Lee H. The worst newsletter ever. Just seen their latest cover portraying the Hidden Valley neighborhood as the most dangerous place to live. That is a lie! Creative Loafing staff needs to learn how thoroughly research before writing any article! Copy and print! The events I have been to that have been hosted by CL i. Best of Charlotte are always incredible and memorable. I recommend, especially if you are new to Charlotte, that you pick this up ASAP and use it to get to know your new city!
Bruce K. Great sections on the local music scene and the sex column is usually good for a giggle. Joseph M. A creepy paper that lacks integrity. Good source for the nightlife though. Jenn K. Use the band listings alot and enjoy seeing what all is going on in Charlotte. I dont think its a. Eric K. I enjoy reading Creative Loafing whenever I pick it up usually over coffee. Creative Loafing also keeps me abreast tee hee! Christmas is coming up, folks, and I could use a spa day! Nick S.
But the content is too hit or miss for me every week. They have their main cover story, which never seems to intrigue me, considering their slant on things.
Joy S. I have mixed feelings about Creative Loafing. The writers fail to engage me, which is sad… I wanted Creative Loafing to be our version of the Village Voice. It took time to build that level of excitement with readers. Every publication in town tried to get an exclusive interview with Tom Cruise when he was in town in filming Days of Thunder at the motor speedway in Concord. One publication got it. Before , the Charlotte Repertory Theatre had never produced a show as large as Angels in America , both in cost and attention.
On the CL cover from March 16, , a chiseled angel floats in front of the stars and stripes, her arms extended and upturned. So much of CL coverage surrounded the arts that Grooms knew this was their story to tell.
In the election, four of the five commissioners who had pulled funding from the ASC were voted out, and the succeeding board restored ASC funding. When Carlton Hargro moved to Atlanta in , he found a paper that covered communities in a way he had never seen before.
When a position opened up in , he applied and got the job. Two years later, when CL in Charlotte was looking for a new editor-in-chief, it plucked Hargro from its sister paper in Georgia. Pitkin tells me about the moment when the paper refocused its arts coverage to be more hyper-local. Kemp served as EIC of the Loaf on and off from to —he kept leaving and coming back for assorted professional reasons—and this was how he kicked off his third stint as boss.
When the team members started working on the music issue for , they chose to put LeAnna Eden, an African-American musician living in Charlotte, on the cover. Not everyone grasped the meaning of the Fourth of July issue. Was the middle finger in front of an American flag? Was the cover anti-patriotic? Inside the paper, Pitkin wrote about proper Fourth of July etiquette. And Pitkin is proud of that. After the last issue was printed on November 1, Pitkin and other ex-Loafers continued to gather as friends, hoping to work together again.
They had a good thing going, he reasoned. Why not keep it alive? They planned a benefit festival in NoDa, not just to help ex-staffers pay bills, but to raise seed money for a new alternative paper: Queen City Nerve. By the time you read this, Queen City Nerve will have printed its first issue on December 5.
Weekly , launched TCB in the same town after Womack laid him off five years ago. Clarey has passed some of his lessons to the ex-Loafers.
John Grooms has never faded from the CL family; he still grabs drinks with them at local dives. Mark Kemp showed up to the benefit in November, supporting his old colleagues and their venture. Many former editors are rooting for them from afar. Pitkin reminds me that the middle finger on the July cover was intended to do more than just piss folks off.
The same electricity keeps Loafers swinging away at the commonplace, even in a new era with no Loaf. When Creative Loafing stopped printing, Pitkin and the others could have shrugged and walked away.
0コメント