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Atlanta Progressive News responds to attack

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

Matthew Cardinale, editor of Atlanta Progressive News, took issue with a blog post I wrote that criticized articles on his website concerning candidates in the mayor’s race. I admit I was somewhat harsh, but I feel my points were valid. Still, in the spirit of journalistic goodwill, we’re giving Cardinale the opportunity to respond. (For the record, we’ve trimmed his letter for the sake of space and relevance — and I added my own annotations.) Enjoy:

In a post entitled, “Where’s Mary, indeed?,” writer Scott Henry makes a number of false, unsubstantiated, defamatory, unprofessional and vicious statements regarding me and my publication, the Atlanta Progressive News.

The relevant text is as follows:

“The latest negative tidbit to surface is a weird piece of innuendo proffered by the Atlanta Progressive News, which is something of a far-left blog masquerading as a media outlet. Acting as an apparent proxy for the Norwood campaign, APN has cluttered e-mail inboxes with a piece insinuating that (Kasim) Reed, in his capacity as an attorney, once battled the NAACP on behalf of Cracker Barrel restaurants.

The ‘article,’ like much of APN’s output — including several attack pieces previously written about Lisa Borders — falls so far short of basic journalistic standards that it scarcely bears notice. Still, another local blogger who also works as an attorney was so offended by the lousy legal analysis she found in the APN piece that she felt compelled to post a point-by-point rebuttal.”

Let me go through and respond to his statements individually.

1. First of all, APN’s article was not innuendo, it was factual. If anything, it’s Henry’s post (and previous posts he’s written on other topics) that are characterized by innuendo. It is a fact that Reed, in his capacity as an attorney, once battled the NAACP on behalf of Cracker Barrel restaurants.

According to the federal database, PACER, Reed absolutely was an attorney, did represent Cracker Barrel, and on the other side was the NAACP, which both filed amicus briefs on behalf of a class of workers and helped organize this and a series of legal cases pursued against Cracker Barrel at the same time.

Now, some could argue that Cracker Barrel is entitled to a legal defense, or that Reed was just doing his job, etc., but that does not change the fact that he “in his capacity as an attorney, once battled the NAACP on behalf of Cracker Barrel.” Henry’s failure to back up his statement also means that his comment is the one that is innuendo, but it is also false.

[From Scott: I described the article as “innuendo” because, in referencing a 1999 case in which Reed was one of many attorneys working on behalf of Cracker Barrel, Cardinale points out that the restaurant chain “historically would neither serve Black customers nor employ homosexuals.” But the case in question had nothing to do with alleged civil rights violations; it was a worker’s comp case dealing with employee overtime.]

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Last week’s top posts: CL gets a new owner, the mayoral ‘machine’ malfunctions, and more!

Monday, August 31st, 2009

1. In the auction for Creative Loafing, the winning bidder is … (… these guys. Hey, they seem pretty OK!)

2. The mayoral ‘machine’ goes haywire, Reed fires back (Memo urges Atlanta’s black leaders to rally behind a single black mayoral candidate — to keep a white candidate out of office.)

3. Wendy Whitaker, symbol of flawed sex offender law, rearrested (When she was 17, Whitaker gave one of the most regrettable blow jobs ever.)

4. Sen. Jeff Chapman’s views on water conservation, water wars (Chapman’s one of the Gold Dome’s greatest enigmas — one of the few Republicans who doesn’t march in lockstep with his fellow pachyderms.)

5. Oxendine: Build an interstate through East Atlanta? Let’s talk! (Um, no.)

(Photo by Joeff Davis)

Last week’s top posts: Soccer, BMF, Jay-Z, Best of Atlanta and armageddon

Monday, July 27th, 2009

1. AC Milan v. Club America (Who knows when Atlanta will get to witness such quality soccer — or such HORRIFIC traffic jams — again. Actually, there’s probably a traffic jam planned for about 15 minutes from now.)

2. BMF member arrested, Jay-Z’s ‘Death of Autotune’ gives nod to the crew (Two milestones for the infamous Black Mafia Family.)

3. Fun CL bankruptcy news! (Wednesday will be a pivotal day for the future of Creative Loafing. Stay tuned.)

4. Filthy Rich: Best of Atlanta 2009 ballot (You only have until this Friday to cast your votes for CL’s 2009 Best of Atlanta issue. After that, the opportunity will be lost forever.)

