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Clint Reilly buys S F Examiner [San Francisco Chronicle]

Clint Reilly buys S.F. Examiner [San Francisco Chronicle] Dec. 18 The San Francisco Examiner is being sold to Clint Reilly Communications, publisher of the Nob Hill Gazette and Gentry magazine, for an undisclosed sum in a deal that also includes the SF Weekly. “I feel newspapers are incredibly important to the life and well-being of a community,” said Clint Reilly, chairman and president of the eponymous company. “If we can help the Examiner have a greater impact, we will be helping the city, the Peninsula and the Bay Area come back from the deleterious impact of this awful pandemic.” Established in 1863, the Examiner was the flagship paper of newspaper magnate William Randolph Hearst, founder of Hearst Corp., which publishes The Chronicle. Hearst sold the Examiner in 2000, and the newspaper has undergone several changes of ownership since then.

Fincher Pays Tribute to His Father and Old Hollywood in Mank | High Plains Reader, Fargo ND

by Raul Gomez | .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) | Cinema | December 17th, 2020 gregcarlson1@gmail.com David Fincher lays down plenty of track on the great big electric train set of “Mank,” the filmmaker’s return to the director’s chair after “Gone Girl” in 2014. Depending on one’s interest in the evergreen legend of “Citizen Kane” and the politics of classic Hollywood, mileage may vary, but Fincher’s detailed visual style and an invested performance from Gary Oldman not to mention the talents of several entertaining supporting players combine to form yet another purely speculative chapter in the cottage industry of films toying with the mythology of one of the most venerated motion pictures ever made.

Mank Recovers the Radical Roots of Citizen Kane

The Nation, check out our latest issue. Subscribe to Support Progressive Journalism The Nation is reader supported: Chip in $10 or more to help us continue to write about the issues that matter. Sign up for our Wine Club today. Did you know you can support The Nation by drinking wine? Long exalted as one of the greatest achievements of cinema, Citizen Kane has suffered the fate common to canonized art: It has become familiar and safe. To be sure, the lore around the film often fixates on how controversial it once was. As a filmic roman à clef about William Randolph Hearst, the film naturally angered the powerful press baron and his many allies in Hollywood, who spared no effort in trying to suppress it. Gossip columnists ran scurrilous stories designed to destroy director Orson Welles and others involved in the production. MGM mogul Louis B. Mayer even made a bid to buy all the prints with the goal of destroying them.

Clint Reilly buys S F Examiner

Real estate investor Clint Reilly - who once tangled with S.F. Examiner - buys it FacebookTwitterEmail 1of2 Clint and wife Janet Reilly attend the reception of the Visionary of the Year Awards Gala at the War Memorial in 2017. Clint Reilly, a magazine publisher, got SF Weekly in the deal.Susana Bates / Special to The Chronicle 2017Show MoreShow Less 2of2 Clint Reilly (left) with wife Janet Reilly and Ben Fong-Torres at The Chronicle’s Visionary of the Year awards in 2018.Carlos Avila Gonzalez / The Chronicle 2018Show MoreShow Less The San Francisco Examiner is being sold to Clint Reilly Communications, publisher of the Nob Hill Gazette and Gentry magazine, for an undisclosed sum in a deal that also includes the SF Weekly.

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