We are presented with the recurring question of where a newspaper and its writer can be sued for the alleged publication of a libel. Berry Gordy, a resident of California and the *831 founder of Motown Records, brought a defamation action in California against The New York Daily News and columnist George Rush for a column published about Gordy in the Daily News. 1 The Daily News and Rush removed the action from Los Angeles Superior Court to federal district court, which dismissed the action for lack of personal jurisdiction over the defendants. We reverse.
I. Background
The jurisdictional facts in this case are undisputed. Gordy is founder, and. former president of Motown Records. He has lived in California for twenty-four years and most of his friends, family, and business associates reside in California.
The Daily News, which published the allegedly defamatory statements about Gordy, is a newspaper based in New York. More than 99% of the circulation of the Daily News occurs within 300 miles of the New York metropolitan area. The Daily News does not contract with or employ distributors, or solicit subscriptions, in California. Nevertheless, a small but regular circulation of the Daily News reaches California. The Daily News circulates 13 copies of its daily edition and 18 copies of its Sunday edition to subscribers in California. This California circulation of the Daily News is approximately 0.0017% of the paper’s total circulation.
Although the Daily News primarily covers events that occur in New York, the features and columns in the Daily News deal with subject matter that is of nationwide interest, such as entertainment news. Because of its considerable emphasis on the entertainment industry, the Daily News frequently sends reporters to California. The paper also gathers news from stringers, 2 anonymous sources, and news services in California.
Rush, a newspaper columnist, is a citizen, resident, and domiciliary of New York. He researched and wrote the article in question in New York. Before publication of the article, Rush authorized his associate, Michael Riedel, to telephone Gordy in California to obtain his response. Riedel purportedly also made telephone calls to two other persons in California while researching the story, to confirm it; the sources were guaranteed confidentiality. Riedel has many California sources in addition to the two he contacted regarding the Gordy article.
The events reported in the allegedly defamatory article did not take place in California, nor did the article mention California.
II. Specific Jurisdiction
California’s long-arm statute extends jurisdiction to the limits imposed by the Due Process Clause.
See
Cal.Civ.Proc. Code § 410.10;
Ziegler v. Indian River County,[
In this appeal Gordy does not argue that the Daily News or Rush has sufficient contacts with California to subject either one to general jurisdiction there, regardless of the subject of the lawsuit. He contends instead that they had sufficient contacts related to his defamation claim to confer specific jurisdiction, over them for the purpose of that claim. In determining whether a non-resident defendant may be subjected to specific jurisdiction, we have long iterated three requirements:
(1) The nonresident defendant must do some act or consummate some transaction with the forum or perform some act by which he purposefully avails himself of the privilege of conducting activities in the forum, thereby invoking the benefits and protections of its laws. (2) The claim must *832 be one which arises out of or results from the defendant’s forum-related activities. (3) Exercise of jurisdiction must be reasonable.
Data Disc, Inc. v. Systems Technology
Ass
ocs., Inc.,
A. Contact With the Forum
The first requirement undergoes a certain amount of distortion when jurisdiction is based on an intentional act committed outside the forum that has intended effects within the forum. It is difficult to see how such a foreign actor “invoke[s] the benefits and protections of [the forum’s] laws.”
Data Disc,
In our case, the Daily News published a column allegedly defaming Gordy, knowing that he lived in California, and it distributed presumably from 13 to 18 copies of the defamatory article in California. Rush wrote the column with the same knowledge. Is their conduct and connection with California sufficient to confer specific jurisdiction over them in that forum?
The closest case to the present one is the Supreme Court’s decision in
Calder v. Jones,
The Supreme Court held that California had jurisdiction over the two defendants. It noted that the article concerned California and caused most of its damage in California; jurisdiction was therefore proper because of the effects of the defendants’ Florida conduct in California.
