― walter kranz (walterkranz), Monday, 24 October 2005 05:09 (eighteen years ago) link
― Matos-Webster Dictionary (M Matos), Monday, 24 October 2005 05:27 (eighteen years ago) link
― Rickey Wright (Rrrickey), Monday, 24 October 2005 06:54 (eighteen years ago) link
― thousands of tiny luminous spheres (plebian), Monday, 24 October 2005 07:11 (eighteen years ago) link
― Theorry Henry (Enrique), Monday, 24 October 2005 07:41 (eighteen years ago) link
― awful bliss (awful bliss), Monday, 24 October 2005 08:08 (eighteen years ago) link
That's IT?
― Raymond Cummings (Raymond Cummings), Monday, 24 October 2005 11:02 (eighteen years ago) link
― Raymond Cummings (Raymond Cummings), Monday, 24 October 2005 11:49 (eighteen years ago) link
By Howard KurtzWashington Post Staff WriterMonday, October 24, 2005; C01
The nation's two largest alternative newspaper chains plan to announce a merger today, a long-rumored combination that champions of quirky, iconoclastic, locally controlled papers have been sniping at for months.
New Times, the Phoenix-based publisher with 11 newspapers from Miami to San Francisco, is acquiring the Village Voice, the storied New York weekly co-founded by Norman Mailer, and five other papers owned by the Voice.
New Times will export its brand of "desert libertarianism on the rocks, with sprigs of neocon politics," writes Bruce Brugmann, publisher of the rival San Francisco Bay Guardian.
Hogwash, says Michael Lacey, New Times's executive editor, insisting that "individual editors in individual cities determine the content of their papers week to week. . . . I wish there were more conservative writers at the papers. There aren't. There isn't anything imposed about the editorial viewpoint from Phoenix."
Reaction is likely to be chilly among many staffers at the notoriously fractious Voice, where columnist Cynthia Cotts described a 2000 acquisition attempt by New Times as a "hostile takeover" by a company whose media purchases produced a "signature bloodbath."
But David Schneiderman, chief executive of Village Voice Media, says the merger will give his papers a "national platform," particularly on the Web, an operation that he will oversee. While his staff will go through "a period of trepidation," Schneiderman says, "the resources of the combined company will strengthen us editorially." New Times executives, he says, "invest in editorial. This is what they're about. It's quite refreshing."
As for the notion that the fabled counterculture papers of yore are becoming more corporate, Schneiderman says: "The issue is, what's in the newspaper? I would challenge anyone who's critical of this to point to anything in our papers or the New Times papers that's establishment. It's flat-out not true."
Lacey says the merger of assets requires no cash. The 2000 deal had a purchase price of about $150 million, according to a source cited by the New York Times.
The planned acquisition will require Justice Department approval on antitrust grounds, since the combined company would control about 14 percent of the circulation of the major alternative weeklies nationwide. The department has clashed with both companies before. In 2002, New Times agreed to close its Los Angeles paper, which competed with Village Voice Media's L.A. Weekly, in exchange for the Voice shutting down its Cleveland paper, which did battle with New Times's Cleveland Scene.
Justice accused the companies of trying "to corrupt the competitive process by swapping markets, thereby guaranteeing each other a monopoly." The firms agreed in a consent decree to notify the department before any merger or shutdown. "We got bad legal advice," Lacey says.
That was not the only allegation of corporate excess; Brugmann's Bay Guardian has sued New Times on charges of predatory practices.
Alternative papers provide an outlet for colorful writing and muckraking local reporting -- as when Portland's Willamette Week revealed last year that former Oregon governor Neil Goldschmidt had sex with a 14-year-old girl three decades ago and paid $250,000 to hush it up. The 50-year-old Village Voice, which has had such prominent contributors as Jules Feiffer, Jack Newfield and Nat Hentoff, has won three Pulitzers, most recently in 2000 for coverage of AIDS in Africa.
Despite their liberal, anti-establishment pedigree, alternative weeklies such as New Times and Village Voice long ago became big business. They are free and stuffed with music and arts coverage, they rake in piles of cash from entertainment ads and personal classifieds. Village Voice Media is owned by a consortium of investment banks that beat out New Times five years ago.
"Perfectly good journalism is commercially viable," Lacey says. "You have to give them well-written, well-reported stories. We don't need focus groups. We knew damn well that good stories sell, not people doing raving opinion pieces about how outraged they are. Blogs have made it completely unnecessary to have alternative newspapers fulfilling that role."
No cash will change hands because the deal is structured as a merger, with New Times getting 62 percent of the equity (plus a 5-4 edge on the company's board) and Village Voice 38 percent. Jim Larkin, the chief executive of New Times, says the negotiations took 15 months and that the only job cuts he envisions are on the corporate staff. "Village Voice makes money," he says. "These are both plump companies."
