2005, it had 35 web sites, including NYTimes.com, Boston.com and
About.com.
The organization is a minority stakeholder in the
Boston Red Sox, a position acquired as part of
John W. Henry's purchase of the famed baseball team. Company-owned papers often state this in articles about the team.
Since
1967, it has been a publicly traded company, listed on the
New York Stock Exchange under the symbol NYT. The company has two types of stock, Class A and Class B. Class B shares are not publicly traded, and are the mechanism by which the descendants of
Adolph Ochs, who purchased the New York Times newspaper in 1896, maintain control of the company. At the
April 2005 Board meeting
, Class B shareholders elected nine of the fourteen directors of the company.
On
January 1,
2003, the company completed its purchase of
The Washington Post's 50 percent interest in the
International Herald Tribune for $65 million. The Times Company, which had owned 50 percent of the IHT, became the sole owner.
On
March 18,
2005, the company acquired
About.com, a leading online provider of consumer information for $410 million.
On
August 25,
2006, the company acquired Baseline StudioSystems, a leading online database and research service for information on the film and television industries for $35 million.
On
September 12,
2006, the company decided to sell all of its television stations
(External Link
). On
January 4,
2007, the New York Times announced it had reached an agreement to sell all of its television stations to private equity firm
Oak Hill Capital(External Link
). The sale closed on
May 7,
2007; at that point, the station group became known as
Local TV.
Further Information
Get more info on 'The New York Times Company'.
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