Id.
at 788-91,
Whatever the status of their hypothetical welder, petitioners are not charged with mere untargeted negligence. Rather, their intentional, and allegedly tortious, actions were expressly aimed at California. Petitioner South wrote and petitioner Calder edited an article that they knew would have a potentially devastating impact upon respondent. And they knew that the brunt of that injury would be felt by respondent in the State in which she lives and works and in which the National Enquirer has its largest circulation. Under the circumstances, petitioners must “reasonably anticipate being haled into court there” to answer for the truth of the statements made in their article.
Id.
at 789-90,
In this case, petitioners are primary participants in an alleged wrongdoing intentionally directed at a California resident, *833 and jurisdiction over them is proper on that basis.
Id.
From these statements of the Supreme Court, one might reasonably conclude that Calder is dispositive that jurisdiction exists in our case, and, ultimately, we conclude that it is. Rush and the Daily News wrote and published their allegedly defamatory column intentionally directing it at Gordy, a California resident. We cannot stop there, however, for we have placed some glosses on Colder.
In
Casualty Assurance Risk Insurance Brokerage Co. v. Dillon,
Rush and the Daily News seize upon this statement, and urge a need for far more circulation in California than the 13 daily and 18 Sunday newspapers the Daily News distributes there. But the statement in Dillon must be viewed in the context of the facts of that case. There had been no distribution of the alleged libel in Guam. “The only ‘effect’ on Guam was that the business reputation of a Guam corporation was harmed in other jurisdictions.” Id. An additional factor in refusing jurisdiction in Dillon was the extreme unreasonableness of requiring the defendant to litigate in as distant a location as Guam. Id. at 600.
Similar considerations governed in
Core-Vent Corp. v. Nobel Industries AB,
Here, there was targeting in a manner that was lacking in
Dillon
and
Core-Vent.
The prime targeting arises, of course, from the fact that Gordy is an individual who lives in California, not a corporation incorporated there and doing business either elsewhere or everywhere. We have no desire to republish the alleged libel, but it was of a nature that clearly would have a severe impact on Gordy as an individual. It is reasonable to expect the bulk of the harm from defamation of an individual to be felt at his domicile.
See Keeton v. Hustler Magazine, Inc.,
Rush and the Daily News would have us disregard the factor of Gordy’s domicile in California and concentrate alone on the small circulation in California. They point out that, in permitting Hustler Magazine to be sued in New Hampshire, the Supreme Court relied on “monthly sales of thousands of magazines” that “cannot by any stretch of the imagination be characterized as random, isolated, or fortuitous.”
Id.
at 774,
First, mailing to regular subscribers, even though few, is not random or fortuitous and is not even necessarily isolated. Surely if *834 some New York entity had written only 13 defamatoiy letters and sent them all to California, we would permit a defamed California resident to sue the entity in California. It is not clear why the distribution of 13 to 18 defamatory copies of a column loses magnitude as a contact simply because the Daily News does a lot of other things elsewhere. 3
Second and most important, in deciding how much of any connection is enough, we deal with the entire picture: “a categorical approach is antithetical to
Calder’s
admonishment that the personal jurisdiction inquiry cannot be answered through the application of a mechanical test but instead must focus on the relationship among the defendant, the forum, and the litigation within the particular factual context of each case.”
Core-Vent,
Rush and the Daily News contend, however, that we have recognized a
de minimis
rule regarding newspaper publication that requires distribution considerably in excess of 13 to 18 copies to permit specific jurisdiction. They rely on two cases that preceded
Colder: Church of Scientology v. Adams,
Demaris
is more difficult to distinguish. There a California plaintiff sought to sue the Las Vegas Sun and its publisher in California. We refused to permit jurisdiction based on 447 weekly and 935 Sunday papers that found their way into California either by casual sales or subscription. We pointed out, however, that the alleged libel concerned the plaintiff in his capacity as writer of exposes of criminal activities in certain cities; two of his books focused on Las Vegas, Nevada.
Demaris,
B. Relation Between the Claim and Defendant’s Activities
There is little doubt that Gordy’s claim arises out of the forum-related activi *835 ties of Rush and the Daily News. As we have explained, a major forum-related activity was the writing of the alleged libel in New York that had a tortious effect on Gordy in California. With regard to that activity, the connection to Gordy’s claim is total.
