June 18th, 2007
Punk Planet’s latest issue will be their last
I just received an email from Dan at Punk Planet explaining that the current issue of Punk Planet, issue #80, will be their final issue. To read the entire statement, click the link below.
I just wanted to say that I will sorely miss Punk Planet. I still remember picking up one of the first issues in late 95/early 96 when their issues came with 7″ flexis. I think the flexi was a Lookout Records’ sampler with tracks from the Queers, Hi-fives, and a few others. I bought the issue at a Zoink!s’ show as their drummer was a writer for Punk Planet. Since that early issue, Punk Planet has become one of my favorite zines and was always a reliable source of intelligently written thoughts and features.
This news is even sadder when you think about how the future of print magazines are not unlike the future for music sales. As hard for it is for me to imagine all of my music and all music journalism to be strictly digital, it seems as though those days are coming sooner than later. As much as I love the possibilities with digital music and media, I don’t think it will ever compare to pulling an issue of Punk Planet out of your backpack to read on the bus or on the couch.
Dan and Punk Planet, thanks for fighting the good fight for over 10 years. I hope nothing but the best for you and your future endeavors.
Dear Friends,
As much as it breaks our hearts to write these words, the final issue of Punk Planet is in the post, possibly heading toward you right now. Over the last 80 issues and 13 years, we’ve covered every aspect of the financially independent, emotionally autonomous, free culture we refer to as “the underground.” In that time we’ve sounded many alarms from our editorial offices: about threats of co-optation, big-media emulation, and unseen corporate sponsorship. We’ve also done everything in our power to create a support network for independent media, experiment with revenue streams, and correct the distribution issues that have increasingly plagued independent magazines. But now we’ve come to the impossible decision to stop printing, having sounded all the alarms and reenvisioned all the systems we can. Benefit shows are no longer enough to make up for bad distribution deals, disappearing advertisers, and a decreasing audience of subscribers.
As to the latter two points, we could blame the Internet. It makes editorial content—and bands—easy to find, for free. (We’re sure our fellow indie labels, those still standing, can attest to the difficulties created in the last few years). We can blame educational and media systems that value magazines focused on consumerism over engaged dissent. And we can blame the popular but mistaken belief that punk died several years ago.
But it is also true that great things end, and the best things end far too quickly.
As to bad distribution deals, we must acknowledge that the financial hit we took in October of 2005, when our newsstand distributor announced that it was in dire straits, was worse than we originally thought. As the dust began to clear from their January bankruptcy announcement, we began to realize that the magazine was left in significantly worse shape, distribution-wise, than they let on.
Add to that the stagnation that the independent record world is suffering under and the effect that has had on our ad sales, not to mention the loss of independent bookstores with a vested interest in selling our publication, and it all adds up to a desperate situation. This has been made far worse by the exhaustion felt from a year and a half of fighting our own distributor. It was a situation that didn’t have an exit strategy other then, well, exiting.
The books line will continue to publish, and the website will continue to be a social networking site for independently minded folk; Dan will be staying with both, but Anne will be moving on, only blogging occasionally at punkplanet.com while she pursues other interests. All further inquiries about the magazine should be addressed to theend@punkplanet.com.
Thanks for your many years support of Punk Planet–and good luck with your projects as well, we know times are tough all over. We hope to see you on our website–advertising there is very inexpensive, and the site is growing every month. You can find out all the specifics at: http://www.punkplanet.com/web_advertising.
There probably isn’t much else to say that we haven’t already said in PP80—in articles about new activist projects, SXSW, the demise of the IPA, and transgender media, and in interviews with the G7 Welcoming Committee, Andre Schiffrin, and The Steinways. Read it, enjoy it, and find in it enough inspiration to last until we come back in some other form, at some other time, renewed and ready to make another outstanding mark on the world.
Thank you so very much,
Dan
Written by Virgil Dickerson






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On June 18th, 2007 at 2:12 pm
southpawnation said:
oh those wild pre-internet days when all i had to get info in my podunk little down was MRR and Flipside at the local record store…
i’m old
On June 18th, 2007 at 6:51 pm
Chris Vandeviver said:
I’m pretty bummed about the whole thing. January/February I had contacted Punk Planet in hopes that I could snag a reviewing position to sort of build my industry “experience”. The reviews editor was very cool and kind, and gave me the opportunity. My first issue just so happens to be Punk Planet’s last.
Punk Planet has been a steady part of my punk rock and subversive diet for the past 9 years. It was definitely a corner stone piece of a culture that you always could count on to be there no matter what happens. If a publication like Punk Planet– who was fighting the good fight– ended up folding, it bums me out what might happen to some others.
I will forever miss Punk Planet.
On June 19th, 2007 at 9:04 am
J. Bannon said:
Dan & Co. did an amazing job for many years. They will be missed.
On June 19th, 2007 at 3:47 pm
Seth Progression said:
This is really tragic. Punk Planet was one of the best around.