New York Press

For the historical newspaper, see New York Press (historical).

Coordinates: 40°44′52″N 73°59′35″W / 40.74778°N 73.99306°W / 40.74778; -73.99306

New York Press

The June 7, 2006 front page of the
New York Press
Type Alternative weekly
Format Tabloid
Owner(s) Manhattan Media
Publisher Tom Allon
Editor-in-chief Jerry Portwood
Founded April 1988
Ceased publication August 2011
Headquarters 79 Madison Ave., 16th Floor
New York, NY 10016
US
ISSN 1538-1412
OCLC number 23806626
Website nypress.com

New York Press was a free alternative weekly in New York City, which was published from 1988 to 2011.[1] During its lifetime, it was the main competitor to The Village Voice. It was originally conceived and published by founder Russ Smith as a conservative voice in a traditionally liberal New York; later it became less political.[2]

The Press strove to create a rivalry with the Village Voice. Press editors claimed to have tried to hire away writer Nat Hentoff from the Voice.[3] Liz Trotta of The Washington Post compared the rivalry to a similar sniping between certain publications in the eighteenth-century British press, such as the Analytical Review and its self-styled nemesis, the Anti-Jacobin Review.[4]

The paper's weekly circulation in 2006 topped 100,000,[5] compared to about 250,000 for the Village Voice,[6] but this total fell to 20,000 by the end of the paper's run. The Press touted a Manhattan-focused, controlled distribution system while a good portion of the Village Voice's circulation is outside of the NYC metro area.

The print edition of New York Press was discontinued on September 1, 2011; its online edition was an aggregate of Manhattan Media's other publications. The print edition of Our Town Downtown was resumed in its place, after merging with New York Press.[2] NYPress.com is currently owned by Straus News.

Independent weekly (1988–2002)

The paper was founded by Russ Smith, who published it until he sold it in late 2002. Smith was assisted throughout this period by John Strausbaugh. Smith wrote a column starting with the first issue, which was published under the pseudonym "MUGGER"; it mostly focused on media coverage of politics, as well as restaurant reviews and personal anecdotes. At some point Smith began running the column under his own name, though still titled "Mugger"; it ran in the New York Press until 2009.

During Smith's editorship, the Press ran regular columns by the radical Alexander Cockburn, the conservative Taki Theodoracopolos, Christopher Caldwell, future Weekly Standard editor; Soul Coughing lead singer Mike Doughty (both under his own name and under the pseudonym "Dirty Sanchez"); Adam Mazmanian, Todd Seavey, Paul Lukas, occultist Alan Cabal,[7] Mistress Ruby, J. R. Taylor, Zach Parsi, CJ Sullivan, Dave Lindsay, Spike Vrusho, Ned Vizzini, and Daniel Radosh.[8] Many New York Press writers and editorial staff from this time have advanced in their careers: examples include the author and screenwriter William Monahan, author Dave Eggers; David Skinner, editor of the Weekly Standard and Humanities magazine; author and raconteur Toby Young; Amy Sohn, New York magazine contributing editor and author; author Jonathan Ames; theater critic Jonathan Kalb (two-time winner of the George Jean Nathan Award for Dramatic Criticism);, author Ben Greenman; faux-memoirist "JT LeRoy"; Scott McConnell, American Conservative magazine editor; writer Kevin R. Kosar, Sam Sifton, New York Times editor; David Corn, novelist and Mother Jones Washington Bureau Chief.

.

The City Sun film critic Armond White joined the staff in 1997 and wrote until 2011.[9]

In the tradition of earlier NY underground papers like East Village Other, New York Press also regularly published cutting-edge comic art, including early work by founding art director Michael Gentile, Kaz, Ben Katchor, Charles Burns, Mark Beyer, Mark Newgarden, Ward Sutton, M. Wartella, Gary Panter, Danny Hellman, Tony Millionaire and others. Ballpoint pen artist Lennie Mace was also among the regular contributing illustrators.

Post-acquisition (2003–2013)

There’s NYP 1988-2002, and then there’s whatever it’s been since. And that’s not just me gassing about the good old days. [...] [T]he pretense that there’s an unbroken timeline connecting the original New York Press to the current version is misleading and disingenuous at best.

John Strausbaugh, a week after the 20th anniversary issue, in April 2008.[10]

Smith sold the paper in late 2002 to investment group Avalon Equity Partners for around US$3 million.[11] Publishers Chuck Colletti and Doug Meadow became the president and C.O.O., respectively. Immediately after the sale, Strausbaugh was fired. After an interim editor declined to stay on, Jeff Koyen was hired away from The Prague Pill. From 2003 to 2005, as editor-in-chief, Koyen continued publishing approximately 100 pages each week. From 2007 onward, the Press ran at less than 40 pages each week.

From April 2003 to July 2004, the Press had a sister publication, New York Sports Express, that was a free weekly devoted to sports. The publishers discontinued it.