The other significant activity is the regular distribution of 13 daily and 18 Sunday newspapers to subscribers in California.
4
There, too, the newspapers necessarily published the libel for which Gordy sues. But for the distribution of those newspapers, a part of Gordy’s reputational injury would not have occurred.
See Ballard,
We are satisfied, therefore, that Gordy meets the requirement of connection between his claim and the defendants’ forum-related activities. In so ruling, however, we do not adopt Gordy’s overly expansive view of the nature of such a connection. Many of the contacts Gordy asserts, such as the general news gathering techniques of the Daily News and Rush, derivation of advertising revenue in California, and contribution to a pension plan administered in California, are not sufficiently related to his defamation claim.
See Church of Scientology,
C. Reasonableness of Exercise of Jurisdiction
Once we have decided that defendants have the requisite minimum contacts and that the plaintiffs claim arises out of them, defendants “must ‘present a
compelling case
that the presence of some other considerations would render jurisdiction unreasonable.’ ”
Ballard,
It is interesting to note the origins of this seven-factor test. In
Insurance Co. of North America v. Marina Salina Cruz,
There is no mechanical or quantitative test for jurisdiction under the International Shoe reasonableness standard, and we shall not attempt to list all the factors that might, in a different case, be part of an assessment of the reasonableness of subjecting a defendant to jurisdiction. For purposes of the present case we conclude that the following seven factors are relevant: [listing].
Id.
(citations omitted). This unassailable and flexible approach then evolved by degrees through
Taubler v. Giraud,
In analyzing the reasonableness of exercising jurisdiction, we apply seven factors: [listing and citing Insurance Co. of North America ]
Id.
at 1065. In
Decker Coal Co. v. Commonwealth Edison Co.,
we must consider seven factors: [listing]. None of the factors is dispositive in itself; instead, we must balance all seven. [Citation], We consider each factor in turn.
This is essentially the formulation reiterated in
Terracom v. Valley National Bank,
Thus did a flexible recital of the factors that happened to be present in Insurance Co. of North America evolve into the seven-factor test that we are asked to apply. Returning to the spirit of Insurance Co. of North America, we point out why we think it is reasonable in this case to require Rush and the Daily News to come to California and defend. 5 Rush and the Daily News knew that Gordy lived in California when they allegedly defamed him; they had good reason to expect that a substantial impact of their actions would be felt in California; they are in a business in which they deal with California matters regularly; the Daily News sends reporters to California; and the Daily News serves subscribers in California, though they are few. 6
It is true that Gordy could sue in New York, but “[a]n individual injured in California need not go to [New York] to seek redress from persons who, though remaining in [New York], knowingly cause the injury in California.”
Calder,
III. Conclusion
By publishing an allegedly defamatory article the effects of which would clearly be felt in California, and by regularly circulating newspapers in California, Rush and the Daily News purposefully availed themselves of the privilege of conducting activities in California. Gordas claim arises from those activities. The Daily News and Rush have not made a compelling case that litigating in California would be unreasonable. The order of the district court granting defendants’ motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction is therefore
REVERSED.
Notes
. Gordy sued The Daily News, L.P., the owner of The New York Daily News. Both entities will be referred to collectively as the Daily News. In addition, Gordy brought the action against Tony Turner, who is no longer a party to the litigation.
. Stringers are writers who submit stories to the newspaper and are paid for the copy that is accepted.
. First Amendment considerations attending the publishing of a newspaper do not enter into the jurisdictional analysis.
Calder,
. The use of California sources to check on an article is an additional significant activity but our decision does not depend on that factor,
. Even if we applied the 7-factor test of Core-Vent, the result would be the same.
. We recognize that these considerations of reasonableness duplicate to a large degree the analysis that led us to conclude that the California contacts of Rush and the Daily News were sufficient. Such duplication is inevitable, at least in the case of the distant tortfeasor, because the contacts with the forum are sufficient if they "are such that he should
reasonably
anticipate being haled into court there.”
World-Wide Volkswagen,
