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3:AM Magazine

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3:AM Magazine
URL http://www.3ammagazine.com/3am/
Type of site Consumer
Available language(s) English, Portuguese
Owner Andrew Gallix
Created by Kent Wilson
Launched April 2000
Current status Online

3:AM Magazine was set up as 3ammagazine.com in April 2000 in the wake of Salon.com and Nerve. Edited from Paris, its editor since inception has been Andrew Gallix. 3:AM sees itself as an extension of publishing traditions forged by earlier literary magazines before the advent of webzines [1]. The magazine is notable for the array of literary criticism written by authors themselves. It features interviews with figures from all spheres of cultural activity, particularly cult and transgressive fiction. Authors interviewed more than once include Steve Almond, Billy Childish, Dennis Cooper, Stewart Home, Michael Moorcock, Tony O'Neill, Dan Rhodes and Scarlett Thomas. Its outlook and coverage is resolutely post-punk, particularly the emphasis on 'blank generation' authors and elements of 'Prada Meinhof' (for instance Stuart Christie). In 2004, the editors unsuccessfully tried to prevent the Daily Mirror newspaper from publishing a short-lived 3am Magazine supplement based around its 3am Girls gossip column [2]. The site was also called "suitably roguish for a website that aims to be an online Fitzrovia" by the Daily Telegraph [3]. Regular columnists include Sophie Parkin, Ben Myers and Charles Thomson. Its editors include or have included Noah Cicero, Tao Lin and Tony O'Neill. In 2007 it launched a Brazilian edition of the site. An anthology covering its first five years of publishing, The Edgier Waters, was published in Britain by Snowbooks in June 2006, featuring Steve Almond, Bruce Benderson, Michael Bracewell, Billy Childish, Travis Jeppesen, Noah Cicero, Tim Parks, Mark Simpson and Kenji Siratori.

Notes and references

  1. ^ [1]
  2. ^ Guardian, 'Mirror's 3AM Spin-Off Faces Legal Challenge', 9 March 2004 [2]
  3. ^ Daily Telegraph, 'Diary', 19 January 2004 [3]

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3:AM Magazine from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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