AAN News

Art-Book Publisher Stripped to the Essencenew

LA Weekly's Brendan Bernhard interviews a naked Benedikt Taschen, the king of the coffee table art book, as he lies flat on his back at an LA spa."Taschen is a postmodern tycoon for the 21st century, a brash and stylish entrepreneur who has turned the world of illustrated-book publishing upside down. ... The jet-setting 41-year-old German publisher produces exquisite coffee-table books that range in subject matter from the complete etchings of 18th-century Italian engraver Giovanni Battista Piranesi to the pornographic digital diaries of 21st-century Internet exhibitionist Natacha Merritt."
LA Weekly  |  09-13-2002  5:23 pm  | 

AAN Diversity Grant Recipients Head Back to School

Next grant deadline Oct. 14 (FULL STORY)
AAN Staff  |  09-13-2002  11:26 am  |  Association News

Seattle Weekly Asks "Where Is the Peace Movement?"new

For Sept. 11 week, Seattle Weekly looks not to the past but to the future and the prospect of "a nightmare war in Iraq," says Editor Knute Berger. The Weekly's anti-War issue includes a lead essay by Philip Gold, a conservative Marine defense analyst, and articles on the environmental and political implications of an Iraq War.
Seattle Weekly  |  09-12-2002  5:35 pm  | 

IRE Call for Entries

Investigative Reporters and Editors  |  09-12-2002  2:16 pm  |  Press Releases

Alternative Takes on Sept. 11 Anniversary

It's the first anniversary of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on New York and Washington, and the nation is in a period of mourning and memories. Some alternative weeklies are pointedly eschewing additional coverage, but most are taking a special look back at the day that changed everything. Their viewpoint, of course, is quite different from the largely sentimental outpourings of the mainstream media. Alt-weeklies look at Sept. 11 and see lost civil liberties, Muslim communities under siege and Americans who are confused, angry, sad and at times uplifted. Here is a sampling of the alternative view of Sept. 11. (FULL STORY)
AAN Staff  |  09-11-2002  2:38 pm  |  Industry News

New York Press Columnist Launching New Magnew

Greek shipping heir Taki Theodoracapolus, who writes Taki's Top Drawer for New York Press, is providing the financial backing for The American Conservative, a new magazine platform for Pat Buchanan's species of conservatism. The new magazine will be printed bi-weekly on newsprint, in a format similar to The Nation, and mailed to likely subscribers.
New York Times  |  09-10-2002  9:54 am  |  Industry News

Government Recall: Civil Libertiesnew

One phrase that has not been synonymous with Sept 11 is "civil liberty." The one-year anniversary not only marks a significant day in history but also the continuation of an assault on the Bill of Rights. "The U.S. Department of Justice continues to wage its own war to keep Americans in the dark about its vast incursions into their civil liberties — including secret arrests and deportations, lowered barriers to covert searches, and a 'don’t ask, won’t tell' attitude toward public scrutiny," Richard Byrne writes in the Boston Phoenix.
Boston Phoenix  |  09-10-2002  3:44 pm  | 

New Mass Media Launches Arts Magnew

Preview Connecticut, a free monthly magazine, will be devoted to a first look at Connecticut arts events rather than reviews, says New Mass Media Inc. in a news release. New Mass Media also publishes four AAN-member alt-weeklies, Hartford Advocate, New Haven Advocate, Valley Advocate and Fairfield County Weekly. The glossy magazine will appear the first week of every month and will be distributed statewide.
New Mass Media Inc. news release  |  09-09-2002  2:47 pm  |  Industry News

Being Muslim in Americanew

On the eve of the Sept. 11 anniversary, Naureen Shah reflects on being an American, in Fort Worth Weekly. The question many Muslim Americans, no matter their ethnicity, are asking is, "Do I belong here now, or did I ever?" Shah writes. For her, being a Pakistani-American means "being simultaneously bombarded with the American Dream (if you work hard like us and become a doctor then maybe you'll own a BMW like we do) and the Pakistani Dream (get married to a good Muslim and have four kids, preferably three boys and one girl)."
Fort Worth Weekly  |  09-09-2002  10:28 am  | 

Howard University Junior Joins AAN

Josef Sawyer is print journalism major (FULL STORY)
AAN Staff  |  09-09-2002  2:21 pm  |  Association News

New AAN Directory Available

Shipped to members last week (FULL STORY)
AAN Staff  |  09-09-2002  11:54 am  |  Association News

Venerable Underground Paper Moves Southnew

The Fifth Estate, one of the oldest and most radical underground newspapers in America, is pulling up its roots in Detroit and moving to the Pumpkin Hollow commune outside Nashville, Tenn., the Detroit Free Press reports. "Of the hundreds of underground papers that arose across the United States in the 1960s, the Fifth Estate is the oldest survivor," the daily reports. The 37-year-old anarchist paper, which has an international readership, once presented the severed head of a pig to the Wayne State University board of governors and published a picture of the event with the headline "Pig's Head Meets Head Pigs."
Detroit Free Press  |  09-06-2002  3:51 pm  |  Industry News

"I'm Here to Stay," New (Old) Seattle Weekly Editor Saysnew

Knute "Skip" Berger signs on with Seattle Weekly after a two-year hiatus from his job as editor in chief. He says he brought over Chuck Taylor from Seattle Times as managing editor because he was so impressed with Taylor's work on the strikers' version of the daily in 2000-2001. Seattle native Berger says he's a "mossback with no intention of moving anywhere else," and glad to be back in the alternative world.
Seattle Weekly  |  09-06-2002  1:46 pm  |  Industry News

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