Lacey founded Phoenix New Times with Larkin in 1970, when he was a college dropout who had to give blood to make ends meet. He says the chain -- which also owns papers in Houston, Dallas, Denver, St. Louis and Kansas City -- boosts the budgets of the weeklies it acquires, though he would not rule out job cuts at the Voice papers in an effort to boost profit margins.
New Times has won a slew of journalism awards. Mark Jurkowitz, media critic for the Boston Phoenix, wrote recently that the company is "known for being non-ideological." But Lacey concedes that the planned takeover will produce a "culture clash" at the Voice, "because people will resent someone coming in from the outside. It's always very disturbing." What's more, New Times is a non-union shop, while the Voice and L.A. Weekly have noisy unions.
In terms of sheer feistiness, the papers may not be that far apart. A Voice writer recently slammed President Bush's "cluster of neocons and religious nuts and military industrialists," adding: "We need to investigate Wampumgate, Kazakhgate, the oil-for-slush scandal, Plamegate, and all the rest -- we need to do it for the sake of our own democracy."
Phoenix New Times, meanwhile, was calling the Maricopa County sheriff "a modern-day J. Edgar Hoover . . . without the penchant for women's underwear" and accusing local media outlets of the journalistic equivalent of sexually servicing him.
To skeptics, a large company that serves both the 1.1 million readers of New Times and the 800,000 of Village Voice Media -- which also has papers in Seattle, Minneapolis, Orange County and Nashville -- is a giant step toward the corporatization of the alternative news world. But Lacey argues that "media concentration at our end of the business is a good thing because it allows us to compete effectively," and says he hopes to restore the Voice "to its glory days."
That may or may not happen. But the bastion of Greenwich Village liberalism was once owned by Rupert Murdoch for six years. "The joke was we were Poland and Murdoch was Russia," says Schneiderman, a 27-year Voice veteran. "The only question was when he would invade."
― curmudgeon, Monday, 24 October 2005 13:52 (eighteen years ago) link
http://blogs.citypages.com/pscholtes/2005/10/new_times_takes.asp
― Pete Scholtes, Monday, 24 October 2005 14:04 (eighteen years ago) link
http://www.villagevoice.com/news/0543,memo,69258,2.html
― geeta (geeta), Monday, 24 October 2005 15:25 (eighteen years ago) link
Village Voice writers' pay cut while music editor is on vacation
― Eppy (Eppy), Monday, 24 October 2005 16:45 (eighteen years ago) link
― gear (gear), Monday, 24 October 2005 16:50 (eighteen years ago) link
― Frank Kogan (Frank Kogan), Monday, 24 October 2005 22:10 (eighteen years ago) link
― fact checking cuz (fcc), Monday, 24 October 2005 22:54 (eighteen years ago) link
http://www.reclaimthemedia.org/stories.php?story=05/10/24/3056201
― geeta (geeta), Monday, 24 October 2005 23:18 (eighteen years ago) link
That said: ding dong, the Voice (as we know it) is dead. Or, "How the Central Scrutinizer toppled the Empire from an office in Denver."
― Chris O., Monday, 24 October 2005 23:32 (eighteen years ago) link
And yeah, hearsay about NT varies from "alright" to "nightmare", as Chris O. cogently pointed out... It will really depend on where on that scale an alt-weekly falls currently, as far as readership/competition/etc.
― iDonut B4 x86 (donut), Monday, 24 October 2005 23:46 (eighteen years ago) link
― miccio (miccio), Monday, 24 October 2005 23:53 (eighteen years ago) link
― iDonut B4 x86 (donut), Tuesday, 25 October 2005 00:20 (eighteen years ago) link
― Are You Nomar? (miloaukerman), Tuesday, 25 October 2005 00:30 (eighteen years ago) link
― Banana Nutrament (ghostface), Tuesday, 25 October 2005 00:52 (eighteen years ago) link
― js (honestengine), Tuesday, 25 October 2005 00:58 (eighteen years ago) link
― Are You Nomar? (miloaukerman), Tuesday, 25 October 2005 01:53 (eighteen years ago) link
again, i don't expect to be terribly popular or persuasive -- here or anywhere, really -- for awhile. i merely wish to hack away at the New Times Seal-Clubbing Neocon Automaton rap we're inevitably gonna get. o'connor's right: it's a case-by-case, paper-by-paper situation, and some are better than others. (he's not the first guy to use the Drunk Dad metaphor, actually.) but that alone blows holes in the theory that we're gonna sire 17 papers with identical copy and only change the street names and sports teams. certain details (layout/movie reviews) aside, our papers now are each distinct, regional entities, and trust me -- i join you all in hoping to christ the VV papers stay exactly as they are in that regard. i want matos/sylvester/eddy exactly where they are, only more so.
