Here - AltWeeklies.com
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Here - AltWeeklies.com
2006 ConventionDaily Saturday|6.17.06 Little Rock, Ark. All in the (AAN) Family T By Monica Leas he answer? New Orleans. The questions came from former Gambit Weekly editor Michael Tisserand, who emceed an unusually sober AltWeekly Awards lunch Friday afternoon. “When I got the call to host this year’s awards, my first thought was, ‘Is AAN in so much financial trouble that they can no longer afford Dan Savage’s speaker fees?’” said Tisserand, fully clothed in the tux Gambit publisher Margo DuBos bought him when he started with the paper about eight years ago. “This is like a make-a-wish moment for me,” he said of the opportunity to crack jokes in front of a crowd while sporting his purple and pink polka-dotted bowtie. Tisserand’s more sincere comments came a little later when he thanked the association’s members for their support after Hurricane Katrina scattered some Gambit staffers across the globe and left others to piece life back together in New Orleans. “I always believed AAN was a family, but only in that harborslongstanding-grudges-that-would-make-no-sense-to-an-outsider kind of way,” said Tisserand, who had sold his New Orleans home two days earlier and stopped in Little Rock en route to his new home in Evanston, Ill. “When you helped remove financial worries for Gambit employees during the profoundly unsettling weeks right after the flood, you truly lived up to Robert Frost’s definition of home — that when you have to go there, they Willamette Week’s Byron Beck didn’t get the memo: No male strippers at this year’s lunch. Tisserand enjoys his ‘make-a-wish moment’ have to take you in. Thank you.” To show his gratitude, Tisserand offered Mardi Gras beads, fried peach pies from Hubig’s, a six-pack of Abita Restoration Ale and “Make Levees not War” stickers to those who jumped in quickest with answers to his brain-crunching trivia questions. And although the luncheon ensued sans stripteases or sneaker shots this year, there were at least a couple tawdry moments — like the flash of a busty pink puppet who appeared topless on an award-winning cover for Las Vegas Weekly. “I know I’m going to have a bad dream about that one tonight,” Tisserand said. In the, ahem, flesh, Byron Beck of Willamette Week and Cary Stemle of Louisville Eccentric Observer also bared their chests, sporting only suit coats and borrowed bowties. Their walk-on roles, an opportunity declined by several other editors, came with only a little arm-twisting from Tisserand. “Now he owes me big time,” Stemle said after recovering from his bare-chested exploit. “This is why I went into print — so I wouldn’t have to do this.” For the List of Winners, See P. 3 Bill Clinton’s Arkansas A By Max Brantley s a young general assignment reporter, one of my first “scoops” came in 1974. A young University of Arkansas law professor was going to announce a bid for Congress against Republican John Paul Hammerschmidt. The law prof lost that race for Congress. But he won quite a few more. His success wasn’t surprising. I knew Bill Clinton was a competitor. I’d seen him play fierce softball and a mean game of charades when my future wife was his colleague on the law school faculty. I knew he had charisma. My mother, the lifelong Republican, became a Clintonite on her first meeting in 1980. I could also tell you that you always had to listen very carefully to Bill Clinton. The word “parse” wasn’t in heavy use in the early 1980s, when Bill Clinton was governor and I was city editor of the Arkansas Gazette. But after more than a few disagreements on whether our reporters had sufficiently captured the nuance of one of his pronouncements, we decided to tape everything he said. Like most Southern liberals, I was conflicted about Bill Clinton. In general elections, particularly, he was clearly preferable to the alternative. But his “third way” politics often disappointed idealists like me. By the time he was the Democratic nominee for president, I was editor of a new alternative weekly, the Arkansas Times. Being generally supportive of Bill Clinton amounted to an