5. Atlanta at $20 per gallon of gas (A vision of armageddon.)

(Photo by Alejandro Leal)

5 things to do: Thursday

Thursday, July 23rd, 2009

1) The Heritage Arts Festival celebrates the African diaspora at Underground Atlanta.

2) Creative Loafing gets down and dirty at the Best of Atlanta Voting Party.

3) Zachary Steele and Joshua Corin discuss Anointed: The Passion of Timmy Christ and Nuclear Winter Wonderland: A Tale of Nuclear Terror, Kidnapping, Gangsters and Family Values, respectively, at Decatur Library.

4) The Coca-Cola Film Festival continues at the Fox Theatre with Breakfast at Tiffany’s.

5) WCLK-FM (91.9) hosts a Michael Jackson benefit concert at Vinyl.

See more Atlanta events.

(Photo by St. John Photographics)

CL’s financial woes rate E&P coverage

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009

Editor & Publisher, the leading trade journal of the dying print news industry, has a short piece about CL’s upcoming bankruptcy auction. Here’s a chunk:

The auction was scheduled after Creative Loafing CEO Ben Eason and the group’s largest creditor, Atalaya Capital Management LP, agreed on a reorganization plan that will write down the value of Atalaya’s $31 million loan to $12 million. All other creditors will be paid in full under the plan, with the exception of BIA Digital Partners, which also provided some funding for Creative Loafing’s 2007 acquisition of the Chicago Reader and Washington City Paper. BIA plans to join with Eason in bidding for the chain.

Got all that? If so, please give me a call and explain what’s going on. All I know is what’s run on the CL Tampa blog, written by Wayne Garcia, who’s attended all the court hearings down there.

Anyway, the drop-dead, come-to-Jesus, Four-Horseman date is Aug. 25. That’s when some lucky bidder will have bought himself a newspaper. We’ve got no idea what will happen. All we ask is: Be gentle.

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.

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” …

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.

Ex-CLer named Atlanta magazine editor

Tuesday, February 24th, 2009

The semi-official motto at Creative Loafing when I started here was, “Once a Loafer always a Loafer!”

No, I never quite swallowed that line either, but I’m willing to invoke it with some pride in reporting that our former news editor, Steve Fennessy, has just been named the next editor of Atlanta magazine, starting April 1. Steve now serves as deputy editor to Rebecca Burns, who will make a lateral move into a newly created position overseeing the magazine’s online initiatives.

Here’s what Deborah Paul, editorial director of Emmis Publications, the magazine’s parent company in Indianapolis, had to say about Steve in an internal memo (which, I should add, was not provided to me by Steve):

Steve has excelled as a writer and editor at Atlanta magazine, where his work has been recognized by Best American Crime Writing and earned him a prestigious Knight-Wallace fellowship. With close to a decade of experience in the Atlanta market (he was an award-winning senior editor at Creative Loafing prior to joining Atlanta), Steve brings a deep knowledge of the city to this role, vital for any city magazine editor. As a seasoned reporter, writer, and editor whose work has taken him from upstate New York to Egypt, he will ensure that Atlanta magazine’s standards for journalistic excellence are maintained.

Awwww. Not to get picky, however, Steve was news editor here and then senior writer, but never quite reached the pinnacle of professional achievement that is the job of CL senior editor.

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Creative Loafing bankruptcy update: hearing today is stalemate

Wednesday, January 21st, 2009

By Wayne Garcia

Creative Loafing Inc. CEO Ben Eason appeared in federal bankruptcy court in Tampa today in the company’s continuing Chapter 11 case.

It was supposed to be a day-long hearing culminating in a decision from Judge Caryl E. Delano as to whether to allow Eason’s biggest creditors — Atalaya Administrative LLC and Atalaya Funding II LP, which loaned more than $30 million to Creative Loafing two years ago to finance the purchase of the Washington City Paper and Chicago Reader — to declare the company’s loans in default and take immediate ownership of the alt-weekly chain.

But that didn’t happen.