― awful bliss (awful bliss), Tuesday, 25 October 2005 02:07 (eighteen years ago) link
that'd be an improvement since the voice killed their sports coverage ages ago.
― hstencil (hstencil), Tuesday, 25 October 2005 03:38 (eighteen years ago) link
― awful bliss (awful bliss), Tuesday, 25 October 2005 03:46 (eighteen years ago) link
― Frank Kogan (Frank Kogan), Tuesday, 25 October 2005 03:48 (eighteen years ago) link
New Times Media Buys Village Voice
By SETH SUTEL, AP Business Writer
New Times Media, the nation's largest publisher of alternative weekly newspapers, is buying the owner of the Village Voice and its five sister newspapers, creating a company with 17 weekly publications and a combined circulation of 1.8 million.
The new company will keep the Village Voice name but will be run by the two top executives of New Times Media, a Phoenix-based company with 11 newspapers, the companies announced Monday.
The deal creates a dominant player in the alternative newsweekly business with nearly a quarter of the industry's total circulation of 7.6 million, according to Richard Karpel, executive director of the Association of Alternative Weeklies, a trade group.
New Times shareholders will own 62 percent of the new company and Village Voice shareholders the remaining 38 percent. The board of the new company will also be made up of a majority of New Times directors.
New Times CEO Jim Larkin will run the new company, to be called Village Voice Media, and New Times executive editor Michael Lacey will be executive editor. Village Voice CEO David Schneiderman will oversee online operations.
Schneiderman said the combination would allow the newspapers to more effectively compete for national advertising and build up a bigger presence online, where newspapers face competition to their lucrative classified advertising business from free listings services like Craigslist.
The newspapers from the Voice group will be added to backpage.com, a free online classified advertising venture that is owned by New Times and was launched as an alternative to Craigslist.
The combined company would have overall revenues of about $180 million, Schneiderman said. He declined to disclose other financial details, noting that both companies are privately held, but he did say both were "comfortably profitable."
The Village Voice, with a free circulation of about 250,000, is one of the best known alternative weekly newspapers in the country. It was co-founded in 1955 by the novelist Norman Mailer, and has been owned at various times by magazine industry veteran Clay Felker; Rupert Murdoch's News Corp. and the businessman Leonard Stern.
Under the new structure, the Voice's editor Donald Forst will continue in his current role but will report to Lacey, as will the editors of the Voice's five other weeklies in Los Angeles and Orange County, Calif.; Seattle, Minneapolis / St. Paul and Nashville.
New Times publishes in 11 cities including Phoenix, Cleveland, Houston, San Francisco, Miami and Dallas.
The absorption of the Voice and its sister newspapers into a larger company would do nothing to dampen their antiestablishment tone, Schneiderman said.
"We kept our finger firmly planted in the eye of the establishment when Murdoch owned us," Schneiderman said. "It's part of our genetic makeup."
The deal will be subject to federal regulatory approval. The two companies have run afoul of regulators before, and in 2003 settled charges of collusive behavior from the Justice Department after selling competing papers to each other in Los Angeles and Cleveland.
The deal had been expected, and has been the subject of much discussion in the alternative weekly industry. For smaller publications, the creation of a big company with newspapers in several large cities including New York, Miami and San Francisco could mean tougher competition for national advertising.
"I think there's a sense of resignation," said Brian Hieggelke, the publisher of the alternative weekly Newcity in Chicago. Hieggelke is also director of the board of a cooperative that sells national advertising for weeklies which competes with Ruxton Media Group, a similar business owned by New Times. As part of the deal, the Voice papers will become part of Ruxton's ad sales network.
"For people who aren't part of New Times or (Village Voice Media), the best case scenario is that it will be neutral for their business, but in many cases it will be a negative," Hieggelke said.
The Voice is currently owned by a group of investors including three private investment funds: one managed by Goldman Sachs; Weiss, Peck & Greer and the Trimaran Fund. None of those investors is exiting as part of the current transaction.
― geeta (geeta), Tuesday, 25 October 2005 03:57 (eighteen years ago) link
As for what's in store... Well, Westword, the New Times paper in Denver, has no book review section. And yes, Rob, I know that not all New Times papers are the same. Still, what does that tell you about these guys' priorities? Or, if you're interested, got to www.westword.com and type "TABOR" into the search engine, or "C and D" (what next week's ballot is going to be all about in Colorado), and follow the links, and see if you learn anything about it. Pitiful.
― Frank Kogan (Frank Kogan), Tuesday, 25 October 2005 04:47 (eighteen years ago) link
― maura (maura), Tuesday, 25 October 2005 04:51 (eighteen years ago) link
Xpost Xpost Xpost
― Frank Kogan (Frank Kogan), Tuesday, 25 October 2005 04:59 (eighteen years ago) link
This is inelegant code for unfastening everyone who had an opinion in hard copy versus someone who will give you their opinion for free or pennies on the Internet. What's the difference, actually? Well, one's a rationalization and an excuse, the other's the justification for the rationalization and the excuse. It's just like every other newspaper manically seized by obsession and fear of/with content from the Internet. Most newspapers are going through or will go through this in 2005 or next year. Even though profitable, cuts are expected at the biggest because it's the way corporate does things.
