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- <text id=94TT1202>
- <title>
- Sep. 05, 1994: Ideas:Zine But Not Heard
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Sep. 05, 1994 Ready to Talk Now?:Castro
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ARTS & MEDIA/IDEAS, Page 68
- Zine But Not Heard
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Edgy and underground, homemade "fanzines" mine punk-rock love
- and crepe-sole shoes to make words on paper radical again
- </p>
- <p>By David M. Gross
- </p>
- <p> There are those who argue that the underground these days can
- be found on the Internet: the global computer network allows
- its travelers to move about anonymously and carve out a corner
- for narrow, unconventional obsessions. But there is another,
- subterranean world of people with aliases and attitudes that
- makes the Internet seem almost fuddy-duddy. E-mail? Postings?
- Those are for executives and housewives.
- </p>
- <p> The real underground has taken the very un-Postmodern step of
- depending on paper and the Postal Service: this is the low-tech,
- unwired world of photocopied "fanzines" (from fan magazines),
- the vanity projects of a new generation of publishers who are
- making fat, unglossy magazines radical again. Many of these
- "zines," as they are more generally called, are produced with
- desktop computers, but that is as sophisticated as they get.
- The majority make a point of their crude appearance and unhurried
- voyage to the reader; most are collated by hand, distributed
- by the mailman and cost $3 to $6. If they are printed at all,
- the runs typically remain at fewer than 2,000 copies. And the
- goal, of course, is not to make money, build circulation or
- get noticed. Instead some zines refuse to carry any advertising,
- distribute only to their intellectual compatriots and switch
- titles to disguise themselves as well as avoid detection by
- a possible talent scout.
- </p>
- <p> The purpose of zines is to have a voice--quiet, yes, but more
- tangible than a computer message--to create a nonvirtual community
- of like-minded readers who can, in the case of the more longstanding
- publications, actually reach the publisher on the phone. "Benjamin
- Franklin made zines," says R. Seth Friedman, 32, publisher of
- Factsheet Five, a bimonthly review of these publications. "He
- published his own thoughts using his own printing presses. It
- wasn't the magazine business. He did it all on his own."
- </p>
- <p> Cometbus is a case in point. A hand-collated zine with a cult
- following, it recounts the travels, incidents and imaginings
- of Aaron, an American drifter who wanders the contemporary landscape
- in search of adventure, both ordinary and profound. With more
- than 30 issues published in 12 years, Cometbus is considered
- a classic in this subterranean world. Like many zines, it is
- filled with words. Issue No. 30, for instance, is 82 pages of
- pure print, sometimes crawling off the page. It contains this
- paean to punk love: "Punk rock love is...looking at her
- tattoos while she's asleep. Taking showers together. Playing
- checkers with cigarette butts. Watching her band play...Both of you having the same ex-girlfriend...Her giving you
- 10 rolls of duct tape for your birthday. Her beating up skinheads.
- Going to the prom on her motorcycle and checking in the helmets
- at the coat check..."
- </p>
- <p> With its low cost of entry--a few thousand dollars and access
- to a copying machine--this society of self-publishers is growing
- fast. This year alone, at least 20,000 titles have been produced
- in the U.S., and Friedman says the cottage industry is growing
- at an annual rate of 20%. Doug Biggert, who oversees the supply
- of some 500 titles at 102 of the Tower record, video and book
- stores, says the chain sells 4,000 zines a month. The supply
- always changes, of course. Dozens of new titles pop up and fold
- each month and focus on everything from the benign to the outre.
- 8-Track Mind, for instance, extols the aural experience of listening
- to eight-track tapes. ANSWER Me!, on the other hand, claims
- to tap "primal longings for violence," according to its 33-year-old
- publisher, Jim Goad. Issues have contained the text of an actual
- phone conversation between euthanasia advocate Dr. Jack Kevorkian
- and a woman pretending to be terminally ill (in reality, Goad's
- wife), as well as articles about the North American Man/Boy
- Love Association, a pro-pedophilia organization. Goad is about
- to publish "The Rape Issue," which includes such articles as
- "Let's Hear It for Violence Toward Women." An admirer of Louis
- Farrakhan and David Duke, Goad proudly describes what he does
- as "journalism without a social value." Publishing, he says,
- "keeps people like me out of jail. The zine is a good outlet
- for aggression that otherwise might be spent injudiciously."
