Salient (magazine)

Salient

The cover of Salient magazine 11 April 2005, designed by Dave Batt

The cover of Salient magazine 11 April 2005
Editor Emma Hurley and Jayne Mulligan
News editors
  • Kate Robertson
Designers
  • Ella Bates-Hermans
Staff writers
  • Philip McSweeney
  • Charlotte Doyle
  • Gus Mitchell
Frequency Weekly (during non-summer trimesters) resulting in 25 issues annually
Circulation 16,000[1]
Year founded 1938
Company Victoria University of Wellington Students' Association
Based in Wellington, New Zealand
Website salient.org.nz
OCLC number 227003028

Salient is the weekly students' magazine of the Victoria University of Wellington Students' Association (VUWSA) at Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand. Salient was established in 1938[2] and originally published in newspaper format, but is now published as a magazine. Salient's style and editorial position can change from year to year due to changes in editors. However, the magazine has generally taken a left-wing stance.

Organisation

Editor

The Salient editor-in-chief is an employee of VUWSA operating under a charter that grants editorial independence. The editor is appointed and employed under a fixed term contract that covers roughly the beginning to end of the academic year. Previous involvement with the magazine is not a prerequisite for applicants, although most have had some role at Salient prior to their editorship. At various times in Salient's history, and consistently since 2011, the editorship has been shared between two people.

Notable past editors include former Prime Minister Geoffrey Palmer, editor of Metro magazine Simon Wilson, Queen's Counsel Hugh Rennie, and New Zealand Listener writer Toby Manhire.[3]

Former editors

  • 2015 Sam McChesney
  • 2014 Cam Price and Duncan McLachlan[4]
  • 2013 Molly McCarthy and Stella Blake-Kelly
  • 2012 Ollie Neas and Asher Emanuel
  • 2011 Uther Dean and Elle Hunt
  • 2010 Sarah Robson
  • 2009 Jackson James Wood
  • 2008 Tristan Egarr
  • 2007 Steve Nicoll
  • 2006 James Robinson
  • 2005 Emily Braunstein
  • 2004 Sarah Barnett
  • 2003 Michael Appleton
  • 2002 Max Rashbrooke
  • 2001 Nikki Burrows
  • 2000 Nikki Burrows
  • 1999 Mike Beggs
  • 1998 Jonathan Hill
  • 1997 Toby Manhire
  • 1996 James Palmer
  • 1995 Vic Waghorn
  • 1994 Andrew Chick
  • 1993 Tony Smith
  • 1992 Cathie Sheat
  • 1991 Carl Dawson
  • 1990 Barbara Duke
  • 1989 Belinda Howard
  • 1988 Bernie Steeds
  • 1987 Grant O'Neill
  • 1986 Richard Adams
  • 1985 Jane Hurley
  • 1984 Sally Zwartz
  • 1983 Mark Cubey
  • 1982 Mark Wilson
  • 1981 Stephen A'Court
  • 1980 Stephen A'Court
  • 1979 Peter Beach
  • 1978 Simon Wilson
  • 1977 David Murray
  • 1976 John Ryall
  • 1975 Antony Ward, Mark Derby, Bruce Robinson
  • 1974 Roger Steele
  • 1973 Peter Franks, Roger Steele
  • 1972 Gil Peterson
  • 1971 Roger Cruickshank, George Rosenberg
  • 1970 David Harcourt
  • 1969 Roger Wilde
  • 1968 Bill Logan
  • 1967 Gerard Curry, Barrie Saunders
  • 1966 Hugh Rennie
  • 1965 Hugh Rennie, John Llewellyn
  • 1964 Bill Alexander, David Wright, Anthony Haas
  • 1963 Geoffrey Palmer, Ian Grant, Robin Bromby
  • 1962 Murray White
  • 1961 Baldwin March
  • 1960 Ian Grant
  • 1959 Colin Bickler
  • 1958 Terry Kelliher
  • 1957 Conrad Bollinger, Antony Wood
  • 1956 Nick Turner
  • 1955 Brian Shaw
  • 1954 Dan Donovan
  • 1953 Trevor Hill
  • 1952 Trevor Hill
  • 1951 Bill Cameron, Maurice McIntyre
  • 1950 Denny Garrett
  • 1949 Peter Jenkins, Denny Garrett
  • 1948 Bill Cameron, Jean Melling, Alec McLeod
  • 1947 Alec McLeod
  • 1946 Bruce Milburn, Lyster Paul, Bill Cameron
  • 1945 W.K.T. (Kemp) Fowler
  • 1944 W.K.T. (Kemp) Fowler
  • 1943 Cecil Crompton
  • 1942 George Turner, Cecil Crompton
  • 1941 Shirley Grinlinton
  • 1940 Maurice Boyd
  • 1939 Derek Freeman
  • 1938 A.H. (Bonk) Scotney

