I
heard some news yesterday that left me seriously upset –
The Word Magazine is closing down.
This
probably sounds a little pathetic to a lot people, but I'm feeling
something like grief. I've read every issue of the magazine since I
picked up a copy in 2004, had a subscription for the past four years,
listened to all its podcasts for the past five, and logged into its
website nearly every day. It's been part of my life and I'm going to
miss it terribly.
It's
been the regular filler for chunks of my time, anything between
fifteen minutes and two hours, when I want to flop out with something
that entertains yet stimulates me. The magazine focuses mainly on
music but also covers movies, TV, books and often strays into
technology and social issues. The podcasts have been lovely, light hearted
chunks of conversation between the staff and various figures from
music and the media. The weekly email has introduced me to lots of
entertaining snippets from the internet, and the giveaway CD lots of great music that I wouldn't otherwise have heard.
On
top of that the website has been something special. Its blog section
has allowed the readers to take over, starting their own
conversations – sometimes serious, sometimes flippant – that
often draw hundreds of comments. It's pulled off the stroke that
gets the best out of the internet, creating a community of people with
similar interests who enjoy conversing with each other. For a middle
aged bloke who doesn't do regular evenings in the pub in any more –
and I'm sure it's the same for many of its male and female readers – it's given me
the joy of jumping into fun conversations whenever I'm in the
mood. And I have been to a couple of its readers' mingles, and found
them to be lovely occasions.
No-one's
sure how much of this may continue in another form, but the magazine
has provided the focus and after one last issue it won't be with us
any more, another victim of the business model for publishers has
fallen apart. I've got every sympathy for the guys who set it up –
Mark Ellen and David Hepworth – and all the people who work with
them. They've done a great job and I hope they can earn a living
doing something similar.
It's
nothing like as bad as losing a person that you love, but I'm losing
something that I've treasured over the past few years, and it's going
to leave an ache that won't go away for a long time. That's why I
don't think there's anything silly in saying that I'm beginning to
grieve for a magazine.