Syndicated features included Pulitzer Prize-winning commentators and columnists, full news and feature services, editorial cartoons and comic strips, online products and photo and graphics packages.
Several of the employees were offered follow on jobs with Tribune Media Services after the closing.
[5] The only strip that appeared to survive the merger was Dave Blazek and John Gilpin's Loose Parts.
After a five-year hiatus, the newly named Los Angeles Times Syndicate picked up the distribution of comic strips again in 1965.
It had a similar lack of long-term success, with most strips not lasting more than three of four year in syndication.