News

Salient news is predominately focused on student issues, the students' association, and the university itself. However, Salient has also reported on national and international items outside of "student" issues. For instance there was significant coverage of the Iraq invasion in 2003. Previous editors include Sophie Boot (2014), Chris McIntyre (2013), Stella Blake-Kelly and Hugo McKinnon (2011), Molly McCarthy (2010), Michael Oliver (2009), Seonah Choi (2008), Laura McQuillan (2007), Nicola Kean (2006), and Keith Ng (2004-2005).

Salient is a member of the Aotearoa Student Press Association (ASPA), which has intermittently had a press gallery journalist in the New Zealand House of Representatives. As Salient is based in Wellington, the ASPA press gallery associate has typically doubled-up as the news editor for Salient. The current press gallery representative is Sophie Boot.[5]

Design

Salient's retired 2013 logo

Salient employs a full-time designer who is responsible for the look of the magazine. Because the designer is typically employed for only a one-year term, the visual aesthetic of the magazine can change significantly from year to year. Previous designers include Imogen Temm (2014), Laura Burns (2013),[6] Juliette Wanty (2010),[7] Rory Harnden (2009), Tony Barnao (2007-2008), Grant Buist (2007) and Dave Batt (2005).[8]

Comics

Salient has been a home to a number of comics and cartoons, and they traditionally have their place on the last page of the magazine. Past comics such as ASCII and Grant Buist's Brunswick have won critical awards, with ASCII winning an Aotearoa Student Press Association (ASPA) award in 2005.[9][10] Previous comics have included Being Blind,[11] Man, ASCII (originally published in Waikato University's Nexus' magazine'),[9] Newtown Ghetto Anger,[12] The Chronicle, Drunk Duck,[13] Uni Life, Super Academic Friends,[14] The Academic Idol Comic, and G33K by Sparx.[15]

Website

As well as publishing in print, Salient operates a frequently updated website. In 2013, the Salient website was redeveloped, and won the award for best website at the ASPAs.[16]Categories:

Radio station

Salient FM
City Wellington
Frequency 88.3 FM
First air date 2007
Format Student radio

Salient FM, known as VBC until 2015, is a non-profit station which has operated at Victoria University of Wellington since 2007.[17] It took the place of Radio Active as the university's campus-based and student-oriented radio station. It is funded by the university and VUWSA through the budget allocated for Salient, and also has advertisers and sponsors.[18]

In October 2013, VUWSA held a referendum asking whether it should cease funding the station from 2014 after a student moved a motion requesting a referendum at VUWSA's AGM.[19] Out of the 2,105 votes cast on the question, 61 percent favoured continuing to fund the VBC.[20]

As of May 2014, VUWSA President Sonya Clark had been made a trustee of the defunct VBC Trust in order to wind it down, so that VUWSA could take control of the station. The Trust owed IRD about $3,000 in unpaid tax, which Clark said VUWSA intended to pay. The 2014 Salient editors expressed an interest in transforming the VBC into "Salient Radio".[21] In 2015, the station was rebranded Salient FM.

History

The student magazine of Victoria University of Wellington has been published under a number of different titles since the early twentieth century: Spike (1902–1964), Smad (1930–1937), and finally Salient (1938–).[22]

Salient was originally published in newspaper format, but is now published as a magazine and online.