Without going into lots of technical bankruptcy law and financial valuation methodology, I’ll just report that testimony in the hearing didn’t go off as planned and has been continued until March 11. Both sides, while complaining of the effect of the delays, worked together during an hour-long recess to reconfigure the Chapter 11 timeline for the case.

Eason’s attorney argued that every day the ownership issue isn’t settled makes it harder to find new equity partners and reorganize the company; Atalaya’s lawyer argued that the value of its collateral continues to decline and is losing the hedge fund millions

Two more hearings, to determine the value of the company and approve part of the reorganization plan, are scheduled for late March and early April.

Tim Bentley, briefly CL’s news editor, dies

Wednesday, January 21st, 2009

Count me as the last to know — having just seen his obit in the AJC — that longtime Atlanta journalist and one-time CL news editor Tim Bentley died two weekends ago at age 55. I don’t believe anyone left in editorial here but myself worked with Tim when he joined the paper nearly 10 years ago. That’s a shame because he was one of the nicer people I’ve met in this industry — laid-back, upbeat, funny and very competent.

Tim didn’t stay long, no more than a year or so, as I recall. But I got the impression that Tim, who had near-white hair even then, never stayed anywhere very long. He seemed eternally restless to do something different, bouncing between journalism and politics.

By the time I met him, Tim had already written for array of magazines, political newsletters and local newspapers. Between those gigs, he worked on political campaigns for Jimmy Carter, Maynard Jackson, Max Cleland and others. Did I mention he was a Yellow Dog Democrat?

Not long after leaving CL, he was editing Business to Business magazine. I stayed in touch for a few years, partly because Tim was a great sounding board for potential stories, partly because he seemed to know everybody who was anybody in the realm of Georgia politics. But I’m sad to learn we won’t be crossing paths again. Ed Bean, editor of the Daily Report, has a fine remembrance of Tim on the Atlanta Press Club website.

Check out the Loaf’s new and improved news site!

Tuesday, January 13th, 2009

Feeling torn between Creative Loafing’s kick-ass news blog (um, that would be the one you’re reading) and our traditional news page? Now you can have the best of both!

On our new News & Views site, you’ll find a feed from this blog, a constantly updated rotation of top stories, in-depth news analysis and long-form cover features, Andisheh’s award-winning Don’t Panic! columns, links to special projects, a bunch of sites we like (and don’t like), headlines from around the web — and more.

If we’re missing something, let us know. If you’re bored, tell us what we can do better. If you don’t have anything nice to say …

Memorial for former Loafer Dan Norton (1927-2009)

Tuesday, January 13th, 2009

On Jan. 6, Creative Loafing lost a former veteran staffer. Dan Norton, 81, was an integral part of the team that helped put the Loaf on the map in the mid-’70s. For more than 25 years, he was a member of a family of talented people who poured everything into creating a great read every week.

His final position with CL was director of development, a job he held until he retired in 1999. In his last few years, he acted in and directed plays in Georgia and North Carolina. Dan had started his acting career in Chicago at age 6. He worked with Paul Newman during the actor’s early years, directing him in several stage plays in Woodside, Ill.

Dan’s wife Marci, who met him when she came to CL in 1994, hopes anyone who remembers Dan will attend his memorial service. “He had stories about all of you,” she says, “and I’d like to hear yours, about him.”

Dan’s memorial service will be held Sat., Jan. 24, at 2 p.m. at the DeFoor Centre, 1710 Defoor Ave.

CL Fiction Contest Party tonight!

Thursday, January 8th, 2009

Tell all your friends! It’s time for the 8th annual CL Fiction Contest Party!

Joins us TONIGHT from 7-9 p.m. at Eyedrum (290 MLK Jr. Drive, Suite 8, 404-522-0655, www.eyedrum.org).

We received more than 200 entries and had to whittle them down to our three faves. It wasn’t easy, believe us. We had amazing help from our three local judges: award-winning children’s author Carmen Deedy; author, playwright and professor Phillip DePoy; and bookworm, aspiring author and Wordsmiths Books marketing guru Russ Marshalek.

The party, which is FREE!! and open to the public, is a great chance to mingle with writers in the community, listen to author readings from the three winning stories, dance to some smooth party jams by local band Night Moves Gold and indulge in refreshments from Highland Bakery.

