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Last week’s top posts

Tuesday, May 26th, 2009

1. The Cheetah, one of Atlanta’s favorite strip joints, is a patriot (More patriotic than the National Museum of Patriotism? Maybe.)

2. Georgia is South Korea (At least when it comes to sizing up human development. And yes, Georgia ranks above Mississippi and Alabama — and even Florida!)

3. CL’s Thomas Wheatley is a finalist for national journalism award (Wheatly’s on the Association of Alternative Newsweeklies’ shortlist for “Sober.” Hooray!)

4. Ga. GOP primary: A sad and soul-crushing spectacle (State Rep. Austin Scott apes McCain at the state GOP convention.)

5. Huey Lewis — err, Mike Evans — calls for Pelosi’s resignation (Congressional wannabe issues unexpected and hilarious press release. U.S. House Speaker doesn’t blink.)

(Photo by Joeff Davis)

CL’s Thomas Wheatley a finalist for national journalism award

Tuesday, May 19th, 2009

Anyone who’s read “Sober,” Thomas Wheatley’s gut-wrenching account of his battle with alcoholism, knows that the story  does a beautiful job describing the horrors and rewards of overcoming a common — and often unacknowledged — disease. (If you haven’t read it, you should. Now.)

The Association of Alternative Newsweeklies has taken notice. “Sober” has been deemed one of the top five feature stories published by the country’s largest-circulation alt-weeklies. Other finalists for the AAN Award in the Feature Story category hail from LA Weekly, Houston Press and Denver’s Westword. The ranking of the finalists will be announced in late June.

Our sister papers, Chicago Reader and Washington City Paper, earned nominations in another six categories. Congrats guys! And congrats, Mr. Wheatley!

In other awards news, CL Photo Editor Joeff Davis is a finalist for the Atlanta Press Club’s Journalist of the Year Award in the Photography category. Go Joeff!

Last week’s top posts

Monday, May 18th, 2009

1. Atlantans mourn Frank Mullen (Beloved music photographer succumbs to cancer.)

2. Beltline CEO Terri Montague stepping down from project (A surprising move from the woman who’d been heading one of the largest public-works projects in recent Atlanta history.)

3. Ga. governor candidate John Oxendine loves ‘Confederate gray’ (Twittering candidate gives us a little too much information about his decorating taste.)

4. Beltline’s affordable housing program starts up despite shakeup, economy (Efforts are afoot to make sure us regular people can afford Beltline-proximate property.)

5. Craigslist dropping ‘erotic services’ category (Alt-weeklies rejoice! We’ve beat out Craigslist for smut ads.)

Last week’s top posts

Monday, May 4th, 2009

1- AJC Redesign: Your thoughts? (Scott Henry makes a few observations on the new print design of our dear ol’ daily – as do some of our readers. Xanax would be a subscription booster).

2- Rep. John Lewis arrested at Darfur protest in D.C. (When the news reminds you of the real news, you need to work on your attention span – I’ll include myself in that bunch).

3- WSB: Georgia swine flu case confirmed (We’ve officially joined the swine flu pandemic).

4- Clever headline about N. Ga. drug bust elicits giggles (When “cops deal blow to Mexican drug cartels,” has it hit the fan?).

5- William Mize granted stay of execution from Ga. Supreme Court (The former Ku Klux Klan leader had sought the death penalty after being convicted of killing a fellow klansman).

    Last week’s top posts

    Monday, April 27th, 2009

    1. AJC redesign infomercial — OMG (Daily paper’s feel-good promo sounds suspiciously like a pharmaceutical ad.)

    2. Three people killed in Athens, Ga., shooting (As of now, a UGA-professor-turned-suspected-triple-murderer is still on the loose.)

    3. NORML now has semi-legal status in Georgia (But the party was short-lived.)

    4. AJC scooped by local blogger! (Atlanta Unfiltered scores a once-in-a-lifetime nod from the notoriously attribution-stingy daily.)

    5. BREAKING: Atlanta Steam relocates, exurban perverts weep (Lingerie-wearing football team runs from Atlanta. Oh my.)

    Last week’s top posts

    Monday, April 20th, 2009

    1. AJC buyout list official — 74 to leave (In addition to the dozens of veteran reporters who jumped ship, news of Pulitzer-winner Cynthia Tucker’s move to D.C. and food writer John Kessler’s brief departure from food-writing made it a very productive week for us pageview-hoarding wretches at Fresh Loaf.)