And before the regrets and bad news there is always the parade of rationalizations about the Internet and nature of editorial content and its origin and how the changing world has dictated something bad but we're still dedicated to and will do great journalism because great journalism is great.
Of course, you follow this to its logical conclusion, you don't even need local editors over the next few years. You can ship raw copy instantaneously to Indonesia or any old ex-Brit empire country now a slave labor nation with high bandwidth telecomm connections to the net and get the product back to you before you get up in the morning. Hey, "The Internet had made it completely unnecessary to have workers at alternate newspapers fulfilling this role."
― George the Animal Steele, Tuesday, 25 October 2005 05:14 (eighteen years ago) link
― don, Tuesday, 25 October 2005 05:31 (eighteen years ago) link
― don, Tuesday, 25 October 2005 05:34 (eighteen years ago) link
― Frank Kogan (Frank Kogan), Tuesday, 25 October 2005 05:51 (eighteen years ago) link
― Chris O., Tuesday, 25 October 2005 15:31 (eighteen years ago) link
― Raymond Cummings (Raymond Cummings), Tuesday, 25 October 2005 15:47 (eighteen years ago) link
― curmudgeon, Tuesday, 25 October 2005 18:24 (eighteen years ago) link
We all have different opinions on who are the better or worse editors of these papers. (This isn't even relating to music editors, necessarily. This can be arts editors, food editors, film editors, political editors, CHIEF editors, etc.) Every paper has a combination of good and bad editors... some are overall better than others.
What this New Times buyout will do is essentially equalize the good and bad qualities of these papers. The shitty editors will have to shape up, and the good editors will be likely (and this depends on which delegate at the Denver/Phoenix Borg Central is assigned to whom) be told how to do things, when they don't need to be told how to do things.
All in all, this is sad, because while a lot of really bad sections might improve, a lot of great sections are likely going to be compromised, and I don't think anything will arise from this that will equal the greatness of the latter. These singular visions that were enjoyable sections are going to be less singular, and this is the sad part. But hey, cut-to-the-chase corporate visions aren't really interested in preserving uniquely great quality in certain spots.. they're interested in across-the-board profitability, even if it means the referendums are going to blemish the good spots, as well as improve the bad spots.
― iDonut B4 x86 (donut), Tuesday, 25 October 2005 18:49 (eighteen years ago) link
― iDonut B4 x86 (donut), Tuesday, 25 October 2005 18:53 (eighteen years ago) link
― don, Tuesday, 25 October 2005 19:08 (eighteen years ago) link
― gypsy mothra (gypsy mothra), Tuesday, 25 October 2005 19:09 (eighteen years ago) link
Yup. Though the smart editors will listen to what they are being told ... a lesson from wise-old deposed Uncle Chris.
― Chris O., Tuesday, 25 October 2005 19:10 (eighteen years ago) link
― Theorry Henry (Enrique), Tuesday, 25 October 2005 19:10 (eighteen years ago) link
― Chris O., Tuesday, 25 October 2005 19:12 (eighteen years ago) link
― save the robot (save the robot), Tuesday, 25 October 2005 20:16 (eighteen years ago) link
haha thanks for making my blood run cold!
― Matos-Webster Dictionary (M Matos), Tuesday, 25 October 2005 20:23 (eighteen years ago) link
― don, Tuesday, 25 October 2005 20:26 (eighteen years ago) link
― iDonut B4 x86 (donut), Tuesday, 25 October 2005 20:31 (eighteen years ago) link
he said liberal
― ▫◌▫ (sic), Friday, 31 August 2018 19:17 (five years ago) link
tbh after the print ed shut, i never looked at it unless i saw a link to a piece.
― a Mets fan who gave up on everything in the mid '80s (Dr Morbius), Friday, 31 August 2018 19:19 (five years ago) link
by that definition "liberal billionaire" is an oxymoron
― aloha darkness my old friend (katherine), Friday, 31 August 2018 19:19 (five years ago) link
Wrote many times in the late '00s yet even with the superb editors who tightened my sentences (never forgot a PHONE line edit with Chuck Eddy in early 2006) there was already a sense in which the clock was ticking. I'm sorry I lived long enough to see this day.
― The Silky Veils of Alfred (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 31 August 2018 19:22 (five years ago) link
I'm amazed our two alt-weeklies have survived the shrinkage since they had to stop running sex work ads - the Dallas Observer is a shell that runs a scattering of local political news and reprints national stories (from New Times, I guess?), the FW Weekly is even smaller but pretty left-wing, they've been running stories from local DSA people every so often.
