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Terminal City (magazine)

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117:, the goal was 100 candidates- the campaign resulted in 58 total names on the ballot. In future elections the fee requirement for city mayoral election was raised and applications had to be submitted in person rather than by fax. In 1994, TC received national attention when the paper published a centrefold "pin the leg on the separatist" campaign, and ran a competition at the Niagara Pub. This campaign was mocking Quebec Separatist leader, Lucien Bouchard after he lost his leg to a flesh-eating bacteria. It ceased operation for several years until being revived in 2001. Approximately in 2004 the paper's staff and management came to unresolvable differences resulting in a split where some of the TC staff founded 105:
cover. It had a significant cultural impact on the city during its long off-again on-again publication. Pete Fry designed the logo, and did graphics for the publication for a large portion of its existence. An article by Brian Salmi, predicting forthcoming riot violence was blamed for having a role in the
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and Bellingham areas during the 1990s. There was often trouble getting the paper on the streets on time, sometimes it was a day or two late. This partly resulted in spotty advertising revenue. The first issue featured an interview by Jonathan Hagey of Bruce McCulloch from Kids in the Hall on the
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contained articles and event listings, often spotlighting local music subculture or local fashion, critical reviews, local or international politics, local art. It was a bombastic and opinionated paper and featured local rabble-rouser Brian "Godzilla" Salmi often. In the later years a prominent
113:'s "Savage Love" column other than his home publication, The Stranger, based out of Seattle. There was immediate controversy, as each letter had to address Savage as "Hey Faggot". In 1996, Brian Salmi was at it again, as he and Terminal City encouraged people off the street to run for 95:
was the name of a free independent weekly magazine created by Darren Atwater and Dave Holden from the ashes of AF Magazine. The magazine was started in 1992. as an "every-other weekly", with initial circulation in Vancouver, Bellingham, and occasionally Whistler and Seattle. Later,
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was a cartoonist for the magazine with his comic strip, "I". The final edition was edited by Ian King. Atwater resides in London, UK and occasionally writes for The Huffington Post.
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did not collect any copies for posterity, as it does not archive weekly papers other than the Georgia Straight.
17: 245: 173: 271: 106: 8: 132: 166: 114: 109:. The paper, and Salmi were never charged. It was one of the first papers to carry 205: 119: 260: 162: 149: 135:, and Heather Watson. In October 2005, Terminal City ceased publication. 141: 110: 101: 148:
were of the style of this paper. Comedian and comic book writer
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During the final version of the paper the local artwork of
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and edited by Bess Lovejoy, Chris Eng, Adam Harrison,
258: 267:Defunct magazines published in British Columbia 203: 277:Local interest magazines published in Canada 42:Darren Atwater, Dave Holden, Josephine Ochej 165:models, Bruce McCulloch, Ren and Stimpy, 259: 199: 197: 297:Weekly magazines published in Canada 249:magazine article about the death of 13: 230:Terminal City suspends publication 194: 14: 308: 239: 292:Magazines published in Vancouver 287:Magazines disestablished in 2005 204:Charlie Smith (7 October 2004). 169:, and Paul Watson on its cover. 223: 155: 18:Terminal City (disambiguation) 1: 282:Magazines established in 1992 187: 7: 84:Vancouver, British Columbia 34:Alternative Weekly magazine 10: 313: 183:was featured on the cover. 146:Rhinoceros Party of Canada 123:. This new incarnation of 15: 80: 70: 62: 54: 46: 38: 30: 174:Vancouver Public Library 161:It once featured local 100:was distributed in the 107:1994 Stanley Cup Riot 16:For other uses, see 27: 167:The Real McKenzies 115:Mayor of Vancouver 72:Ceased publication 25: 127:was published by 88: 87: 304: 233: 227: 221: 220: 218: 216: 201: 144:. Antics of the 73: 28: 24: 312: 311: 307: 306: 305: 303: 302: 301: 257: 256: 242: 237: 236: 228: 224: 214: 212: 206:"Editor sacked" 202: 195: 190: 158: 71: 21: 12: 11: 5: 310: 300: 299: 294: 289: 284: 279: 274: 272:Free magazines 269: 255: 254: 241: 240:External links 238: 235: 234: 222: 192: 191: 189: 186: 185: 184: 177: 170: 157: 154: 140:columnist was 86: 85: 82: 78: 77: 74: 68: 67: 64: 60: 59: 56: 52: 51: 50:Darren Atwater 48: 44: 43: 40: 36: 35: 32: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 309: 298: 295: 293: 290: 288: 285: 283: 280: 278: 275: 273: 270: 268: 265: 264: 262: 253: 252: 251:Terminal City 248: 244: 243: 231: 226: 211: 207: 200: 198: 193: 182: 181:Ehren Salazar 178: 175: 171: 168: 164: 163:Suicide Girls 160: 159: 153: 151: 147: 143: 138: 137:Terminal City 134: 130: 126: 125:Terminal City 122: 121: 120:Only Magazine 116: 112: 108: 103: 99: 98:Terminal City 94: 93: 92:Terminal City 83: 79: 75: 69: 65: 61: 57: 53: 49: 45: 41: 37: 33: 29: 26:Terminal City 23: 19: 250: 246: 225: 213:. Retrieved 209: 136: 124: 118: 97: 91: 90: 89: 81:Headquarters 76:October 2005 22: 156:Other facts 150:Ian Boothby 261:Categories 188:References 142:Amil Niazi 133:Aaron Peck 111:Dan Savage 39:Founder(s) 102:Vancouver 47:Publisher 215:2 August 210:Straight 129:John Kay 63:Language 66:English 55:Founded 247:Only 217:2016 172:The 58:1992 31:Type 263:: 208:. 196:^ 232:/ 219:. 20:.

Index

Terminal City (disambiguation)
Vancouver
1994 Stanley Cup Riot
Dan Savage
Mayor of Vancouver
Only Magazine
John Kay
Aaron Peck
Amil Niazi
Rhinoceros Party of Canada
Ian Boothby
Suicide Girls
The Real McKenzies
Vancouver Public Library
Ehren Salazar


"Editor sacked"
Terminal City suspends publication
Only magazine article about the death of Terminal City
Categories
Defunct magazines published in British Columbia
Free magazines
Local interest magazines published in Canada
Magazines established in 1992
Magazines disestablished in 2005
Magazines published in Vancouver
Weekly magazines published in Canada

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