Thursday, 4 February 2010

Fangoria RIP?

For more than 30 years Fangoria has been the number one name in reporting on the horror genre. No more. Apparently.

I say apparently, because no one seems to know for sure. Articles started appearing on the net yesterday, discussing its demise, articles which seemed to confirm what many of us who wrote for the magazine had been feeling for some time — that the magazine was in trouble and the end was nigh. The Fangoria website had been down for more than a week which wasn't a good sign. Added to that, there was the fact that some contributors haven't been paid for months...

It's such a shame. As a schoolboy, I remember reading the first few issues in a newsagents near where I lived, not believing the bloody nature of the photos. I started buying it regularly from around issue 16, and when I started writing for a living, it was one of three magazines I wanted to write for. (Another was Premiere, which I did, and that sadly has also gone the way of the dodo.)


My first piece for Fangoria was on a movie called The Refrigerator. I wrote about Dust Devil, Branagh's Frankenstein, 28 Weeks Later, Sleepy Hollow, and Blade 2 among many others. I had several cover stories and even appeared on the cover once, much to my surprise.

Fangoria never paid well. I remember being shocked at how little their rate was when I received my first cheque but I, like many others down the years, did it because we loved the magazine, and because editor Tony Timpone and managing editor Michael Gingold are two very nice guys. I had written very little for the magazine in recent times, and once the cheques started being late, I was less and less inclined to.

I received the February 2010 issue in the post last week. It has my cover story on The Wolfman. Will that be the last ever issue of Fangoria? Who knows. I sincerely hope not...

4 comments:

Unknown said...

If true, this sucks. It's truly the end of an era. I used to always look forward to when new issues of both STARLOG and FANGORIA would come out at my local magazine shop (boy, those are now extinct as well!) but I think that this a sign of the times. Print editions of magazines are in deep trouble and they have to go online in order to survive but it must be even harder for FANGORIA what with all the other amazing horror websites out there that dutifully keep up on the latest films, books, TV shows, etc.

Mark Salisbury said...

But Fangoria was a brand that should have moved onto the web with ease. One of the problems was that the company tried too hard to diversify into other areas. Plus the website was pretty awful...

Unknown said...

Yeah, their website sure did leave something to be desired. They shoulda paid attention to some of the excellent horror film-themed blogs that are out there.

Same could be said for STARLOG. Their site is pretty brutal also.

Mark Salisbury said...

'Tis a familiar story...