― louise ck (milo z), Friday, 31 August 2018 19:28 (five years ago) link
this is what i would do if i had the money.
― louise ck (milo z), Friday, 31 August 2018 19:29 (five years ago) link
I wrote a letter to the VV in the '90s about Public Enemy's homophobia (Flavor Flav's really), and someone phoned me to carefully line-edit that.
― a Mets fan who gave up on everything in the mid '80s (Dr Morbius), Friday, 31 August 2018 19:35 (five years ago) link
I think it's safe to say that without the Village Voice I might never have achieved my dream of being a childless 37-year-old debt-ridden "critic's critic" with a niche social media presence and chronic knee pain RIP.— 𝕿𝖗𝖔𝖚𝖇𝖑𝖊 𝕰𝖛𝖊𝖗𝖞 𝕯𝖆𝖞 (@NickPinkerton) August 31, 2018
― a Mets fan who gave up on everything in the mid '80s (Dr Morbius), Friday, 31 August 2018 19:57 (five years ago) link
I care somewhat, not much. The end of the print run seemed much more historically significant. But the online version meant there was still Pazz & Jop, and without that, I'll literally lose my final motivation (following the end of my "freelance" "career" and the implosion of a college radio station where I had a show) to keep up with new music.
Pleasure? I guess I could try that.
― clemenza, Friday, 31 August 2018 21:20 (five years ago) link
wasn't sure which thread to bump, but...
I know it was only a shadow of itself over the last several years, but the actual demise of the Village Voice makes me very nostalgic
It was the print publication that I cared about above all others in the 80s and 90s. there were so many great writers who contributed to it
― Dan S, Friday, 31 August 2018 22:47 (five years ago) link
oh I see this thread has already been revived!
― Dan S, Friday, 31 August 2018 22:48 (five years ago) link
This last (hopefully just latest) owner proclaimed that he intended to bring back the pre-New Times glory days, but I later read that he'd invested in extremely expensive real estate, a palace in the Village/ Also he busted or greatly impaired the union (the Voice had its own union). So a capital drain, talent drain (I know several people who made a point of avoiding the place/brand after that, though they all needed/need the work).I, for one, wish/hope someone/somewhere picks up Pazz & Jop and continues it.Maybe a GoFundMe? Too much for a labor of love, also too much for noobs.
― dow, Saturday, 1 September 2018 01:02 (five years ago) link
Maybe most of all a credibility drain? Other activities showing what his real priorities were (dude might've been lying to himself, even).
― dow, Saturday, 1 September 2018 01:08 (five years ago) link
I was there when Nat Hentoff cleaned his office. They filled dumpsters. I took a bunch of Philip Roth books that were left out. I learned that I hate Philip Roth.
― Yerac, Saturday, 1 September 2018 01:29 (five years ago) link
lol
― Dan S, Saturday, 1 September 2018 01:42 (five years ago) link
VV died for me when Chuck E was fired, not sure I missed a lot
― President Keyes, Saturday, 1 September 2018 02:31 (five years ago) link
what would it really take to keep P&J going somewhere else?
- someone w/ time and/or $, plus motivation- a platform- VV's mailing list- some way to tabulate
am i missing something major?
― alpine static, Saturday, 1 September 2018 08:51 (five years ago) link
revive jackin' pop
― dyl, Saturday, 1 September 2018 16:21 (five years ago) link
But the online version meant there was still Pazz & Jop, and without that, I'll literally lose my final motivation to keep up with new music.
this is kind of astonishing to me
― dyl, Saturday, 1 September 2018 16:22 (five years ago) link
I'm an astonishing person.
― clemenza, Saturday, 1 September 2018 19:42 (five years ago) link
Old too
― The Great Atomic Power Ballad (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 1 September 2018 21:28 (five years ago) link
I listen to hours of music most days, often completely new-to-me, but still expect the ILX annual tracks poll to point me in new directions for songs, movements and artists more than anything else during the year. clemenza otm.
― ▫◌▫ (sic), Saturday, 1 September 2018 21:51 (five years ago) link
That's it, dyl. I don't know how old you are, but, absent any professional obligations, I don't think it's that unusual to lose track of the plot in your mid-50s. Most everyone I know in my non-rock-critic life lost it in their early 20s. (I do get a lot of satisfaction out of putting together a year-end list with comments, though, so I'm just dumb enough to keep doing it for my homepage.)
― clemenza, Sunday, 2 September 2018 02:44 (five years ago) link
new music in the pop vein is generally not for me, i've heard enough. 90% of P&J was a mystery to me 10 years ago.
― a Mets fan who gave up on everything in the mid '80s (Dr Morbius), Sunday, 2 September 2018 02:58 (five years ago) link
if they're so dead why do new articles keep showing up? admittedly they're all by the same person. and one of them's about jethro tull. stands to reason they'd finally get their due via dead voice.
