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Window Media, Owner Of Washington Blade And Others, Abruptly Closes

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Window Media, a company that owns the Washington Blade and a handful of other gay publications, has reportedly closed down, taking its newspapers with it just a month after the respected Blade celebrated its 40th anniversary.

Project Q Atlanta reported this morning that employees of the Southern Voice and David, Window's two Atlanta-based papers, arrived at the office to find the locks changed and a note on the door:

"It is with GREAT regret that we must inform you that effective immediately, the operations of Window Media, LLC and Unite Media, LLC have closed down." The note continues that employees should return Wednesday with boxes for their things.

"We had no inclination it'd be this morning. Everyone's in shock right now," the Southern Voice's editor, Laura Douglas-Brown, told Creative Loafing.

Window Media, which also owns the Southern Florida Blade, the Southern Voice and 411 Magazine, has had a tough couple years. In August 2008, the company's major stakeholder, Avalon Equity Partners, was put in receivership by the Small Business Administration for failing to have private investments totaling half of the SBA's $38 million loan to the firm. In July, Window CEO David Unger quit amid speculation that he was forced out by the SBA. There were also rumors this May that Unger was trying to sell some of Window's assets.

Window was founded in 1997 with the goal of buying gay publications around the country to build a nationwide chain.

No one is answering phones at Window or the Washington Blade.

According to The Advocate, the Blade has been breaking news throughout its history, reporting from New York during the outbreak of the AIDS epidemic and outing a nominee of Bill Clinton for firing gay employees. It also became the first-ever gay publication to interview a Republican presidential candidate last year.

Late Update: The Politico is reporting that members of the Blade's staff are launching a new venture. They'll meet to discuss it tomorrow.

Late late update: The entire staff of two Window publications, South Florida Blade and 411 Magazine, will get to keep their jobs, according to an announcement by 411 editor Sheri Elfman. Both publications will now be published, under new names, by Multimedia Platforms LLC, which owns half of the Florida web site Mark's List.

Elfman said 411 will now be called Mark's List Magazine. The Blade will continue on under an as-yet-to-be-announced name on a biweekly basis. (Via Bilerico)

The move may have been in the works for a while. According to documents with the Florida Department of State, Michael Kitchens -- the COO of Window Media -- is listed as a manager of Multimedia.

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10 comments

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November 16, 2009 1:43 PM   

"The Politico is reporting that members of the Blade's staff are launching a new venture. They'll meet to discuss it tomorrow."

And, no doubt, it will be presented by the Politico as good news for the Republicans.

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November 16, 2009 1:46 PM   

The Washington Blade was the only newspaper that ever interviewed me. It was part of their coverage of our demonstration outside Bolling AFB in December 1983.

I was the guy with the sign, "I'm a straight man for Gay rights!" I was also part of the AFOSI, the people doing the investigation. (I was a cube rat, not an agent.)

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November 16, 2009 2:06 PM   

That's a shame. The Blade was one of the best gay rags I've ever read.

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November 16, 2009 6:11 PM    in reply to ClosetLuddite

Gee, how long has it been since you read the "rag"? It jumped the shark YEARS ago when this current ownership bought it, and the Washington Blade ceased being a GLBT community newspaper, or a DC area newspaper....it was run into the ground, a terribly done newspaper that ignored huge issues in the community, and that was so city-centric that 50% of DC area's gay population was ignored in it....if they re-invent it as an employee locally owned newspaper, perhaps it will go back to being relevant to DC's gay population--that would be a good thing!

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November 16, 2009 8:03 PM    in reply to Doug in Mount Vernon

Ummm I guess it's been since 1998. Things change I guess... I hereby backdate my comment to whenever it "jumped the shark".

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mcc

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November 16, 2009 2:29 PM   

I couldn't tell you anything about the print version but the Blade web publication was fantastic, they frequently are the first or only reporting source to break a gay rights story. I really hope at least the web version is able to continue in some form.

Is it known whether the Blade, as a standalone venture, was making money before the parent company went under?

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November 16, 2009 2:41 PM   

The Blade did house some really excellent reporters, though seems to me I heard that their owners were a bunch of Log Cabin Republican types who zealously enforced "balance" in the paper's coverage? Another demonstration of the right's brilliant business nous, perhaps?

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November 16, 2009 5:31 PM    in reply to septictank

I wouldn't call them LCR types, but more politically independent. They managed to piss off the parties on both sides of the aisle. I never found them to be overly concerned about "balance." Chris Crain, one of the founders of Window Media, used to be pretty heavily associated with the Republican party, but he, like a lot of gay Republicans, ended up landing in independent territory as the party has swung further right.

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November 16, 2009 6:13 PM    in reply to septictank

I WOULD call them mostly LCR types---or more specifically, ignornat of what GLBT progress looks like, anyway.

They were not a GLBT community newspaper anymore, and it showed.

Kevin "Mr. I Can't Believe Any Gay People Still Live in Virginia" Naff was a pathetic editor! His editorials were mostly LCR tripe, and they were almost always WRONG!

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November 16, 2009 3:00 PM   

This is another fallout of a financier-led economy. The papers themselves are almost certainly viable, but if somebody in a suit who lost a bet with other people's money can't be bothered to figure out who to sell them to or how to hive them off in a timely fashion, the brands just go up in smoke.

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