alternative media viewpoint in Little Rock. The dominant daily newspaper had little good to say about him -- then and still. There’s no doubt his campaign and our coverage -- one of our reporters wrote one of the early Clinton biographies -- helped build the reader base we enjoy today. The Clinton presidency reaped a whirlwind for Arkansas. A special counsel investigation introduced Arkies to the heat of the TV camera, the imperfection of big-name journalists and the vicious partisanship of modern politics, not to mention some punishing legal bills and jail terms. It seemed so personal to us. We knew the president and first lady as Bill and Hillary. Others making headlines included Webb and Bruce and Vince and Kaki. It was good reading, that’s for sure. What do we have to show for it today, besides memories? A huge presidential library, for one thing, its parking lot filled with cars from all over. They bring people of all political stripes, drawn by a man who remains one of the world’s most compelling personalities. 463!!! AAN thanks each and every one of the 463 people who have shared this year’s Convention with us. We hope you’ve all enjoyed it. See you next year in Portland! 2 This issue of the Arkansas Times -- from May 7, 1992 -- was also the first after the Times switched to a weekly newspaper from a monthly magazine. It’s hard for me to separate the personal from the political. Bill Clinton appointed my wife to a judgeship in 1986. As president, he gave my daughter’s college singing group a White House tour and a late-night Oval Office bull session. He gave the Arkansas Times his last interview as president, a quick chat in an airplane hangar on his farewell fly-around. Thanks to him, I was invited over the years to write pieces for newspapers around the world. Knowing Bill Clinton, I think he’d probably forgive me if he ever came across the one I wrote for a newspaper in The Hague. Presuming he can read Dutch. Max Brantley is editor of the Arkansas Times. Keynote and Program Update The second block of seminars will start 15 minutes early, at 11:30 a.m., and end at 12:45 p.m. Those attending the Keynote Lunch should proceed directly to the Wally Allen Ballroom of the Statehouse Convention Center to be seated by 1 p.m. President Clinton will speak first. And The Winners Are ... Arts Criticism Cartoons Small First: “Playing with the Passion,” “Attachment Disorder” and “Going Down in History in Flames” Steven G. Kellman, San Antonio Current Second: “Desires vs. Duties,” “De-Evolution, Albee Style” and “Down, Home” Byron Woods, Independent Weekly Third: “Private Texas,” “Grand Theft History” and “Feeling Negative” Elaine Wolff, San Antonio Current Honorable Mention: “Drastic Romantic,” “Evil’s Puppets” and “Raven’s Son” Michael Bowen, Pacific Northwest Inlander 3 or fewer newspapers First: “The HR Department” Ed Harrington Second: “BEK” Bruce Eric Kaplan Third: “Image Control by Mr. Fish” Dwayne Booth Large First: “Blown Opportunity,” “Lost in the Stars” and “Pulling Punch Lines” Jim Ridley, Nashville Scene Second: “Africa Screams,” “Diary of a Mad White Woman” and “Chow Fun” Kristian Lin, Fort Worth Weekly Third: “Objects of Scorn,” “Memory Pictures” and “Poise II Men” Jeffry Cudlin, Washington City Paper Honorable Mention: “Gender Benders?,” “Dante, Dude” and “The Many, the One, and the Two” Jeffrey Gantz, Boston Phoenix Column Arts Feature Small First: “Panic Attack” David Lee Simmons, Gambit Weekly Second: “Diamonds and Rusty” Paula Routly, Seven Days Third: “Lush Be a Lady” Gillian Fassel, San Antonio Current Honorable Mention: “Lunatic Fringe” Owen Holmes, Folio Weekly Large First: “Roboscalper” David Downs, East Bay Express Second (tie): “Big Cheese” Jimmy Magahern, Phoenix New Times Second (tie): “Unfinished Symphony” Malcolm Gay, Riverfront Times Third: “Tough Love for the Arts” Roger Downey, Seattle Weekly 4 or more newspapers First: “Mild Abandon” E.J. Pettinger Second: “Tom the Dancing Bug” Ruben Bolling Third: “This Modern World” Tom Tomorrow Small First: Miriam Axel-Lute, Metroland Second: Bruce George Wingate, Fairfield County Weekly Third: Steve Schneider, Orlando Weekly Honorable Mention (tie): Dusty Rhodes, Illinois Times Honorable Mention (tie): Derek Jennings, Independent Weekly Large First: “Ask a Mexican!” Gustavo Arellano, OC Weekly Second: “Social Studies” Vincent Williams, Baltimore City Paper Third: “The Dubliner” Katie Haegele, Philadelphia Weekly Honorable Mention: Patricia Calhoun, Westword Column - Political Small First: “Poli Psy” Judith Levine, Seven Days Second: Donna Ladd, Jackson Free Press Third: Andrew Wheat, The Texas Observer Honorable Mention: “Politics and Other Mistakes” Al Diamon, Portland Phoenix Large First: “Commie Girl” Rebecca Schoenkopf, OC Weekly Second: “Citizen Servatius” Tara Servatius, Creative Loafing (Charlotte) Third (tie): C.J. Janovy, The Pitch Third (tie): “Potter’s Field” Chris Potter, Pittsburgh City Paper Honorable Mention: Robin Meyers, Oklahoma Gazette Cover Design Small First: Jeffrey Bland, Style Weekly Second: David Jayne, David Robert and Sandra Hoover, Reno News & Review Third: Agnes Carrera, Michael Germana and Dan Santat, Pasadena Weekly Honorable Mention: Matt Ansoorian, Bill Kienzel, Tanner Goldbeck and Branden Aroyan, Santa Barbara Independent Large First: Benjamen Purvis, Las Vegas Weekly Second: Tom Carlson, Riverfront Times Third: Derrick Rainey, SF Weekly Honorable Mention: Nathan Paolinelli and Jeff Drew, Weekly Alibi Ed Harrington’s “The HR Department” took First Place in Cartoons that appear in 3 or fewer papers. See AltWeekly Awards, P. 4 3 Drugs Reporting Small First: “Searching for Justice” Brita Belli, Fairfield County Weekly Second: “Overprescribed Drugs” Jill Kramer, Pacific Sun Third: “Chemical Casualties” Joel Warner, Boulder Weekly Large First: “Crackpot Crackdown” Jordan Smith, Austin Chronicle Second: “The Perfect Drug” Sarah Fenske, Phoenix New Times Third: “Lost & Found” Luke Turf, Westword Honorable Mention: “Little Court of Horrors” Beth Hawkins, City Pages Editorial Layout Small First: “No Place to Go,” The Coast Second: “Y,” The Coast Third: “Right Place, Right Time,” Style Weekly Honorable Mention: “Inside Eden,” Monterey County Weekly Large First: “XXXXXXXL,” Baltimore City Paper Second: “Rising and Shining,” Seattle Weekly Third: “Cool and Collected,” Miami New Times Honorable Mention (tie): “Extra Innings,” Miami New Times Honorable Mention (tie): “Head, Shoulders, Knees and Woes,” Washington City Paper Feature Story Small First: “Lord God!” Leslie Newell Peacock, Arkansas Times Second: “Hope Floats” Brandon Walters, Style Weekly Third: “No Apologies” Casey Parks, Jackson Free Press Large First: “Baby Man” Joe Watson, Phoenix New Times Second: “Death of a Salesman” Jason Cherkis, Washington City Paper Third: “Green to the Core” Judith Lewis, L.A. Weekly Honorable Mention: “A Man Named Sue” Will Harper, East Bay Express Food Writing Small First: Ann M. Colford, Pacific Northwest Inlander Second: Mackensy Lunsford, Mountain Xpress Third: Ella Lawrence, North Bay Bohemian Honorable Mention: Ari LeVaux, Missoula Independent Large First: Bill Addison, Creative Loafing (Atlanta) Second: Jonathan Gold, L.A. Weekly Third: Dara Moskowitz, City Pages Honorable Mention: Charles Ferruzza, The Pitch One of Jeffrey Bland’s cover designs for Style Weekly that earned him First Place in the Small Papers Category. 4 “Snowman Robot” garnered Philadelphia Weekly’s Justin DeGarmo First Place in Illustration, Large Papers. Format Buster Small First: “It’s Our Water” Jessica Lyons, Monterey County Weekly Second: “BW’s City Council Starting Line-Up” Nicholas Collias, Erin Ruiz and Leila Ramella, Boise Weekly Third: “A Modest Proposal” Orlando Weekly staff Honorable Mention: “Here It Comes” John Borgmeyer, Nell Boeschenstein, Mike Uriss and Bill LeSueur, C-Ville Weekly Large First: “Unreal Presents Soulard Mardi Gras Bingo” Riverfront Times staff Second: “Worst Case Scenario” Kenny Be, Westword Third: “Remembering Our Camelot” Tommy Craggs, SF Weekly Honorable Mention: “Fight Organized Crime” Enzo DiMatteo, NOW Magazine Illustration Small First: “The Holiday Planner” Kate O’Connor, The Coast Second: “Biting Back” Glenda Chiu, Pasadena Weekly Third (tie): “Losing Choice” Chris Buzelli and Angela Moore, Santa Fe Reporter Third (tie): “Risky