AAN News

Westword Editor Recalls Haggard Scoop That Got Awaynew

In her column this week, Patricia Calhoun writes about her close encounter with Mike Jones, the male prostitute from Denver who recently outed evangelical leader Ted Haggard. Jones told his lurid tale first to Calhoun before ultimately deciding to spill the beans on a local radio show. Not to be outdone, Calhoun reports that Haggard bought "mass quantities" of cock rings and other sexual paraphernalia, according to a former Denver porn-shop clerk.
Westword  |  11-13-2006  10:12 am  |  Industry News

Phoenix New Times Article Prompts Goldwater Family to Seek File Closurenew

The heirs of the late Sen. Barry Goldwater are in a dudgeon over a recent cover essay, the alt-weekly reports. Stephen Lemons' "Goldwater Uncut" included details about the Republican icon's bawdy, hard-drinking lifestyle that didn't make it into an HBO documentary. Lemon's source: the Goldwater family's own correspondence from an archive established by the senator in 1959 with no restrictions on public access. The Arizona Historical Foundation has temporarily blocked access to part of the documents at the request of family members.
Phoenix New Times  |  11-13-2006  9:57 am  |  Industry News

MMA Issues Guidelines for Mobile Adsnew

Online Media Daily (reg. req.)  |  11-13-2006  2:36 pm  |  Industry News

Az. Republic Recaps New Times-Village Voice Culture Clashnew

Arizona Republic  |  11-13-2006  12:43 pm  |  Industry News

Jackson Free Press Editor Subpoenaed in Mayor's Trialnew

Jackson Free Press  |  11-13-2006  10:04 am  |  Industry News

Creating E-maginative Email Adsnew

Adotas  |  11-12-2006  10:20 pm  |  Industry News

Experts Project Increased Holiday Spending in '06new

Center for Media Research (reg. req.)  |  11-12-2006  10:15 pm  |  Industry News

NOW and Then: Toronto's NOW Magazine at 25new

Twenty-five years ago today the first issue of the Canadian alt-weekly hit the streets. In a look back, founders Alice Klein and Michael Hollett revisit the early days and their original vision of engaging the local community and capturing a cultural life missing from other media. It was a venture they didn't take lightly. "Marrying a loud, opinionated social consciousness with entrepreneurialism was like going to the dark side in those days," Klein writes.
NOW Magazine  |  11-09-2006  11:31 am  |  Industry News

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