This weekend, the Tucson Weekly is hosting the annual
convention of the Association of Alternative Newsweeklies. Yes, for all
you haters out there, Tucson has shown itself capable of attracting
somebody other than the Jehovah’s Witnesses during the summer.

You’re probably wondering what such a gathering would look like. If
you see a bunch of people who look like a renaissance fair collided
with Woodstock, where the women resemble what Janis Joplin would look
like today (dead or alive), and the men look like Dennis Hopper in
Easy Rider (or at just about any other stage of his life),
that’s not the AAN convention; that’s the Fourth Avenue Street
Fair.

I’ve been told by my esteemed editor that the people at these things
look and act surprisingly normal-ish. In calculus terms, they approach
normal as a limit. For better or worse, they’re pretty much mainstream.
They don’t drive cars made out of hemp. Most of them never took Ron
Paul seriously. And many of them will only claim to be vegetarian if
they happen to be attracted to a woman with armpit hair.

However, being normal-ish, they also fall prey to normal human
emotions. After battling the grey ladies in their respective towns for
decades, they now find themselves watching as, one by one, the
once-great dailies (sadly) blink out of existence, their ownership
muttering something about how maybe trying to maintain a 40 percent
profit margin wasn’t such a good idea.

Now, their innate competitiveness is being turned against one
another. They’d probably deny it, but I’m guessing that, deep down,
they’re constantly trying to see who can out-alternative the others. As
they stroll through the JW Marriott Starr Pass this week, they’ll be
eyeballing each other and thinking, “I’m way more alternative
than that dude.”

My editor is a gay ex-Mormon. That alone should allow him to pimp
through the convention like Kramer wearing that velvet trench coat. You
don’t get any more alternative than that.

I’ve always been a big fan of alternative papers. My first
experience was with the old Los Angeles Free Press, the one with
Ron Cobb as the cartoonist. I picked up a copy once, opened it up and
saw an ad that read:

“SAAB: The No-Bullshit Car.”

I thought, “Wow, how cool, a newspaper that will print the word
‘Saab.'”

It burned brightly and then flamed out, but other papers around the
country popped up, carved out a niche and then served their local
readerships well.

I’ll admit I was a bit surprised by the success of the Phoenix
New Times
. I mean, really, Phoenix? How many times can they run a
cover story on “The Great Stucco Debate?”

But the New Times has done a great job of covering Arizona’s
arcane politics, where the cynic and the bumpkin join hands and attempt
to march back into the first half of the 20th century, when things were
much simpler. It’s an absolute hoot watching the New Times butt
heads with Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio. The Meskin’-hating
Arpaio may very well be the most popular public figure in the entire
state, a fact that sends the New Times people up the wall. (And,
settling the argument once and for all, more often than not, it is a
stucco wall.)

The AAN Web site has a list of its member publications. Some of the
newspaper names are generic, others esoteric. Some cities have more
than one alternative paper. Boston, for example, has the Phoenix and the Weekly Dig. That’s when you know you’ve arrived as an
alternative paper, when you’re so big that somebody feels the need to
provide an alternative to the alternative.

Among the other papers listed are:

• The Georgia Straight. They probably wouldn’t hire my
editor. This paper is actually in Vancouver, British Columbia, which
borders the Strait of Georgia. Those zany Canadians really put a lot of
effort into their puns.

Eugene Weekly. I think I played ball with that guy in
college. He would rather pass a kidney stone than a basketball.

Isthmus, in Madison, Wis. Who would name a
paper after the hardest word in the English language to say out loud?
Every time you say it, you spit on yourself and/or others.

Salt Lake City Weekly. An alternative paper in Salt
Lake City?! What do they do, publish the Mass times at the Catholic
church? (Actually, they have this really nice, big Catholic church up
on a hill near downtown. My daughter and I attended Easter Mass there
when she was playing volleyball for Cornell.) I went to the Salt
Lake City Weekly
Web site, and it says, “Having carved a large
niche of young, affluent, and educated Utahns … .” They’re called
“Utahns?” Can you say that without exhaling for 12 seconds? I feel like
Steve Martin in The Man With Two Brains, trying to say his name,
Dr. Hfuhruhurr.

Anyway, alt-folks, welcome to Tucson. Enjoy the sunsets; hand out a
few awards; then get back to work, because you’re the last, best line
of defense against both the powers that be and the
attention-span-deficit knuckleheads who think that Twitter is a form of
communication, and that blogging somehow advances the human race.

2 replies on “Danehy”

  1. I find it interesting that many of these “alternative” weeklies share a format consisting of a big cover story, a political gossip column like “The Skinny,” three or four columnists, and the remaining space padded out by music reviews, concert listings, classifieds and phone-sex ads which envelop and often submerge the content like Boss Hogg in front of a plate full of marshmallows. And with corporate ownership in the mix, “alt” has become a mainstream paradox, a reliable but not-too-strikingly independent local media outlet that manages to survive, even thrive under a dead-tree business model as the dailies wilt up.

  2. I think the Tucson Weekly is doing a fine job. Of course, I’m a fan of the alt-weekly genre. 🙂

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