    2. Atlanta Tea Party with Sean Hannity to feature ’shit sandwiches’ (It’s estimated that 10,000 people attended. Imagine the response had Hannity been offering roast beef!)

    3. Bottoms up at Frolicon (That’s a lot of booty.)

    4. Anti-tax protestors urged to, um, ride MARTA (Irony sandwich, anyone?)

    5. CNN’s Anderson Cooper on why Republicans can’t find their voice (A  recap of last week wouldn’t have been complete without at least one teabagging reference. Phew.)

    (Photo by Joeff Davis)

    Last week’s top posts

    Monday, April 6th, 2009
    Creative Loafing CEO Ben Eason

    Creative Loafing CEO Ben Eason

    1. CL CEO keeps company (Creative Loafing Inc.’s biggest creditor fails in its efforts to take over the six-newspaper chain, and CL’s bankruptcy saga continues.)

    2. Earl Paulk, DeKalb’s frisky “bishop,” to be laid to rest (The charismatic leader of a 12,000-congregant mega-church was repeatedly accused of sexual misconduct, all but obliterating his legacy.)

    3. Mayor’s race begins in earnest at witching hour Friday (Upon the official end of the ‘09 legislative session, campaign season for local pols kicked into high gear.)

    4. Georgia’s Confederate History Month, the idea that will not die (Misguided lawmakers push for a 30-day holiday that much of rural Georgia already celebrates 365 days a year.)

    5. It’s official: Borders is off and running (After dropping out of the mayoral race to care for her ailing parents, City Council Prez Lisa Borders is back in.)

    CL CEO keeps company — UPDATED

    Tuesday, March 31st, 2009
    Eason

    Eason

    Fresh from a Tampa courtroom, our colleague Wayne Garcia has the scoop on CL’s ownership dispute:

    Ben Eason, whose family started Creative Loafing in Atlanta in 1972, was vindicated in a federal bankruptcy court in Tampa today, as a judge ruled against a lender’s effort to take control of the nation’s second-largest chain of alt-weekly newspapers.

    Judge Caryl E. Delano said despite contradictory (and flawed, in her estimation) reports about the chain’s value since going into Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in September 2008, there was no evidence given that Eason’s management of the media company is harming its value, as lender Atalaya Capital Management had maintained in its effort to dislodge Eason and the current management.

    To the contrary, Delano read from the bench, three days of hearings showed that Eason’s management had done a lot to preserve value, by making budget cuts and introducing an emphasis on web publishing models, including one in Tampa that has produced a sharp increase in web traffic while making the print edition a break-even proposition instead of a money-losing one.

    “I find that Atalaya has not met its initial burden of proof and is not entitled to relief [from court stays against it foreclosing on the company's debt] at this time,” Delano said.

    Continue reading “CL CEO keeps company — UPDATED” …


    CL’s fate to be decided at 2 p.m.

    Tuesday, March 31st, 2009
    Creative Loafing CEO Ben Eason

    Creative Loafing CEO Ben Eason

    Here’s the latest — and most pressing — dispatch on Creative Loafing’s bankruptcy case, from our colleague Wayne Garcia at CL’s Tampa paper:

    The battle for control of the six-altweekly newspaper chain Creative Loafing Inc. reaches a climax this afternoon in a Tampa bankruptcy courtroom, when Federal Judge Caryl E. Delano is set to rule on a motion by lender Atalaya Capital Management to take over the company.

    Atalaya wants to foreclose on its $31 million in loans given to finance CL’s 2007 expansion and purchase of Washington City Paper and the Chicago Reader. That action was blocked when CL filed for bankruptcy court protection under Chapter 11 of the federal code in September 2008.

    I’ll be there and will report as soon as possible from the anti-technology courthouse (no cell phones or laptops allowed in federal court).

    Download the judge’s order setting the announcement for 2 p.m. on Tuesday. She’s allowing the out-of-town Atalaya attorneys to attend via telephone.

    Calling all students!

    Tuesday, March 31st, 2009

    Creative Loafing is currently on the hunt for editorial interns for the summer semester!