New York Press attracted strong criticism in March 2005 for a cover story entitled "The 52 Funniest Things About the Upcoming Death of the Pope," written by Matt Taibbi.[12] The cover prompted outraged comments from a variety of New York politicians.[13] Within a few weeks editor Jeff Koyen resigned due to the uproar. He was replaced by "interim editor" Alexander Zaitchik.

During Koyen's and Zaitchik's editorship, the paper ran regular columns by Paul Krassner, Michelangelo Signorile, and Matt Taibbi. Many of the writers from this time period, including Zaitchik, went on to work at The eXile.

Harry Siegel became the paper's editor in August 2005, bringing along with him three editors and writers (Tim Marchman, Jonathan Leaf and Azi Paybarah). He directed the Press to a greater focus on local politics. In February 2006 all four men resigned from the paper, after the publisher rejected a planned cover story that would have shown the Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons from the controversy in Denmark.[14] Siegel was replaced for a short time by Steve Weinstein, former editor of the New York Blade. In 2006, Adario Strange, former editor of The Source, became the new editor. A year later, in 2007, Strange left the paper to return to film directing. After being promoted to publisher, Nick Thomas named Jerry Portwood, former arts and entertainment editor, as editor of the Press.

On July 31, 2007, the paper was acquired by Manhattan Media, the owner of Avenue magazine and a small stable of New York community weekly newspapers. One of those weeklies, Our Town Downtown, was initially merged with the New York Press. It was revived independently as the Press' replacement in August 2011.

In September 2007, David Blum was named editor-in-chief of the New York Press. A former contributing editor of New York magazine and Esquire, Blum had previously been editor-in-chief of the Village Voice. In June 2008, Blum left the New York Press to assume another the editorship of 02138, a new Manhattan Media acquisition. Blum was replaced by Jerry Portwood.

From 2005 to 2007, the Press ran regular columns by Amy Goodman and Ed Koch (former Mayor of New York City), among others.

In 2013, Manhattan Media sold its Our Town downtown and NYPress.com to Straus News.[15]

Other noted contributors

Matt Taibbi was a contributor in the early 2000s until August 2005. Noted memoirist and longtime staff writer, occasional arts and entertainment critic, and author of the nearly two decade old "Slackjaw" column, Jim Knipfel was one of the paper's only mainstays for more than thirteen years. "Slackjaw" ran in the Philadelphia Welcomat for five years before it was picked up by the Press in 1993, where it continued through June 2006. Later, Knipfel worked as the Press' head writer.[16][17] Stephanie Sellars wrote the Lust Life column in 2006–2007, which featured stories about sex from the perspective of a bisexual polyamorist. Film critic Armond White was another of the paper's mainstays.

See also

References

  1. Jeremy Glass (24 November 2014). "5 Defunct Magazines that Changed America". Thrillist. Retrieved 1 May 2016.
  2. 1 2 "New York Press Is Dead, Long Live Our Town Downtown", Kat Stoeffel, The Observer, 18 October 2011.
  3. New York Press - THE EDITORS - Resolutions for the Unresolved
  4. Liz Trotta (26 April 1999). "Don't Stop the 'Press'". Insight on the News.
  5. New York Press | Association of Alternative Newsweeklies
  6. The Village Voice | Association of Alternative Newsweeklies
  7. Christopher Knowles (2007). Our Gods Wear Spandex: The Secret History of Comic Book Heroes. San Francisco, Calif.: Weiser Books. pp. 197–198. ISBN 1-57863-406-7. ...New York City, where Franki eats jelly beans with icecream the occult renaissance outlived the Sixties. Groups like the OTO were very active there in the 1970s, and like-minded esotericists gathered in occult bookshops like the Magickal Childe in Chelsea. While the rest of the counterculture movement was being co-opted, these initiates created a counterculture of their own--a close-knit community devoted to drugs, sex, and magic. Luminaries like former Village Voice writer Alan Cabal,...
  8. Who Walk In Brooklyn » Blog Archive » Jim Knipfel: A Swell Looking Babe
  9. Coscarelli, Joe (July 22, 2011). "New York Press to Close? Manhattan Media Publisher Tom Allon Makes No Promises Beyond Labor Day". The Village Voice. Retrieved January 31, 2016.
  10. New York Press – Mailbox
  11. Window of Opportunity, page 1 - News - Village Voice - Village Voice
  12. New York Press - MATT TAIBBI - The 52 Funniest Things About The Upcoming Death of The Pope
  13. "New York News, Traffic, Sports, Weather, Photos, Entertainment, and Gossip - NY Daily News". Daily News. New York. 2010-09-29.
  14. http://thepoliticker.observer.com/2006/02/ny-press-kills-cartoons-staff-walks-out.html
  15. Isis Venture Partners sells Manhattan Newspaper Group to Straus News
  16. Dylan Stableford (2006-06-12). "Longtime Columnist Jim Knipfel Out at NYPress". Mediabistro.com.
  17. Jim Knipfel began writing the Slackjaw column for Philadelphia's Welcomat in 1987
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