
Citybeat closure silences more critical voices in the arts
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_This article was originally on a blog post platform and may be missing photos, graphics or links. See About archive blog posts._ The alternative weekly publication Los Angeles CityBeat will
discontinue publishing, Bruce Bolkin, president of parent company Southland Publishing, Inc., said in a memo today. The end of the publication will -- at least temporarily -- silence more
critical voices on arts and entertainment in Los Angeles, including culture writer Alan Rich, former music critic for LA Weekly, who only recently began writing for CityBeat, and theater
critic Don Shirley, a former Los Angeles Times staff writer. Earlier this year, LA Weekly eliminated the position of theater editor and critic held by Steven Leigh Morris, although Morris
continues to contribute to theater coverage for that publication on a freelance basis. As we reported in Culture Monster in January, at the time that LA Weekly cut Morris loose, the Los
Angeles Daily News had dropped theater critic and writer Evan Henerson. Shirley said he received a copy of the Bolkin memo in an e-mail this morning, topped with a few words from CityBeat
Publisher Will Swaim: > Guys: Sorry to be the bearer (and recipient) of this bad news: > we’re closing. Thanks very much for your diligent work. You made > the paper great. --will
When asked for comment on how the closure would affect theater coverage as a whole in Los Angeles, Shirley said... ‘So much of it was said when Steven Leigh Morris was laid off, although
he’s doing exactly the same work he was doing beforehand; I don’t have that option here, because the paper is closing. Most of it has been said ad nauseam.’ Continued Shirley: ‘I was going
[to the theater] between six and eight times a week, most weeks, and I was doing everything -- no one else was doing theater for CityBeat.’ Said Rich in an e-mail to The Times: ‘The
absurdity of this latest shutdown is that it’s happening exactly as classical life in Los Angeles zooms skyward in importance, controversy and excitement: the ‘Ring’ at the Opera, the
changing of the guard at the Philharmonic, the emergence of the Colburn School, the new halls in Orange County. Measure this against the reduction of independent music criticism to absolute
zero, and even the newspaper staff depleted, and you come up with something perilously between irony and disaster. ‘ The full memo from Bolkin: > March 27, 2009 It is with great regret
that as of the March 26, 2009 > issue, Southland Publishing, Inc. has decided to discontinue > publishing the Los Angeles CityBeat alternative weekly publication. > For 6 years, the
Los Angeles CityBeat has offered a fresh > perspective to the readers of Los Angeles, and Southland is > extremely proud of its writers and entire staff who have contributed > to
the paper. We want to thank our readers and advertisers for their > support. Southland Publishing, Inc. continues to publish the > Pasadena Weekly, Ventura County Reporter, San Diego
CityBeat, Inland > Empire Weekly, and the monthly magazines Life After50, Ventana and > Arroyo. Bruce Bolkin President Southland Publishing, Inc. -- Diane Haithman