    The best interns are assertive, ambitious and organized. Each candidate should have some journalism experience and must be working toward a degree. Additionally, candidates must be receiving credit for the internship. Do we make exceptions? NO. Students with published work preferred. We require a minimum commitment of 12-16 hours per week.

    Internships are available in the following categories:

    • News
    • Music
    • Events
    • Food & Drink
    • Arts & Entertainment
    • Photography
    • Video

    To apply, please send a cover letter (explaining how the internship will fit into your course of study), a resume, two references (with e-mail and phone number), and three samples of your work to: alicia.wages@creativeloafing.com.

    If you are interested in the Photography and Video internships, please contact taralynne.pixley@creativeloafing.com.

    Last week’s top posts

    Monday, March 30th, 2009

    1. AJC plans to cut staff by 30 percent (As we later reported, nearly 90 editorial staffers will be bought out or laid off. That sucks.)

    2. Atlanta to New Orleans rail line in danger … because of Alabama? (At least this story has a happy ending.)

    3. Atlanta City Council OKs Decatur Belt deal— with a catch (Marietta Street residents protect their neighborhood from destruction, and the newest Beltline plan is a win-win)

    4. Examining the Sweet 16: Nova v. Duke is can’t miss basketball (Needless to say, we rooted for the Tar Heels.)

    5. Georgia slips in ’safest state’ rankings to no. 39 (The Peach State dropped seven spots, to be exact — the largest plummet in the country. Oops.)

    (Photo by Joeff Davis)

    Closing arguments filed in CL bankruptcy case

    Thursday, March 26th, 2009

    Our colleague Wayne Garcia at our sister paper in Tampa has another dispatch from the (seemingly never-ending) bankruptcy case that will determine Creative Loafing Inc.’s fate:

    Both sides have filed their closing arguments in writing, concluding the hearing process for an attempt by lender Atalaya Capital Management to take control of the Creative Loafing newspaper chain from CEO Ben Eason. Now, federal bankruptcy District Judge Caryl Delano will rule, expected to come via telephone conference call in the next few days, possibly by Tuesday of next week.

    There’s nothing new in either closing argument, just a recitation of each side’s opinion about whether the value of CL has dropped since filing for bankruptcy court protection on Sept. 29, 2008, and whether the current management is harming the company’s value and therefore diminishing the collateral used to secure $31 million in loans from Atalaya. That money was used to retire debt and purchase the Washington City Paper and Chicago Reader.

    Continue reading “Closing arguments filed in CL bankruptcy case” …

    Last week’s top posts

    Monday, March 16th, 2009

    1. Atlanta job fair at Georgia World Congress Center (If this post had attracted thousands of visits a few years back, I’d have laughed to myself and said, “What next? Creative Loafing declares Chapter 11 bankruptcy?” Hahahahaha.)

    2. Soapbox: Jekyll Island Authority ‘at it again’ (At 239 comments and counting, the Jekyll post is encroaching on Black Mafia Family territory. A JIA v. BMF beef? Scary.)

    3. AJC layoffs: this week or next (I’m not going to make a snide remark about the abovementioned job fair. This economy is no place for snide remarks.)

    4. Georgia mayor’s Facebook page confuses nation (How easy it is to offend with a can of Schlitz and a pack of Camels!)

    5. Sneak peek: Creative Loafing’s website makeover (The euphoria of making our own top-five list is only slightly diminished by the fact that most commenters trashed our makeover. Meanies.)

    (Photo by Joeff Davis)

    CL CEO testifies in bankruptcy court

    Friday, March 13th, 2009

    Here’s the latest dispatch our colleague in Tampa, Wayne Garcia, about Creative Loafing Inc. CEO Ben Eason’s attempt to retain control of his six-newspaper company. The case continues next Tuesday in Florida bankruptcy court.

    Ben Eason

    Ben Eason

    It was A Tale of Two Media Companies as Creative Loafing CEO and President Ben Eason testified Thursday afternoon during a hearing to determine whether he keeps ownership of the alt-newspaper chain.

    Or perhaps I should write, ownership of the alt-digital media company. Much of Eason’s testimony concerned the collapse of the print news publishing economic model starting in 2005 and accelerating with the advent of the current recession in mid-2008. Under direct examination from CL’s bankruptcy lawyer David Jennis, Eason detailed how the company responded to 20 percent decreases in advertising revenues that he says company officials started seeing in July 2008.