― Thus Sang Freud, Tuesday, 11 September 2018 23:36 (five years ago) link
let's twist againhttps://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/22/business/media/village-voice-new-owner.html
― the serious avant-garde universalist right now (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 23 December 2020 18:18 (three years ago) link
Won't let me past paywall, what's it say?
― dow, Wednesday, 23 December 2020 19:59 (three years ago) link
The Village Voice, the storied New York alt-weekly that shut down in 2018 after a 63-year run, will live again.Brian Calle, the chief executive of Street Media, the owner of LA Weekly, said on Tuesday that he had acquired the publication from its publisher, Peter D. Barbey.“I think a lot of people will be hungry for this and I’m superoptimistic,” Mr. Calle said in an interview.He added that he planned to restart The Voice’s website in January and would publish a “comeback” print edition early next year, with quarterly print issues to follow. On Tuesday he hired Bob Baker, a former Voice editor, as a senior editor and content coordinator. Mr. Calle said he wanted to bring back more former staff members who know the paper’s tone. He has not yet named an editor in chief.The Voice, a mainstay of the independent journalism scene until it wasn’t, was founded in 1955 by Dan Wolf, Edwin Fancher and Norman Mailer. It was home to the dogged investigative reporter Wayne Barrett; the jazz critic and free-speech columnist Nat Hentoff; the early rock critic Richard Goldstein; the feminist cultural critic Jill Johnston; the nightlife columnist Michael Musto; and the groundbreaking hip-hop writers Nelson George and Greg Tate.Generations of New Yorkers found their first apartments through its seemingly endless classified section. The paper grew thinner over the years, as Craigslist cut into its revenue, and bloggers and early digital sites chipped away at its cultural position.In 2015 it was sold by the Voice Media Group to Mr. Barbey, an heir to an American retail empire whose family owned The Reading Eagle newspaper in Pennsylvania for generations until 2019. He vowed to revitalize the paper, but in August 2017 he took it digital only and shuttered it a year later.Mr. Calle said he had eyed The Voice for several years and got in touch with Mr. Barbey about buying the paper in recent months. “I literally just cold-called him and I said, ‘Hey, I’ve been thinking a lot about The Village Voice and a lot about journalism in the context of this year and I feel like we need to figure out a way to bring it back,’” he said.“We had roughly half a dozen calls, just talking about the history of The Voice and getting to know each other, because he views himself as a kind of a steward and was just waiting for someone to come along.”Mr. Barbey said he had been approached by a number of prospective owners.“I originally bought The Village Voice to see if we could save it in a different media era,” he said. “Brian called and we talked for a while. After thinking about it, I figured he had the best philosophy about how to move forward with The Village Voice.”The terms of the deal were not disclosed. In a news release, Street Media said the acquisition did not include the Obie Awards, the Off Broadway honors that will continue to be presented by the American Theater Wing.Mr. Calle has experience running an alt-weekly, but his time as publisher and chief executive at LA Weekly has not been without incident. Formerly an opinion editor for The Orange County Register in California and other newspapers, Mr. Calle bought LA Weekly with a group of investors in 2017 from the Voice Media Group. (From 2012 to 2017, the Voice Media Group owned LA Weekly in addition to its flagship paper in New York.)LA Weekly’s newsroom was quickly gutted after the sale, and former writers organized a boycott of the paper, pressing advertisers and other journalists to cut ties. Mara Shalhoup, the editor in chief of LA Weekly when Mr. Calle bought it, said that nearly the entire newsroom staff was fired. Ms. Shalhoup, who next week will start as ProPublica’s South editor, said she felt LA Weekly was not as focused on serious journalism after the acquisition by Mr. Calle.“I think my opinion is shared by the community of readers in Los Angeles,” she said. “It was not the same quality publication after he purchased it as it was before.”In 2018, David Welch, one of the investors, sued Mr. Calle and the other LA Weekly backers, alleging that they had mismanaged the paper. The suit was settled in 2019.“That lawsuit was settled and we both went our separate ways,” Mr. Calle said. Speaking more generally of the detractors of LA Weekly under his leadership, he said, “I think the proof is in the results, which is that we’re still around and we’re on a nice trajectory.”He added that the paper he acquired on Tuesday “will honor the traditions of The Village Voice of yesteryear.”Mr. Calle said he planned to start a Voice podcast and increase the publication’s social media presence while looking for new revenue streams. He said he also envisioned The Voice performing a critical role of alt-weeklies: acting as a watchdog of mainstream media outlets.Since The Voice stopped publishing new content in September 2018, the website has been periodically updated with articles pulled from its archives. Some staff members stayed on to work on building a digital archive. Mr. Calle said he and Mr. Barbey planned to donate The Voice’s print archives to a “major New York public institution” in the coming months.