Business” Jo Scott, Seven Days Large First: “Snowman Robot” Justin DeGarmo, Philadelphia Weekly Second: “Confessions of a Substitute Teacher” James Yamasaki, Nashville Scene Third: “Bill Gates” Tra Selhtrow, Seattle Weekly Honorable Mention: “Christmas Bush” Tim Gough, Philadelphia Weekly Investigative Reporting Small First: “A Death in McAllen” Dave Mann, The Texas Observer Second: “The Road to Meadville” series Donna Ladd, Jackson Free Press Third: “All Shook Up” Cara DeGette, Colorado Springs Independent Honorable Mention: “Beat by the System” Susan Clark Armstrong, Folio Weekly Large First: “PGE” series Nigel Jaquiss, Willamette Week Second: “Worst Homocide” series David S. Bernstein, Boston Phoenix Third: “The Fall Guy” A.C. Thompson, San Francisco Bay Guardian Honorable Mention: “Bomb Bait” Paul McMorrow, Boston’s Weekly Dig Media Reporting/Criticism Small First: Krestia DeGeorge, City Newspaper Second: Todd Stauffer, Jackson Free Press Third: Fiona Morgan, Independent Weekly Honorable Mention: Leigh de Armas, Orlando Weekly Large First: Nikki Finke, L.A. Weekly Second: Sydney Schanberg, The Village Voice Third (tie): Chad Garrison and Malcolm Gay, Riverfront Times Third (tie): Bob Norman, New Times BPB Honorable Mention: Chris Potter, Pittsburgh City Paper Music Criticism Small First: “J Spot” Jonanna Widner, Santa Fe Reporter Second: John Brodeur, Metroland Third: “Boys, Express Yourselves” Stephen George, LEO Weekly Honorable Mention: Frank De Blase, City Newspaper Large First: Sarah Godfrey, Washington City Paper Second: Kandia Crazy Horse, Creative Loafing (Charlotte) Third: Rob Harvilla, East Bay Express Honorable Mention: Chris Herrington, The Memphis Flyer News Story - Long Form Small First: “Torture in Maine’s Prison” Lance Tapley, Portland Phoenix Second: “St. Joseph’s Night Gone Blue” Katy Reckdahl, Gambit Weekly Third: “Guards Sound Alarm” Sue Sturgis, Independent Weekly Honorable Mention: “Getting Plucked” Dave Mann, The Texas Observer Large First: “Attack of the Killer Weed” Wyatt Olson, New Times BPB Second: “For Sale” Laura McPhee, NUVO Third: “Cross to Bare” Robert Nelson, Phoenix New Times Honorable Mention: “Hijacking at the Hospital” Pablo Lastra, Fort Worth Weekly News Story - Short Form Small First: Adam Lynch, Jackson Free Press Second: Rick Marshall, Metroland Third: Bill Davis, Charleston City Paper Honorable Mention: Andrew MacLeod, Monday Magazine Large First: Alan Prendergast, Westword Second: Kristen Hinman, Riverfront Times Third: Paul McMorrow, Boston’s Weekly Dig Honorable Mention: Kia Gregory, Philadelphia Weekly Photography Small First: “Under the Bridge” Walter Coker, Folio Weekly Second: “A-Z Charleston Artists” Nancy Santos, Charleston City Paper Third: “My Cuba” Jeff Clark, Ventura County Reporter Honorable Mention: “At the Crossroads” Michael Brown, Illinois Times See AltWeekly Awards, P. 6 “Under the Bridge” earned Folio Weekly’s Walter Coker First Place in Photography, Small Papers. 5 Large First: “Losing Hanna, Part 2” Jim Stawniak, Creative Loafing (Atlanta) Second: “We Have Been Blessed” Jeff Fusco, Philadelphia Weekly Third: “A Gentle Faith” Cameron Knight, Cincinnati Citybeat Honorable Mention: “Naked Ambition” Bootsy Holler, Seattle Weekly Special Section Small First: “DISH,” Charleston City Paper Second: “7 Nights,” Seven Days Third: “Best of Boise,” Boise Weekly Honorable Mention: “Back to School,” The Coast Large First: “CP Choice,” Philadelphia City Paper Second: “Best of L.A.,” L.A. Weekly The Coast’s Web site won First Place for Small Papers in the inaugural year of the Web Site category. Third: “Minnesota’s Greatest Hits,” City Pages Honorable Mention: “State of the Children,” Oklahoma Gazette Web Site Small First: The Coast Second: Seven Days Third: Tucson Weekly Honorable Mention: Jackson Free Press Large First: Seattle Weekly Second: The Village Voice Third: Baltimore City Paper Honorable Mention: Metro Times Friday Around the Convention Newsletter Staff Photos by Roxanne Jo Mitchell EDITOR Jon Whiten WRITER Monica Leas PHOTOGRAPHER Roxanne Jo Mitchell CONTRIBUTORS Amy Gill, Joy Howard Roxanne Jo Mitchell Photography roxannejomitchell.com Laura Dell leads the “Management Tools for Editors Who Don’t Like to Manage” session. 