    “There’s been significant changes in our business…” Eason said in what qualified as the understatement of the day.

    Continue reading “CL CEO testifies in bankruptcy court” …

    Creative Loafing Inc. bankruptcy hearing continues, CEO testifies today

    Thursday, March 12th, 2009

    Our Tampa colleague, Wayne Garcia, is closely following Creative Loafing’s court appearance today in Florida, during which the company’s CEO is arguing to maintain ownership of his six newspapers. Here’s Garcia’s second post from yesterday’s proceedings:

    From an afternoon of Ph.D.- or MBA-level financial testimony, here’s the bottom line in the hearing for control of the Creative Loafing chain of alternative weekly newspapers:

    – Lender Atalaya Capital concluded its case with testimony from Deloitte valuation expert Stamos Nicholas, who went through a detailed report he produced that concludes Creative Loafing’s value as a company dropped from $19 million on Sept. 30, 2008 — a day after it filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection — to $11.4 million by Dec. 31, 2008. Nicholas blamed falling revenues and operating margins at the chain, as well as a general economic collapse in the wider economy.

    CL’s attorney Tim Andreu challenged Nicholas’ report on cross-examination, pointing out that Nicholas did not speak with the chain’s management to learn more details about the financial assumptions he used for his valuation.

    (more…)

    CL bankruptcy case in court today

    Wednesday, March 11th, 2009

    Our Tampa colleague, Wayne Garcia, is closely following Creative Loafing’s court appearance today in Florida, during which the company’s CEO is arguing to maintain ownership of his six newspapers. Here’s Garcia’s first post of the day:

    The Creative Loafing chain is in a Tampa bankruptcy court hearing today as owner Ben Eason tries to fend off his biggest creditor, which wants to take ownership of the chain and says it has “lost confidence” in Eason’s management.

    Atalaya Capital Management LP, an investment fund that is owed $31 million from financing CL’s 2007 pay-down of debt and purchase of the Chicago Reader and Washington City Paper, said in court this morning that it would continue to operate the newspaper chain “as a going concern” and put more dollars into it rather than get rid of it in a fire sale.

    Atalaya partner Michael Bogdan testified that the firm has hired another investment banking firm with media experience, Bulkley Capital of Dallas, Texas (with an office in Atlanta, the home of CL’s largest newspaper) to advise it and provide “management assistance” in running the CL papers if it is successful in court today. That firm’s founder, Brad Bulkley, has strong media experience, Bodgan said. Bulkley’s website describes it this way:

    Continue reading “CL bankruptcy case in court today” …

    Last week’s top posts

    Tuesday, March 10th, 2009

    1. Atlanta THUNDERSNOW!!!! (Yes, that was last week. Snow. Inches of it. Followed by 80-degree bliss. Georgia is rad.)

    2. Man found dead in Capitol office building (State employee apparently took his own life.)

    3. Gena Evans: ‘Best day’ at GDOT was day I was fired (What the former Department of Transportation commissioner meant to say was, “Take this job and shove it!”)

    4. Speakeasy with Outkast’s Andre Benjamin (Rapper’s “Class of 3000″ cartoon transitions from TV to the stage.)

    5. Animated superheroes burst from shadows of live-action films (In other animation news, comic-book protagonists transition from ink to celluloid.)

    (Image from Regator’s “thundersnow” t-shirt page on Zazzle)

    Sneak peek: Creative Loafing’s website makeover

    Tuesday, March 10th, 2009

    Why, yes. We did get a haircut. And some new threads. We’ve been working out, too. A lot. So glad you noticed.

    It’s true — we’ve finally overhauled our creaky ol’ website. Here’s just a tiny glimpse of our new homepage, which we hope you’ll find better-looking and friendlier than our old one. You’ll be privy to the real deal later today NOW. (Please excuse anything that looks out of whack; we’re working out the last few kinks this very moment.)

    Our new-and-improved  Music, Food & Drink, News & Views, and Arts & Entertainment pages — as well as our new A&E blog, Culture Surfing — are pretty damn hot, too. You’ll see. Soon. Like in a few hours this very second.