ASPA Awards

Salient has participated in the ASPA Student Media Awards since their inception in 2003. The magazine dominated the first two years of the awards winning amongst other categories Best Publication in 2003 and 2004. Otago's Critic is generally seen as Salient's strongest competition and in 2005 turned the tables, sweeping a number of categories including Best Publication with Salient coming second. Critic won Best Publication again in 2006 and Salient came second.

In 2009, Salient won the award for Best Publication. Salient dominated these awards with five first places and eight other placings.[23] In 2011, Salient also won best publication. However, in both 2012 and 2013 Salient has been runners-up in best publication to Critic.

Waghorn affair

In 1995 there was controversy surrounding the editor Vic Waghorn, such that a Special General Meeting of VUWSA was called in June to dismiss her from the role. The motion to dismiss Waghorn at the meeting was soundly defeated 250 to 3, but it was not the end of the matter. Personal grievances and accusations she had misappropriated funds led to her being suspended in September by the VUWSA Executive. In response, Waghorn managed to change the cover of the final issue of Salient "to a cartoon depiction of cunnilingus captioned 'suck it hard'". Most of the covers were removed before release however.[24]

The affair led to a change to the VUWSA constitution so that it would be harder to dismiss a Salient editor in the future.[24]

Fee rise leak and court injunction

In September 2005, the Vice-Chancellor of Victoria University obtained a court injunction to prevent an issue of Salient from being distributed[25][26] – thought to be the first time in the magazine's history this has happened. The issue of Salient contained information obtained from leaked University Council documents with details about possible university fee increases of 5 to 10 percent. The controversy made national media, with several items on the television news. The university failed to realise that information was put on to the ASPA newswire, hence the information was published in several other student magazines and on the internet. Distribution of Salient was eventually allowed, four days late after Salient and the university reached an out-of-court settlement. The documents were returned to the university, reportedly with pictures of male genitalia drawn over them.[27]

Listing of Chinese people as a species to be wary of

In April 2006, Salient published a short piece which put "Chinese", along with animals like poisonous snakes and penguins, in a list of "top five species we should be wary of". The supposed "joke" upset the Chinese community and caused huge protests from both Chinese students and the Chinese Embassy. Accused of being blatantly racist, editor James Robinson apologised, saying "It was a ridiculous jab that was honestly so stupid I didn't even think twice about it." However, he argued people who were offended had misinterpreted it: "We put 'the Chinese' between 'penguins' and 'very poisonous snakes' on the list, and people somehow took it seriously." He also defended his right to publish it, saying "It's not hate speech or inciting violence against the Chinese race. It would be a dangerous precedent to come out and say, 'Sorry, we were totally out of our minds to print such a thing'."[28]

Naked Hu Jintao cover

In May 2008, Salient published a feature article concerning the rise of China as a new world superpower. To promote this article the cover that week depicted a naked, yet to be identified, Salient staffer draped in a Chinese flag, with Hu Jintao's face photoshopped onto their own. The cover invoked a strong reaction from the Wellington Chinese community, with pro-China students removing the magazine from distribution at the University's Karori Campus. Following this disruption, the Chinese Students' Association of Victoria University presented a petition of 133 signatures calling for an apology. To date, Salient has not apologised.[29] Responses from the Chinese community were mixed, with some commentators mentioning that this controversial cover (in conjunction with the 2006 satirical comparison of Chinese to dangerous animals) resulted in a possible ban on Salient writers travelling to China.