6 Dwayne Booth at the AltWeekly Awards Lunch, where he picked up a Third Place award for his cartoon, “Image Control by Mr. Fish.” A Party With a Different View T Betsy Otwell, hostess extraordinaire, builds a Mr. Picasso-Head. he view for Friday night’s cocktail gathering wasn’t quite as expansive as a sunset over the Arkansas River. But over 200 convention-goers soaked up impressive indoor imagery at the Arkansas Arts Center, where a traveling Picasso exhibit is showing this summer. Over appetizers, the group swapped stories of the day’s activities and questioned locals for restaurant advice before venturing out to Little Rock’s neighborhoods for dinner. - Monica Leas Photos by Roxanne Jo Mitchell Stephen Buel of East Bay Express enjoys some good conversation. Cincinnati CityBeat’s Kristofer Sommer Clark: Alt-Weeklies ‘Vital to American Democracy’ M By Monica Leas Roxanne Jo Mitchell ore than 150 early-risers greeted retired Gen. Wesley K. Clark with rousing applause and intermittent “amens” Friday morning as he discussed faulty motivations for the war in Iraq and an ongoing quest for America’s next big idea. “We don’t have the right big idea,” he said. “What is it? American Idol? What is the big idea? It’s certainly not the war … That can’t be the big idea of American society.” The former Democratic presidential candidate spoke of current struggles across the nation’s business, health care, and education fields — and expressed dismay at the distracting focus on the war on terrorism. “If we keep that focus, we’re going down,” Clark said. “That’s not the most important thing.” Clark criticized the Bush administration’s “high degree of incompetence” in handling the war in Iraq and likened Bush’s post-September 11th response to the reaction of a college student who suddenly realizes he forgot to write a term paper over Christmas vacation. But the four-star general said that now that troops are engaged, it is too early to jerk them back. “What we’ve got to do is try to get a C-, D+ solution,” Clark said. “It might work. It’s too early to say it can’t happen, there- fore we’ve got to maintain our military commitment.” Clark also reflected on his own military career and his upbringing in Little Rock, when, he said, “we had an organizing principle in America — and it didn’t stop rock and roll.” He empowered alt-weeklies to search for a similar principle today, by educating readers with critical reporting on big issues. “As alternative weeklies … you cover news in a way that’s vital to American democracy … and we need you out here in America,” Clark said. 7 An Arty Party The Fascinating Robert Newman of Fortune Design talks shop in front of Picasso with designer Donny George of C-Ville Weekly. The Bus-ted Ride O -Monica Leas Michael Schwarz and Michael King of Austin Chronicle may be getting sucked into the vortex - or they might be standing in front of a painting. 8 Ray Alba (aka Dominic) and Joseph Bachana of Database Publishing Consultants are all smiles. Photos by Roxanne Jo Mitchell ne mile-long bus ride from the Peabody to the Arkansas Arts Center may have taken nearly a half-hour -- but for the handful of passengers on board, the adventure was worth every minute. It’s not clear what caused a temperamental tour bus to stop and start throughout its mini-tour of duty Friday evening, but after a few stalls in intersections and a few coasts through red lights, a few passengers were more than eager to get off. “We said, ‘We’ll walk. We’re Canadian -- we like the heat,’” said Kyle Shaw, whose colleagues from The Coast weren’t permitted to make the last eight blocks on their own. A hospitable driver said their destination was too far for that. An end appeared near as a Subaru station wagon sped toward the stalled bus at one intersection. “I yelled, ‘Brace for impact!’” said publishing consultant Fran Zankowski, one of about a dozen passengers. But the brief game of chicken ended favorably, and the bus glided safely to the museum’s drive. The hot and bothered passengers took solace in their cocktails while plotting their ride home.