    Of course, our makeover won’t be complete until you, dear reader, tell us what might be tweaked to make it better. Don’t be shy (not that you would). Leave us a comment on this post, or hit us up here.

    Five years ago this week: Tale of a teenage triple-murderer

    Wednesday, March 4th, 2009
    Falicia Blakely, in 2004

    Falicia Blakely, in 2004

    Back in 2004, CL Senior Editor Mara Shalhoup chronicled the story of Falicia Blakely, a young woman who’d pleaded guilty to the murders of three men.

    Shalhoup interviewed Blakely at the DeKalb County jail, not long after her guilty plea. Here’s the ensuing two-part story, which earned first-place prizes for feature writing in the 2005 Clarion Awards and the 2005 Association of Alternate Newsweeklies Awards.

    Learning to hit a lick

    Falicia Blakely was a 16-year-old dancer when she met a pimp 11 years her senior. Within two years, she’d be a prostitute facing the death penalty for three murders.

    Aug. 15, 2002

    Falicia stretched out on the floor of the apartment and, finally feeling ready for anything, pulled from her purse a .32-caliber Sauer & Son pistol. Nobody seemed to care. Doc was on the phone. Ray and Pumpkin were playing solitaire on Ray’s laptop. In front of the four of them, the sliding glass door framed a sky about to reach out and swallow the sun, to take the edge off the heavy August heat. Since the afternoon, when they began partying, the cover of clouds had lifted, loosening the morning fog and mist so that only broken fragments remained. And still no rain. It hadn’t rained in weeks.

    They’d kept it to tequila and weed for the most part, some ecstasy and blow for later. Falicia had shown up at Ray’s hours ago, under the pretense of bringing him ecstasy pills. But as always, it was expected she hang out when she delivered the drugs. With Ray she didn’t mind. They’d been doing business for more than a year. She liked him. Unlike most men she knew, Ray had helped her out of more than one bad scene, had picked her up when she was in trouble, had listened to her rant when she was scared or pissed off. He was a welcome change.

    She herself was easy to do business with. All long legs and slow curves, eyes like a sphinx and skin like bitter Godiva. She was only 18 – not that she let on – and full of fast talk, a little ghetto at times, but tinged with just enough girlish sass to disarm.

    But not today. Something was different about her today.

    Continue reading ‘Learning to hit a lick’ …

    Last week’s top posts

    Tuesday, March 3rd, 2009

    1. East Atlanta neighbors stand up against crime (Ken Womack’s eavBuzz.net helps folks monitor their ‘hood — in real time.)

    2. GDOT Commissioner Gena Evans fired (Chief of beleaguered transit agency later tells CL her sob story.)

    3. Piedmont Park residents not cool with tunnels under Atlanta (But the rest of the city thinks they’re pretty awesome.)

    4. Smart-growth guru smacks Atlanta (Andres Duany is to Atlanta what Toby Young is to overcooked fish.)

    5. Strip-club arson case gets seamy (How could it not?)

    (Photo by Joeff Davis)

    Five years ago this week: Kerry v. Nader

    Wednesday, February 25th, 2009

    Back in late February, 2004, the Democrats were busy fielding candidates for what — for them — would be a deflating presidential election. Sen. John Kerry was eying ex-nominee Howard Dean’s base of grassroots supporters — and was bracing himself against the threat that was Ralph Nader.

    In a short chat with CL, Kerry had this to say in the Feb. 26, 2004, issue of the Loaf

    Kerry in Atlanta: ‘Let’s not eat our own’

    Hours after Ralph Nader threw his hat back into the ring, Democratic front-runner John Kerry insisted he’s the best choice for reform-minded voters.

    “I’m going to speak to Naderites [and] to people who supported Howard Dean,” Kerry said in a brief interview with Creative Loafing in Atlanta. “I intend to speak to those folks. I think my career speaks to them.”

    Continue reading ‘Kerry in Atlanta: “Let’s not eat our own”‘ …

    (Photo by Jim Stawniak)

    Meet our food blog’s newest contributor: Richard Blais

    Tuesday, February 24th, 2009
    Richard Blais, the Willy Wonka of Atlanta's restaurant scene

    Richard Blais, the Willy Wonka of Atlanta

    Over at our sister blog, Omnivore, Atlanta’s favorite molecular gastronomist and “Top Chef” 2008 short-lister Richard Blais will be dishing up celebrity-chef insight as Creative Loafing’s newest columnist.