Brian Calle, the chief executive of Street Media, the owner of LA Weekly, said on Tuesday that he had acquired the publication from its publisher, Peter D. Barbey.
“I think a lot of people will be hungry for this and I’m superoptimistic,” Mr. Calle said in an interview.
He added that he planned to restart The Voice’s website in January and would publish a “comeback” print edition early next year, with quarterly print issues to follow. On Tuesday he hired Bob Baker, a former Voice editor, as a senior editor and content coordinator. Mr. Calle said he wanted to bring back more former staff members who know the paper’s tone. He has not yet named an editor in chief.
The Voice, a mainstay of the independent journalism scene until it wasn’t, was founded in 1955 by Dan Wolf, Edwin Fancher and Norman Mailer. It was home to the dogged investigative reporter Wayne Barrett; the jazz critic and free-speech columnist Nat Hentoff; the early rock critic Richard Goldstein; the feminist cultural critic Jill Johnston; the nightlife columnist Michael Musto; and the groundbreaking hip-hop writers Nelson George and Greg Tate.
Generations of New Yorkers found their first apartments through its seemingly endless classified section. The paper grew thinner over the years, as Craigslist cut into its revenue, and bloggers and early digital sites chipped away at its cultural position.
In 2015 it was sold by the Voice Media Group to Mr. Barbey, an heir to an American retail empire whose family owned The Reading Eagle newspaper in Pennsylvania for generations until 2019. He vowed to revitalize the paper, but in August 2017 he took it digital only and shuttered it a year later.
Mr. Calle said he had eyed The Voice for several years and got in touch with Mr. Barbey about buying the paper in recent months. “I literally just cold-called him and I said, ‘Hey, I’ve been thinking a lot about The Village Voice and a lot about journalism in the context of this year and I feel like we need to figure out a way to bring it back,’” he said.
“We had roughly half a dozen calls, just talking about the history of The Voice and getting to know each other, because he views himself as a kind of a steward and was just waiting for someone to come along.”
Mr. Barbey said he had been approached by a number of prospective owners.
“I originally bought The Village Voice to see if we could save it in a different media era,” he said. “Brian called and we talked for a while. After thinking about it, I figured he had the best philosophy about how to move forward with The Village Voice.”
The terms of the deal were not disclosed. In a news release, Street Media said the acquisition did not include the Obie Awards, the Off Broadway honors that will continue to be presented by the American Theater Wing.
Mr. Calle has experience running an alt-weekly, but his time as publisher and chief executive at LA Weekly has not been without incident. Formerly an opinion editor for The Orange County Register in California and other newspapers, Mr. Calle bought LA Weekly with a group of investors in 2017 from the Voice Media Group. (From 2012 to 2017, the Voice Media Group owned LA Weekly in addition to its flagship paper in New York.)
LA Weekly’s newsroom was quickly gutted after the sale, and former writers organized a boycott of the paper, pressing advertisers and other journalists to cut ties. Mara Shalhoup, the editor in chief of LA Weekly when Mr. Calle bought it, said that nearly the entire newsroom staff was fired. Ms. Shalhoup, who next week will start as ProPublica’s South editor, said she felt LA Weekly was not as focused on serious journalism after the acquisition by Mr. Calle.
“I think my opinion is shared by the community of readers in Los Angeles,” she said. “It was not the same quality publication after he purchased it as it was before.”
In 2018, David Welch, one of the investors, sued Mr. Calle and the other LA Weekly backers, alleging that they had mismanaged the paper. The suit was settled in 2019.
“That lawsuit was settled and we both went our separate ways,” Mr. Calle said. Speaking more generally of the detractors of LA Weekly under his leadership, he said, “I think the proof is in the results, which is that we’re still around and we’re on a nice trajectory.”
He added that the paper he acquired on Tuesday “will honor the traditions of The Village Voice of yesteryear.”
Mr. Calle said he planned to start a Voice podcast and increase the publication’s social media presence while looking for new revenue streams. He said he also envisioned The Voice performing a critical role of alt-weeklies: acting as a watchdog of mainstream media outlets.
Since The Voice stopped publishing new content in September 2018, the website has been periodically updated with articles pulled from its archives. Some staff members stayed on to work on building a digital archive. Mr. Calle said he and Mr. Barbey planned to donate The Voice’s print archives to a “major New York public institution” in the coming months.