Lundy 500

See also: Lundy murders

In July 2009, Salient editor Jackson Wood courted controversy by announcing the "Lundy 500", an event whereby "teams of vehicles ... [would] travel from Petone to Palmerston North as convicted double murderer Mark Lundy did in 2000, before murdering wife Christine and daughter Amber, according to the prosecution at his 2002 trial." Participants were tasked with doing the trip in 68 minutes or less, the same time Lundy is argued to have driven the distance. Wood argued that the "event was designed to draw attention to some of the inconsistencies in the New Zealand legal system", and emphasised that he wasn't encouraging anyone to break the law.[30] However, the proposed event was harshly criticised in the media,[31][32] and on August 2, it was announced that the event was to be cancelled. Wood apologised to the Lundy family and wrote that: "He acknowledged that their viewpoints were not adequately taken into account before the event was announced on Friday, and that there were other ways for this point to be communicated".[33]

A similar re-enactment of the travel involved in the Lundy case, dubbed the "Lundy Three Hundy" was proposed in 2013 by Nic Miller. It was likewise criticised in the media, with Mathew Grocott writing that "this event should not go ahead and if those involved have any human decency then it won't go ahead."[34]

See also

References

  1. "Advertising". Salient.org.nz. Retrieved 5 October 2013.
  2. "History of VUWSA". Victoria University of Wellington Students' Association.
  3. Du Fresne, Karl (11 February 2012). "Salient magazine breeds ruling elite". The Dominion Post. Retrieved 26 February 2014.
  4. Stella Blake-Kelly; Molly McCarthy (23 September 2013). "Editorial – Victoria University". Salient.org.nz. Retrieved 7 October 2013.
  5. "Press Gallery List". Parliament.govt.nz. New Zealand Parliament. Retrieved 19 February 2014.
  6. "Laura Burns on Behance". behance.net.
  7. "Salient magazine". juliettewanty.com.
  8. "Salient magazine". spraystation.blogspot.co.nz.
  9. 1 2 ASCII
  10. Brunswick
  11. Being Blind
  12. Newtown Ghetto Anger
  13. Tip Of The Iceberg Archived October 15, 2007, at the Wayback Machine.
  14. Super Academic Friends
  15. G33K Archived October 24, 2010, at the Wayback Machine.
  16. "Excellence in student media recognised". Voxy.co.nz. 6 October 2013. Retrieved 7 October 2013.
  17. Wellington City Council, Community Directory, The VBC 88.3FM
  18. "History of VUWSA". VUWSA. 2014. Retrieved 14 October 2014.
  19. "VUWSA Referendum 2013". Salient. 23 September 2013. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
  20. Boot, Sophie (7 October 2013). "VUWSA Suffers Electile Dysfunction". Salient Magazine. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
  21. Hurley, Emma (May 2014). "For VBC TBC". Salient magazine. Wellington. Retrieved 15 April 2015.
  22. Hamilton, Stephen (2002). A Radical Tradition: A History of the Victoria University of Wellington Students' Association. Wellington: Steele Roberts Publishers and VUWSA. p. 225. ISBN 1-877228-72-9.
  23. "Salient wins best publication", Salient Magazine 2009. Retrieved 14 September 2008.
  24. 1 2 Fowler, Nina (23 March 2009). "Salient Loves VUWSA". Salient magazine. Wellington. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
  25. Ng, Keith (3 October 2005). "We interrupt your regular programming...". Public Address. Retrieved 8 October 2013.
  26. "University wins court bid to stop student magazine publishing". New Zealand Herald. NZPA. 3 October 2005. Retrieved 26 February 2014.
  27. McCarthy, Molly (18 March 2013). "A Salient Birthday". Salient.org.nz. Retrieved 8 October 2013.
  28. Cheng, Derek (13 May 2006). "Joke about Chinese backfires on university". New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 8 October 2013.
  29. Choi, Seonah (7 July 2008). "Chinese students angry about naked president". Salient. Retrieved 8 October 2013.
  30. "Something big has arrived: Salient announces Lundy 500". Salient.org.nz. 31 July 2009. Retrieved 7 October 2013.
  31. "Students call off Lundy 500". NZherald.co.nz. 2 August 2009. Retrieved 7 October 2013.
  32. "'Lundy 500' not welcome here - Mayor". Manawatu Standard. Fairfax media. 1 August 2009. Retrieved 7 October 2013.
  33. "Lundy 500 cancelled". Salient.org.nz. 2 August 2009. Retrieved 7 October 2013.
  34. Grocott, Mathew (21 October 2013). "Grow up Nic Miller - if you can". Manawatu Standard. Retrieved 22 August 2014.
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