- LivingOUT
.
The first issue (Volume 01, No. 1) was published on June 2nd, 2004, and distributed throughout the Twin Cites of Minneapolis and St. Paul including their surrounding suburbs. The first headline was "Repercussions of Same-Sex Marriage In
Massachusetts ," written byDavid J. Rust . The publisher,Donna M. Gimbut , was credited with the title "editor," with Charles Hughes as Content Manager. Staff writers were David J. Rust andRebecca Boever . Contributing Writers wereEmilie Carter , Charles Hughes,Liz Schulze , Charles Taylor, andChristopher Title .The paper initially had two separate sections: its main news portion and its second portion, "OUT in the Metro," covering travel, entertainment, and local color. On April 6th, 2005 (issue #22), "OUT in the Metro" was combined with the rest of the paper, maintaining the same number of pages, but requiring only a single printing.
Unlike many
LGBT publications, the paper made it a policy not to publish lurid photographs orsexually explicit advertisements . The observation was that many other magazines and news publications serving thegay andlesbian communities already included such explicit material, and LivingOUT wanted to set themselves apart while addressing the growing community of same-gender couples with children as well as families with GLBT members.Gimbut was also the owner of
3 Dollar Bill , which publishedThe Source GLBT Community Directory , a gay and lesbian yellow pages. 3 Dollar Bill was a separate company although some employees worked for both it and LivingOUT Media Group.In 2004, the newspaper covered major news events such as Marriage Equality, legislative activism by groups such as
OutFront Minnesota andRainbow Families , the 2004 Presidential Election, and a variety ofgay rights issues.The end
By late spring, 2005, many employees had quit over lack of payment and the final issue was released only at the
Twin Cities GLBT Pride Festival . This last publication of LivingOUT, delayed from its cover date of June 15, 2005, was also the first anniversary issue.Additional to its non-payment of employees there were other legal concerns. Most prominent were accusations that LivingOUT inflated its circulation numbers to advertisers and provided poor customer support, further leading to few repeat customers.
For a brief period in late September, 2005 through October, 2005, the Justice Department was actively seeking the whereabouts of the company's owner and publisher.
On October 13th, 2005, owner Donna M. Gimbut declared personal
bankruptcy although LivingOUT and all other associated businesses were reportedly not in bankruptcy.External links
* [http://www.citypages.com/databank/26/1290/article13614.asp Article on the demise of "LivingOUT"] from
City Pages
* [http://www.eleventh-avenue-south.com/archives/000553.html Blog Coverage on the end of "LivingOUT"] "Eleventh Avenue South "
* [http://www.eleventh-avenue-south.com/archives/000564.html Further Blog Coverage on the end of "LivingOUT"] from "Eleventh Avenue South "
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