― the serious avant-garde universalist right now (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 23 December 2020 20:11 (three years ago) link
let's twist again
let's not, and say we didn't
http://boycottlaweekly.com/who-is-semanal-media/ ^ since then:
Oh I forgot Calle was editor for CalWatchdog! A Koch Bros venture to launder the ideas of far-right goons like Dinesh D'Souza into mainstream! Good times. He also gave talks paid for by the notorious Mercer family, when they were trying to launch their far-right media venture.— April Wolfe (@AWolfeful) December 23, 2020
Okay, back to recent things Calle has done:-Repeatedly published sponcon w/ no attempt to identify it as such-Given copious page space to cannabis businesses he OWNED A STAKE in, while he was also collecting a salary in marketing for those businesses— April Wolfe (@AWolfeful) December 23, 2020
-Got sued by one of his co-investors, who proved Calle was incompetent and didn't seem to actually care about turning a profit at LA Weekly. Hmmmm wonder why!-Acted a fool in every interview, lying about me personally and my colleagues multiple times— April Wolfe (@AWolfeful) December 23, 2020
A reminder that Brian Calle has spent the last two years worshipping at the altar of the brazenly corrupt LA County Sheriff Alex Villanueva, the "Donald Trump of law enforcement."No greater sham than a pro cop "alternative paper." https://t.co/Y5eTPQfExC— Otto Von Biz Markie (@Passionweiss) December 22, 2020
Flash back to earlier this summer when at the height of the uprising, Brian Calle's Vichy LA Weekly seized the moment to spread Blue Lives Matter propaganda https://t.co/SphBXEWZZM— Otto Von Biz Markie (@Passionweiss) December 22, 2020
In a last ditch attempt to stave off looming bankruptcy, the brochure-sized LA Weekly is now resorting to selling its cover to ambulance chaser attorneys.This has to be the most pathetic thing I’ve ever seen in an industry that somehow continues to sink to new lows. pic.twitter.com/Te9SBMKuHb— Otto Von Biz Markie (@Passionweiss) March 6, 2020
― huge rant (sic), Wednesday, 23 December 2020 20:15 (three years ago) link
Yeah, I can't see this being a good thing given what's happened with L.A. Weekly. More likely, they've re-animated the Voice's corpse to do horrendous things against its will.
― birdistheword, Wednesday, 23 December 2020 22:27 (three years ago) link
There is approximately 0 chance that the latter is not the case, with a 0 margin of error.
― huge rant (sic), Wednesday, 23 December 2020 23:00 (three years ago) link
People lose their memories every 3 years, and you have to remind them that everything Brian Calle touches turns to turds and that his "gee golly who me" attitude belies a guy WHO LEARNED HOW TO LAUNDER RIGHT-WING TALKING POINTS INTO THE MAINSTREAM WITH JAMES O'KEEFE. https://t.co/8ms8olJnEn— April Wolfe (@AWolfeful) December 23, 2020
It makes me feel insane that people somehow forget Brian Calle was VP at the Claremont Institute & then was magically placed in the role of opinion editor for SoCal News Group. That's not an accident. He wasn't a journalist. This guy was trained for laundering and grifting.— April Wolfe (@AWolfeful) December 23, 2020
― huge rant (sic), Thursday, 24 December 2020 05:00 (three years ago) link
ugh
― curmudgeon, Friday, 25 December 2020 15:37 (three years ago) link
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/EzNe254VkAIIy71.jpg
― but also fuck you (unperson), Sunday, 18 April 2021 00:32 (three years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LKdHy18rZcI
― It Is Dangerous to Meme Inside (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 18 April 2021 00:40 (three years ago) link
And just realized after all these years that this song has kind of the “I Want Candy” variant of the Bo Diddley Beat.
― It Is Dangerous to Meme Inside (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 18 April 2021 00:41 (three years ago) link
Forgot the #onethread
― It Is Dangerous to Meme Inside (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 18 April 2021 01:15 (three years ago) link
why do my hips hurt
Took a gander at the twitter account of the guy Brian Calle just hired as the new CEO of Village Voice. He's a Hamptons Trump bro obsessed with the Hunter Biden laptop conspiracy theory. Surprised he didn't go private before the announcement. pic.twitter.com/VNqjEryGKB— April Wolfe (@AWolfeful) July 1, 2021
― bobo honkin' slobo babe (sic), Friday, 2 July 2021 06:42 (two years ago) link
For fuck's sake, someone please put the Voice out of its misery. It deserves a dignified death, not this.
― birdistheword, Friday, 2 July 2021 20:31 (two years ago) link
Same thought: just sad.
― clemenza, Friday, 2 July 2021 20:54 (two years ago) link
Think you'll find selling it to Calle eradicated any possibility of dignity.
― bobo honkin' slobo babe (sic), Friday, 2 July 2021 21:12 (two years ago) link
So they've got a Fall 2021 Print Edition online, and latest (?) music coverage:https://www.villagevoice.com/category/music-2021/
― dow, Monday, 20 September 2021 16:48 (two years ago) link
I Don’t trust new owner based on what I have read, so kind of ignoring new Voice
― curmudgeon, Tuesday, 28 September 2021 16:51 (two years ago) link