The eXile explained

The eXile
Type:Alternative weekly
Format:Tabloid
Foundation:1997
Ceased Publication:2008
Owners:Independent
Publisher:Konstantin Boukarev
Language:English
Headquarters:Moscow, Russia

The eXile was a Moscow-based English-language biweekly free tabloid newspaper, aimed at the city's expatriate community, which combined outrageous, sometimes satirical, content with investigative reporting. In October 2006, co-editor Jake Rudnitsky summarized The eXile editorial policy to The Independent: "We shit on everybody equally."[1], The eXile is published in an online-only format as The Exiled.[2]

Rolling Stone magazine said in 1998 that then-coeditors Mark Ames and Matt Taibbi take the raw material of this decadent new Moscow and convert it into 25,000 instantly snapped-up issues of The eXile, consisting of misogynist rants, dumb pranks, insulting club listings and photos of blood-soaked corpses, all redeemed by political reporting that's read seriously not only in Moscow but also in Washington."[3] A CNN documentary in 1999 focusing on The eXile agreed, saying, "Brazen, irreverent, immodest, and rude, The eXile struggles with the harsh truth of the new century in Russia...Since 1997, Ames and Taibbi have lampooned and investigated greed, corruption, cowardice and complacency."[4] The Moscow Times writes that "The eXile, which publishes Gonzo-style journalism on topics such as drugs, prostitution and Moscow nightlife side-by-side with political analysis, has often pushed the limits of decency -- not to mention libel law."[5] Newsweek correspondent Owen Matthews called The eXile "brilliant and outrageous."[6]

The eXile history saw several practical jokes, including reportedly getting Mikhail Gorbachev to enter negotiations to secure a position as "perestroika coordinator" for the New York Jets.[7] Jonathan Shainin of Salon also wrote in 2005 that The eXile "ran serious press criticism salted with vicious personal attacks on reporters."

On 10 June 2008, columnist Gary Brecher ("The War Nerd") published a letter on the website asking for donations from readers, saying "it takes money and we have none, zero, aren't even getting paid any more".[8] On 19 June 2008, the London Daily Telegraph reported that following a government audit, the paper would cease to be printed and would, from then on, appear only on the Internet.[9] A month after shutting down, the newspaper launched a web site[10] called eXiled Online. According to Mark Ames, the new site is to "focus more on the United States," though the Saint Petersburg Times reported that co-editor Yasha Levine will remain in Russia "as long as [he] can hold out."

Origins

In 1997, Ames was editor of the English-language Moscow newspaper Living Here. The concept of Living Here was first proposed by Manfred Witteman, who convinced his partner Marina Pshevecherskaya to provide $10,000 of start-up capital.[11] Citing Manfred and Marina's "incessant petty squabbles over money and title" Ames quit Living Here and began planning his own publication. Ames convinced most of the intermittently paid staff of Living Here to defect to the newly conceived newspaper, The eXile, including sales manager Kara Deyerin, and his replacement editor Kevin McElwee. Manfred and Marina hired Matt Taibbi to counter this rebellion, but he became disillusioned after producing one issue of Living Here. Taibbi also defected and became co-editor of The eXile.

Some of the contributors, including Ames, Taibbi, Alexander Zaitchik, and John Dolan (using the pseudonym Gary Brecher), previously worked for the New York Press.

Contributors

Content

Articles published in The eXile have focused both on Moscow- and Russia-related topics, as well as issues of more general interest. Investigative reporting, reviews of Moscow nightlife, concerts, and restaurants, commentary on politics and culture in Russia and America, film and book reviews, and mocking replies to its readers' letters appeared in most issues. The eXile was known for its descriptions of Moscow life. Andrew Meier, who served as Time magazine's Russia correspondent from 1996 until 2001, was quoted by Rolling Stone as saying: "No one describes expat life in Moscow better than The eXile. They hit it right on its ugly head."

"The '90s in Moscow were a great time," Ames told The New York Observer, "like what they say about the 20s in Paris or the early 30s in Berlin. It was completely hedonistic and nihilistic and full of crime... A lot of [Taibbi's] prose was written on smack and a lot of mine was written on speed... We wrote a whole bunch of editorials about the size of Putin's penis".[12]