- </p>
- <p> The vast majority of zines, however, settle for the slightly
- irreverent. Some have literary aspirations, others revel in
- white-trash culture; some have a weirdly tight focus, others
- purposefully ramble. Diseased Pariah News uses gallows humor
- to lampoon the daily trauma of living with AIDS; Processed World
- ridicules the consumer culture of Popeye's chicken shacks and
- Subway sandwich shops; the I Hate Brenda Newsletter lambastes
- former Beverly Hills, 90210 star Shannen Doherty for everything
- from her pancake-white makeup to her recital of the Pledge of
- Allegiance at the 1992 Republican Convention. Dirt Rag is a
- service zine for dirt bikers that lists the sport's contests
- and teaches readers how to make spiked ice tires for the winter.
- Chuck glorifies trailer-park food--such dishes as Armour Potted
- Meat Food Product; and FishWrap publishes poetry like Craig
- Thompson's "Swarm," which includes the line: "Splattered on
- the windshield, a thousand gnats struck low by physics."
- </p>
- <p> Friedman traces contemporary zines to two sources. One route
- passes through the highbrow beat poetry of the 1940s and '50s
- that, because of its small audience, perfected the art of producing
- the small-run, beautifully crafted publications called chapbooks.
- The other follows the science-fiction press back to its pulp
- roots in the late '30s when fans of this literary genre circulated
- rough, mimeographed copies of their own voluminous stories,
- commentary and manifestos.
- </p>
- <p> The exploding of the punk scene in the late '70s gave rise to
- the first fanzines, which were devoted to the bands and their
- followers. Fanzines soon branched out, engaging in more general
- critiques of contemporary mores and aesthetics but always reflecting
- the personal tastes of their publishers: thus they evolved into
- so-called perzines. Nancy's, edited by Ohio librarian Nancy
- Bonnell-Kangas, broke the "band barrier" in the mid-'80s to
- become one of the earliest perzines to address nonmusic issues.
- Now in its 10th year, its current offering is called "The Ground
- Issue" and includes articles on the richness of humus, the sweetness
- of yams and the delights of beet salad.
- </p>
- <p> Whether discussing food or crepe-sole shoes, the point is always
- to take the personal public, while preserving an intimate audience.
- That's why the thing most feared by a zine publisher is fame,
- even the notorious kind. Greta, for instance, is the publisher
- of Mudslap, but Greta is an alias, and she puts out her zine
- as she hitches rides in the boxcars of America's railway system.
- "I don't want anyone to know too much about it--'cause if
- they do, then people will think they're Jack London or Steinbeck.
- They'll go freight hopping and get their legs cut off. Please
- don't do it." Greta is not just worried about inspiring imitators.
- Her underground status also allows her to justify her unconventional
- publishing practices. "If you're mainstream, you can't steal
- postage. You can't plagiarize. You can't ditch bills. You can't
- be incendiary. You can't be yourself," she says.
- </p>
- <p> Bobby S. Fred also uses an alias to run an independent record
- label--which he refuses to name--and to edit a post-punk
- zine called Bobby Is Fred. He makes his living stuffing burritos
- at a Del Taco in Los Angeles. Unlike wannabes who prowl Sunset
- Plaza looking to get noticed, Bobby craves obscurity. He enjoys
- saying his favorite activity is eating at such trendy restaurants
- as Spago--by serving himself from the Dumpster out back. "Look,
- this is a nation of disenfranchised kids," says Bobby. "The
- reason we don't talk to the mainstream media is because we want
- to guard the few places that we have left, like our zines."
- But the secret is getting harder to keep. A budding zinemeister
- can now consult a glossary called The World of Zines, put out
- by Penguin, which offers helpful hints on how to start your
- own.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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