Media Coverage of Go-Go Magazine
- Michael Roberts, The Message: Getting Racked,
Westword, September 12, 2002
"Go-Go, an entertainment biweekly, is very unhappy about
the Denver ordinance governing news racks, and many [other local publications] feel the same."
- Bill Husted, "Parties ready to get wild!" Denver Post,
March 17, 2002
"Not everyone loves St. Patrick's Day. Disgusted janitor Arthur Hernandez is quoted in Go-Go magazine this week: "Have you ever tried to pick up green vomit?"
- Michael Roberts,
The Message: Wake me up before you Go-Go, Westword, November 22, 2001
"When I first started documenting the comings and goings
of higher-ups at the entertainment biweekly Go-Go, I had no idea how much work it would
turn out to be."
- Michael Roberts,
The Message: Tight Times, Westword, October 18, 2001
"Smaller papers are being hit as well. The bi-weekly magazine Go-Go is hanging in there,
having just hired a new editor, former Go-Go intern Matt Davis, but the music publication
Soundboard has been forced into hiatus."
- Michael Roberts,
The Message: Turmoil a-Go-Go, Westword, September 20, 2001
"The biweekly known as Go-Go has been among the more resilient zines
to hit Denver in recent years."
- Bill Husted,
Things to Do in Denver, Denver Post, June 10, 2001
"So what are you going to do until The Wildlife Experience comes to town? The new Go-Go magazine lists 10 Things to Do After Ten in Denver. I usually
can only think of one. Sleep.... "
- Laura Bond, Backwash, Westword,
April 5, 2001
"Still, everyone in attendance -- from mayoral spokesman Andrew
Hudson to furniture maven/ad-rate crusader Jake Jabs and Go-Go Magazine editor Chris
Magyar -- seemed to enjoy the proceedings, which had been publicized only in an April
Fool's mention in the most recent edition of Go-Go."
-
Michael Roberts, The Message: Hooligan Rises Again, Westword, February 8, 2001
"In my November 9 column "Zine But Not Heard," John Reidy, the
man behind The Hooligan, which is among the
most singular Denver zines ever, said nasty
things about the biweekly publication Go-Go, not
the least of which was, "If Go-Go is around for
seven years, I'll eat a turd." Afterward, he was
bombarded with e-mail attacks from Go-Go
supporters questioning everything from his punk
credibility to his sexuality. "
- Floyd Miller,
Making the Zine: Slam dance, Letters to Westword, November 23, 2000
"Michael Roberts's "Zine But Not Heard," in the November 9 issue, was
an interesting piece of slam on other papers....And in the section on Go-Go,
it's no wonder Roberts failed to mention the food critic and sex-advice column,
both of which are a million times more interesting and clever than ... your
paper...."
-
Michael Roberts, The Message: Show Them the Money, Westword,
November 16, 2000
"Meanwhile at Go-Go, a periodical spotlighted
seven days back, publisher Gary Haney ... has left the building.... Haney's
replacement is Sean Weaver, the editor of Metro State's newspaper, the
Metropolitan."
-
Michael Roberts, The Message: Zine But Not Heard, Westword,
November 9, 2000
"Go-Go, currently the city's most
prominent new entertainment bi-weekly..."
- Bill Husted,
The Dish, Denver Post, September 29, 2000
"Meet Bobby Black, Denver's newest restaurant writer. He
writes the Tattooed Food Critic column for Go-Go magazine, an alternative
paper..."
- Justin Berton,
Breast Reduction, Westword, November 25, 1999
"Entertainment, honest to God, without the X."
All Rights Reserved © 2001 Go Go Media, LLC, Denver, Colorado
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