The Asheville Global Report announced yesterday that this week’s issue will be its last. The weekly, volunteer-run newspaper has been publishing for eight-and-a-half years, delivering news that’s gone underreported by the mainstream media to progressive readers.
While the print version of the AGR will cease to exist, the people who produce it will continue to generate news in other media. AGR TV, the publication’s relatively new public-access television program on URTV, is now also featured on Free Speech TV on the Dish Satellite Network, and next week, the show will debut on Atlanta’s public-access channel.
Below, an e-mail from AGR Editor Eamon Martin announcing the papers’ decision to stop publication.
— Rebecca Bowe, editorial assistant
___________________________________________________________________________
From: emartin@agrnews.org
Subject: Good Night to the AGR newspaper
Date: May 20, 2007 9:32:08 PM EDT (CA)
To: undisclosed-recipients:;
Dear friends and family,
I don’t know quite how to say this other than just being direct. After the
publication of this week’s 436th issue of the Asheville Global Report, the
newspaper will cease to exist.
A combination of several factors has led to this inevitable outcome, and
our newspaper is by no means alone. The past year has seen many of the
strongest progressive publications meet a similar fate: Clamor, LiP
Magazine and the NewStandard, just to name a few. The difficulties in
sustaining a grassroots publishing enterprise of this sort have never been
more apparent. Though most of AGR’s reasons for stopping publication are
particular to us, we do share with our defunct colleagues many overlapping
reasons as well.
Without getting into the whys and wherefors here, let’s just say we feel
proud and lucky to have enjoyed a weekly consistent run as much as we’ve
had. Really, it’s taken several miracles to make even that possible –that,
and the crucial support of friends like you who are reading this email.
You might not think that financing 2900 copies of a news weekly would be
so difficult, but it sure is these days, especially one of our stripe.
The GOOD NEWS is that our little flagship tugboat has succeeded beyond our
wildest dreams. It’s carried us to a place where the baton has been passed
to a more sophisticated method of information transportation. The
newspaper’s passing marks not just an end, but the beginning of an
exciting new era for AGR, unthinkable a year ago, let alone over the
course of our eight and a half year print run. Through our website and
relatively new TV program, AGR is now potentially reaching 26-28 million
people, a feat that would never have been possible with the newspaper.
And these figures are growing…AGRTV can now be seen on Free Speech TV on
the Dish satellite network, as well as cable access channels in Asheville,
Raleigh, and Chapel Hill. This week marks our debut on Boone, NC’s public
access channel and next week, Atlanta’s(!!) Last month also saw a
remarkable spike on our web traffic –the most in about a year –a number
that has already been surpassed this month.
So though I’m sadly announcing our newspaper’s funeral, it’s with no small
amount of excitement and optimism for the rest of the AGR enterprise.
I’m sorry for the impersonal nature of this announcement, but I needed to
talk to as many of you as possible at once. This development will have a
direct impact on some of you who work directly with AGR, whether you’re a
volunteer, reporter, an advertiser, a member of our top-notch radio team,
or a loyal reader and supporter. Please be assured that I will be in touch
however necessary as soon as I can to talk to you personally.
Thanks again for being there for us all these years, and for me
personally. It has meant a great deal more to AGR and me than you may ever
know.
Onward and upward,
Eamon
Although I was never in 100 percent agreement with the AGR’s take on many things, I’m deeply saddened to see the paper close up shop. In fact, I always sort of wished I had their fire — their sheer passion for getting the other side of the story out there to be read — even if I didn’t share all of their social and political views. TV show and other projects notwithstanding, I’ll miss reading the AGR, or rather, I’ll miss knowing that the AGR was there to be read.
Good luck to all of you on the new project.
The AGR was one of the jewels in our cooky, southeastern altern-crown. whether or not you agreed with everything they wrote, most of us were very proud to have it come from Asheville.
i’ve had some great conversations with editors and contributors while enjoying a cup of tea at a coffee shop dowtown, and i consider those conversations one of the many perks of living in such a great commyunity. it’s not about whether those left-wing conspiracy nutjobs were right. it as that they were OUR left-wing extremists. there are not too many towns in this supposed free nation where such sentiments could be published weekly.
now i guess i have to watch the teevee show, or buy eamon a beer at broadways to find out about dick cheney’s latest evil-doings in the middle-east and beyond.
long live the AGR!!!!!!!!!!!
How sad is it that a bunch of people complaining about not getting tickets to a show by a bunch of has-beens gets 30-plus comments, and yet almost no one seems to care that the Global Report is going under? This sucks! Get your priorities straight people.