Features

Notes and References

  1. News: 10 October 2006 . Moscow newspapers: the story of one title's survival . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20061025232353/http://news.independent.co.uk/media/article1822802.ece . 25 October 2006 . The Independent . London.
  2. Web site: The eXiled: We’re Back, And We’re Very Pissed Off - By Mark Ames - The eXiled . 21 June 2024 . en.
  3. https://www.rollingstone.com/culture/culture-news/bright-lights-red-square-189787/ Bright Lights. Red Square
  4. News: Jack Hamann . 1999-09-23 . The Russia Factor . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120214081906/http://www.cdi.org/russia/johnson/3462.html . 2012-02-14 . CNN Perspectives . Reprint. (see also Hamann's site)
  5. News: Alexander Osipovich . 2008-06-05 . Investigators Target eXile For Possible Violations . The Moscow Times.
  6. News: June 2008 . End of The eXile Era . The St. Petersburg Times.
  7. News: McMeekin, Sean . January 2006 . From Russia With Malice . Reason Magazine.
  8. News: Brecher, Gary . Save The eXile: The War Nerd Calls Mayday . The eXile.
  9. News: 19 June 2008 . Moscow forces expat newspaper to close . The Daily Telegraph.
  10. News: 18 July 2008 . eXile Returns Online After Paper's Closure . https://web.archive.org/web/20080719235252/http://www.sptimes.ru/index.php?action_id=2&story_id=26581 . 19 July 2008 . The St. Petersburg Times.
  11. Book: Ames, Mark . The eXile: Sex, Drugs and Libel in the New Russia . Taibbi, Matt . Limonov, Edward . Grove/Atlantic Monthly . 2000 . 0-8021-3652-4. (online excerpt available)
  12. News: George Gurley . 18 June 2000 . From Russia with Lust . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20070927001437/http://www.observer.com/node/43059 . 27 September 2007 . The New York Observer.
  13. http://mokk.bme.hu/kozpont/konferenciak/szetfolyoirat/eloadasok/dolanj Conceived in Sin: The Online Audience and the Case of the eXile
  14. News: Leaya Lee . Lecture: Matt Taibbi . Bullpen.
  15. News: Mark Ames . 10 April 1999 . Democracy Sucks . the eXile.
  16. Suetenko, Larisa. Pravda, 21 June 2001.
  17. News: Nabi Abdullaev . 16 November 2005 . Supreme Court Bans Bolsheviks . The Moscow Times. Paid archive a/o 30 March 2010.
  18. News: Tom Parfitt . 16 April 2003 . Writer to serve four years in labour camp . The Scotsman.
  19. News: 30 June 2003 . Maverick writer freed . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120204033927/http://www.cdi.org/russia/johnson/7245-11.cfm . 4 February 2012 . gazeta.ru . Reprint.
  20. http://www.aponline.gov.in/apportal/contact/CONTACT_DETAILS.ASP?CONTACTID=494 Government of Andhra Pradesh
  21. News: 8 January 2010 . Congmen attack Reliance outlets across Andhra . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120505012540/http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2010-01-08/india/28117240_1_gas-dispute-ysr-ambani-brothers . 5 May 2012 . The Times of India.
  22. Web site: Archives Top and Latest News .
  23. Web site: 3 August 2004 . eXile - Issue #194 - We Dunnit! . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20040803150859/http://www.exile.ru/194/we_dunnit.html . 3 August 2004 . 21 June 2024 . The eXile.
  24. News: Mark Ames . 4 September 2004 . Our Man in Moscow . Metroactive.
  25. News: Gary Martin . 15 July 2004 . Bonilla forgery was work of tabloid . San Antonio Express News.
  26. News: 28 June 2004 . ru:Американские конгрессмены копают под киндер-сюрприза . http://www.pravda.ru/politics/authority/kremlin/28-06-2004/47644-kirienko-0 . Pravda . Russian.
  27. News: 28 June 2004 . ru:КРЕДИТ МВФ: КТО-ТО ТЕРЯЕТ, КТО-ТО НАХОДИТ . http://2004.novayagazeta.ru/nomer/2004/45n/n45n-s16.shtml . Novaya Gazeta . Russian.
  28. News: 13 July 2004 . Exile взял на себя ответственность за фальшивое письмо о Кириенко . Lenta . Russian.
  29. News: 20 December 2004 . ru:"Новая газета" опровергла обвинения в адрес Кириенко . http://lenta.ru/most/2004/12/20/novaya/ . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20070311210003/http://lenta.ru/most/2004/12/20/novaya/ . 11 March 2007 . lenta . Russian.
  30. News: Joel Tannenbaum . 5 August 2004 . Web site of the week . Philadelphia City Paper.
  31. News: 19 July 2004 . ru:Зарубежные события . http://www.kommersant.ru/doc.aspx?docsid=490722 . Kommersant Vlasti . Russian.
  32. News: Mark Ames . 22 July 2004 . Double Punk'd! Meta-Prank Goes Mega-Bad . the eXile.
  33. James Verini, Lost Exile The unlikely life and sudden death of The Exile, Russia's angriest newspaper Vanity Fair (magazine), February 2010. Retrieved on 1 March 2010