    Blais is ready and willing to “field as many questions as I can” and “take some harsh critique from real people behind ridiculous screen names” — with a couple of exceptions:

    The rules are simple. I won’t be writing about any of my projects in Atlanta. My boss, my “chef”, my editor, the food critic, who I’ve sworn profanity at from the comfort of my own kitchens at times, won’t have it. And neither will I.

    Read “Knife’s Edge: Richard Blais takes on CL …”

    Last week’s top posts

    Monday, February 23rd, 2009

    1. Our complete Oscar predictions, even ‘Documentary Short’ (It undoubtedly was Fresh Loaf’s gusto for “The Conscience of Nhem En’s” that pushed this blog post over the top.)

    2. Upcoming AJC cuts to be ’substantial’ (Tragic and unfair, but not really a surprise.)

    3. The Televangelist: ‘Lost’ episode 6 (What happened Ben? What happened to Aaron? What happened to Kate’s unconvincing attempt to abide by the law?)

    4. Georgia has the Bible Belt blues (The Christian Coaltion relied on teetotaling teenagers to threaten our chance to buy beer on Sundays. Meanies.)

    5. Madea Goes to Jail, locks out critics (Tyler Perry is predictably cagey about his newest project.)

    (Photo by Ishika Mohan)

    Five years ago this week: Georgia’s gay marriage ban

    Tuesday, February 17th, 2009
    In 2004, then-state Sen. Joey Brush fought gay marriage.

    In 2004, then-state Sen. Joey Brush fought gay marriage.

    Five years before the country erupted in protest over California’s passage of Proposition 8, Georgia was gearing up for its own vote on a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage.

    What a bummer that the one time we’re years ahead of California on a national trend, it has to be something that’s a source of disgrace.

    In 2004, in the months leading up to the passage of Georgia’s amendment, then-CL staff writer Kevin Griffis penned a delicious story that pointed to the hypocrisy of state lawmakers who supported the anti-gay-marriage bill. One lawmaker in particular who wanted to keep gays from marrying — in order to protect the “sanctity” of marriage — was accused in court papers of cheating on his wife with two married women.

    Without further ado, here’s Griffis’ 2004 story:

    In defense of hypocrisy
    State senator preaches “sanctity of marriage,’ is accused of adultery

    During Monday’s Senate debate over a resolution to put a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage before Georgia voters, Sen. Steve Thompson issued a warning to his colleagues.

    “You’re trying to out-moralize each other over here and some of you are going to break your necks,” the Powder Springs Democrat said. “Because that white horse is tall, and that fall has a kick.”

    In other words, don’t cast stones if you live in a glass house.

    The debate over the anti-gay marriage amendment, which the Senate approved and sent to the House on Monday, has the state Capitol boiling over with long-simmering rumors of extramarital affairs by the very people now holding themselves up as defenders of “the sanctity” of marriage. And at least one prominent state senator who supported the anti-gay amendment has been accused in court of an affair.

    Sen. Joey Brush, R-Martinez, is alleged to have had extramarital affairs during the last decade with two women — one of whom, under oath in a 1997 Columbia County divorce case, identified Brush as a sexual partner.

    “That had nothing to do with the vote yesterday,” he said. “The vote yesterday was about same-sex marriages. That’s all it was about, and that’s what the people of my district want to do, vote on it.”

    Asked if he’d find it hypocritical to legislate morality if he didn’t abide by his own wedding vows, Brush — the Senate Education Committee chairman — retorted, “Well, I find you pretty hypocritical.” He then trotted away.

    Continue reading “In defense of hypocrisy” …

    Last week’s top posts

    Monday, February 16th, 2009

    1. Woodstock lawmaker hates edumacation (BJs and prostitutes and legislators — oh my.)

    2. Beltline, Amtrak, GDOT maps and more! (Looks like some serious wonks are reading Fresh Loaf. Hi guys!)

    3. Piedmont parking deck foe gets award (Parking decks bad. People who hate parking decks good.)

    4. Homer Simpson’s worst nightmare (Everybody lusts after donuts — almost as much as they lust after … )

    5. Lust List 2009: The Countdown ( … super-sexy unsung Atlantans.)