Publishers take new alternative routes: LA, OC Weekly vets getting back in the game.Two icons of the local alternative press are launching two very different publications this month. Jay Levin, who founded LA Weekly in 1978, has started work on a glossy monthly magazine called RealTalk LA along with the Web site RealTalkLA.com. The magazine's first issue, with a free distribution of 250,000, will carry a May cover date and reach newsstands during the last week of April. Meanwhile Will Swaim, former editor-publisher of OC Weekly, will debut an alternative weekly newspaper tiffed the District in Long Beach. Swaim expects to distribute 30,000 copies of the first issue on 600 newsracks with a cover date of April 11. Although Levin's project seems far afield from his newsprint newsprint low grade paper used for newspapers. Old newspapers are fed to cattle as an alternative roughage and may occasionally be ingested by dogs. Significant amounts of lead are accumulated in tissues; no cases of poisoning have been recorded in cattle, though it has been roots, he said RealTalk LA would stick to the progressive idealism idealism, the attitude that places special value on ideas and ideals as products of the mind, in comparison with the world as perceived through the senses. In art idealism is the tendency to represent things as aesthetic sensibility would have them rather than as of his previous successes. Levin said that he's hoping that through his magazine and Web site he can "reinvent re·in·vent tr.v. re·in·vent·ed, re·in·vent·ing, re·in·vents 1. To make over completely: "She reinvented Indian cooking to fit a Western kitchen and a Western larder" the concept of a city magazine and create the next evolution of the local online community." His ventures will target what he calls the "non-European demographic" of Hispanic, Asian, African-American and Middle Eastern people. Specifically, Levin plans to deliver advertisers a diverse segment of affluent, college-educated minorities in the 25- to 49-year-old age category. According to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. RealTalk research, the non-European demographic has about 700,000 households with incomes above $75,000 in Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850. . Levin faces a challenge in appealing to such varied ethnic groups. Planned stories he mentioned include a profile of business leaders working to improve the economic status of their employees or involved in community development, and a series on the relationship between minority youth in poverty and the criminal justice system. That's a far cry from the edgy fare that filled the LA Weekly during Levin's tenure, which included investigative pieces on Scientology and the onset of the AIDS crisis. "The overt, politically declarative de·clar·a·tive adj. 1. Serving to declare or state. 2. Of, relating to, or being an element or construction used to make a statement: a declarative sentence. n. agenda of the Weekly is not part of our agenda," Levin said. "We are not trying to be the alternative newsweekly news·week·ly n. pl. news·week·lies A weekly newsmagazine or newspaper that reports current events. ." RealTalk LA arrives as the magazine industry is stagnating. Last year total magazine advertising revenues increased 3.8 percent, according to the Publishers Information Bureau, essentially keeping pace with inflation and postal rate hikes. While the Audit Bureau of Circulation reported that magazine subscriptions increased 2.2 percent during the last half of 2006, some high-profile magazines dosed in that period, including Elle Girl, Premiere (the U.S. edition) and FHM FHM For Him Magazine FHM Fachhochschule München (Munich University of Applied Sciences, Germany) FHM Forest Health Monitoring FHM Familial Hemiplegic Migraine FHM Funeral Home Marker (genealogy) . Levin gravitated to the magazine format fur both business and aesthetic reasons. A magazine can attract a broader 'range of advertisers--national, regional and local--than a newspaper, especially in such categories as automotive, financial services The examples and perspective in this article or section may not represent a worldwide view of the subject. Please [ improve this article] or discuss the issue on the talk page. , apparel and telecom that Levin plans to go after. In terms of visual presentation, "the vibrancy and color of the city could be captured more readily" on magazine pages, he said. "I'm aware that major old-line segments of the magazine industry are not doing well, but I'm also aware that magazine advertising went up about 4 percent last year," he said. "Certain niche magazines and local and multicultural magazines are doing well." There is some skepticism among industry observers, however. A recent study from the City & Regional Magazine Association suggests potential weaknesses in a strategy of free distribution. "In all cases, 'free distribution' publications prove to be significantly less well-read, significantly less-valued and significantly less well-known than paid or requested publications," wrote consultant Charles Rodin, author of the study. "Despite the publicity surrounding the 'free distribution' floes in the advertising community, respondents in the affluent ZIP areas surveyed prove significantly less likely to be aware of them." Levin's decision to re-enter re·en·ter also re-en·ter v. re·en·tered, re·en·ter·ing, re·en·ters v.tr. 1. To enter or come in to again. 2. To record again on a list or ledger. v.intr. the L.A. media market comes after a string of other projects. After leaving LA Weekly in 1992, he launched Planet Central Television, an early experimental independent cable network. After losing a few million dollars, it folded in 1997 and Levin moved on to start an anti-poverty organization called Share With the Other L.A., and got involved plans for a Web site called GetHelp.org, which was never launched. He also developed a private practice in "spiritual psychology." He felt inspired to get back into publishing because of its ability '"to reveal the real culture." Just as LA Weekly chronicled the counterculture coun·ter·cul·ture n. A culture, especially of young people, with values or lifestyles in opposition to those of the established culture. coun scene, RealTalk LA will define the multi-ethnic culture of 21 st century Los Angeles. Online advertising will feature the same brands that buy in the print publication. Swaim's way Unlike Levin, Swaim plans to replicate his previous success in a new location. He calls Long Beach the largest city in the U.S. without an alternative weekly, and he sees it as the perfect market for his product. Relatively low real estate prices have brought a wave of young professionals to Long Beach from Orange County and other areas of Los Angeles, according to Swaim. Better yet, Long Beach has the identity of a self-contained city--a rarity in Southern California Southern California, also colloquially known as SoCal, is the southern portion of the U.S. state of California. Centered on the cities of Los Angeles and San Diego, Southern California is home to nearly 24 million people and is the nation's second most populated region, . In 1998, Swaim wrote a business plan for a Long Beach weekly at the request of his bosses at Stern Publishing, which owned OC Weekly. The company passed on the idea because of other concerns. Two years later the company changed its name to Village Voice Media, the present owner of both the LA Weekly and OC Weekly. Swaim refers to those two publications as editorial models for the District. He wants investigative journalism investigative journalism n → periodismo de investigación and plenty of humor humor, according to ancient theory, any of four bodily fluids that determined man's health and temperament. Hippocrates postulated that an imbalance among the humors (blood, phlegm, black bile, and yellow bile) resulted in pain and disease, and that good health was , because even the alternative press takes itself far too serious, he said. As for a political agenda, "this won't be a knee-jerk lefty paper," Swaim promised. "I'm just looking for Looking for In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with. great stories and Long Beach has them in abundance." The District hopes to have 20 advertisers in its first issue, dominated by the usual alternative advertisers: bars, concert venues, tanning tanning, process by which skins and hides are converted into leather. Vegetable tanning, a method requiring more than a month even with modern machinery and tanning liquors, employs tannin; its use is shown in Egyptian tomb paintings dating from 3000 B.C. spas and retailers with some national accounts. Swaim believes his readership will span college-age kids up to people in their 50s and 50s, with the target demo in the low 30s. Both Swaim and Levin financed their ventures by tapping individual investors, and both expect to break even within the first year. "This is media--everybody is out there competing for the pool of ad dollars," Levin concluded. "But L.A.'s a big community and there are billions of dollars spent on advertising. Media that's relevant to its audience always finds support." BY JOEL RUSSELL Staff Reporter |
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