Aside from the readings, live music and food, Wordsmiths Books will be on hand to sell books, CL will open up its press closet for a book swap and party co-sponsors Oxford Comics and Eyedeology, who’ll be collecting old eyeglasses, will have tables at the event.

Come help Creative Loafing support Atlanta’s burgeoning literary scene. We think you’ll like what you hear.

5 things to do today: Thursday

Thursday, January 8th, 2009

1) Patrick Heagney discusses his exhibits, Memoria Technica and Paper Thin, at Hagedorn Foundation Gallery.

2) Join us at Eyedrum for Creative Loafing’s Fiction Contest Party!

3) New Wave Atlanta: When Urban Intervention Speaks French opens at GSU’s Welch School of Art and Design, with a pre-party intervention hosted by artist Stephane Magnin, Free Because It’s Yours, at Hurt Park.

4) Southern Comforts opens at Georgia Ensemble Theatre.

5) Metaphors & Symbols, Alan Loehle’s work during his Guggenheim Fellowship, opens at Marcia Wood Gallery.

CL Fiction Contest Party Thursday

Tuesday, January 6th, 2009

Tell all your friends! It’s time for the 8th annual CL Fiction Contest Party!

Joins us Thurs., Jan. 8 from 7-9 p.m. at Eyedrum (290 MLK Jr. Drive, Suite 8, 404-522-0655, www.eyedrum.org).

We received more than 200 entries and had to whittle them down to our three faves. It wasn’t easy, believe us. We had amazing help from our three local judges: award-winning children’s author Carmen Deedy; author, playwright and professor Phillip DePoy; and bookworm, aspiring author and Wordsmiths Books marketing guru Russ Marshalek.

The party, which is FREE!! and open to the public, is a great chance to mingle with writers in the community, listen to author readings from the three winning stories, dance to some smooth party jams by local band Night Moves Gold and indulge in refreshments from Highland Bakery.

Aside from the readings, live music and food, Wordsmiths Books will be on hand to sell books, CL will open up its press closet for a book swap and party co-sponsors Oxford Comics and Eyedeology, who’ll be collecting old eyeglasses, will have tables at the event.

Come help Creative Loafing support Atlanta’s burgeoning literary scene. We think you’ll like what you hear.

Creative Loafing CEO wins more time

Thursday, December 18th, 2008
Ben Eason

Ben Eason

Wayne Garcia, our colleague at CL’s Tampa paper, attended today’s hearing about Creative Loafing Inc.’s bankruptcy protection proceedings.

Garcia reports:

Current Creative Loafing CEO and Chairman Ben Eason won a partial victory in federal bankruptcy court in Tampa today as Judge Caryl E. Delano refused to grant a motion by lender Atalaya to give it ownership of the company.

At a preliminary hearing this afternoon, Delano ruled that Creative Loafing’s reorganization plan should move forward and that it is too early to say that it can’t work. If it were nine months or more into the bankruptcy, Delano said from the bench, such a motion would be worth pursuing. “We’re three months into the case. I think the debtor should be provided a reasonable opportunity…. This case has been on a short string,” Delano told the parties in court. “The debtor has complied with those timetables” in producing a preliminary reorganization plan.

Garcia reports the judge scheduled an evidentiary hearing for Jan. 21. A hearing to review the proposed reorganization plan has also been scheduled for Jan. 26. Read more at Garcia’s blog.

(Photo by Jim Stawniak)

Sunday Paper announces expansion

Friday, December 5th, 2008

Less than two weeks after he publicly offered a measly $1 million dollars to buy CL’s Atlanta operation, Sunday Paper publisher Patrick Best announced his plans today to publish editions in Tampa and Charlotte — two other markets where Creative Loafing Inc. has newspapers.

Atlanta Magazine’s Steve Fennessy wonders if Best’s announcement might be a bluff.

CL is in the midst of a Chapter 11 bankruptcy, and Best’s move could be intended to pressure CL’s creditors into selling him the Atlanta, Charlotte and Tampa papers:

Best’s announcement could be seen as a way to elevate his profile as a potential buyer of Creative Loafing. His message then would be pretty obvious: Sell the papers to me or I’ll try to run them out of business.

If you have a second, be sure to read Sunday Paper’s terrific press release on the expansion plan.

In the final paragraph, Best openly acknowledges that Sunday Paper’s “brand” strategy is to confuse people:

“‘The Sunday Paper’ is the newspaper industry’s strongest brand,” Best says. “When you refer to the Sunday edition of the Charlotte Observer or the St. Pete Times, you refer to it as the Sunday Paper. We’re taking advantage of the good will and recognition of this product name . . .”

If his short-term expansion plans are successful, expect Patrick to eventually launch a weekly international news magazine. He’ll probably call it Thyme.

Sad shout-out from Too Busy to Hate

Thursday, December 4th, 2008

A guy named John has the bleakest post ever on his blog/photojournal Too Busy to Hate, which chronicles street life on maudlin Ponce de Leon Avenue. CL even gets a mention! Our “situation” is included in a litany of all the miserable and depressing things going on in Atlanta:

“Alternative weekly Creative Loafing declared bankruptcy, fired its editor, and is getting baited by rival Sunday Paper over its situation.”

Baited“? By our “rival”? For a blog with such a peace-loving title, that sounds like fightin’ words to me.

Just saying.

Saying goodbye to our former editor

Wednesday, December 3rd, 2008
Edelstein was the yeast in our Loaf.

AIM HIGHER: Edelstein was the yeast in our Loaf.

It’s safe to say that Creative Loafing owes its reputation as the city’s smartest, edgiest, most endearing rag to Ken Edelstein, who up until last week was the paper’s editor for a decade.

The man lived and breathed the Loaf. From his disheveled mess of a cubicle, he’d impart his detailed recollection of a state Senate race circa 1998, or his vision for an Arts & Entertainment mega-section, or his adoration for a clever turn of phrase, a perfectly composed photo, and a well-crafted blog post. He was eager to talk, longwindedly at times, about the philosophy of newsgathering and his strategy for drawing readers to the Web. He obsessed on the grammar of every sentence he edited, calling out writers for their overuse of gerunds and each superfluous “that.”

As editor, Edelstein had high standards and a resume to match. His knowledge of Atlanta – its politics, infrastructure, and history – runs as deep as his desire to improve the city he calls home. In a column he wrote last year, he characterized Atlanta as an impetuous young woman, and he offered her a bit of advice:

“Too busy to hate, too busy to wait, too busy for anything but the next hustle. … You gotta clear your head of all the baggage from your past and aim a whole lot higher.”

Nearly everyone who knows him would agree that “aiming higher” is Ken’s mantra. He pushed his staff as hard as he pushes himself.

Read the rest of this column.

New Year’s Eve cover contest

Tuesday, December 2nd, 2008

Creative Loafing’s on the lookout for some party pics to be featured in our New Year’s Eve Guide Dec. 17. Anything that captures the essence of New Year’s Eve is fair game — Magic Markered declarations lovingly bestowed on faces, the classic couch pass-out, amusingly bad acrobatic endeavors, whatever. As long as it tells a New Year’s Eve story, we’re listening. If we like your image, we’ll slap it on CL’s cover.

Check out our You Shoot page for details on how to submit your images. Just make sure to tag any New Year’s Eve submissions with “clnyeve08.”

Pop! goes the 2008 Creative Loafing Fiction Contest

Wednesday, November 5th, 2008

It’s that time of year again folks – Fiction Contest time! And we know that given the current economic situation (there’s some serious cash at stake here people), there are more starving artists out there than ever.

So, submit a manuscript of no more than 3,000 words either as a hard copy to our offices or online. All works of fiction must in some way incorporate the word “pop” — as a theme, a metaphor, whatever. You can use the word as any way you like; just use it well. Originality is encouraged, and the word count is enforced.

Click on the image below for more details or to submit an entry.

Pop! goes the 2008 Creative Loafing Fiction Contest

Tuesday, November 4th, 2008

It’s that time of year again folks – Fiction Contest time! And we know that given the current economic situation (there’s some serious cash at stake here people), there are more starving artists out there than ever.

So, submit a manuscript of no more than 3,000 words either as a hard copy to our offices or online. All works of fiction must in some way incorporate the word “pop” — as a theme, a metaphor, whatever. You can use the word as any way you like; just use it well. Originality is encouraged, and the word count is enforced.

Click on the image below for more details or to submit an entry.