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	<title>Observer &#187; Maer Roshan</title>
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		<title>Observer &#187; Maer Roshan</title>
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		<title>Courtney Love Contains Multitudes: One Woman, Two Dueling Twitter Accounts</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2012/02/courtney-love-contains-multitudes-one-woman-two-dueling-twitter-accounts/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 04 Feb 2012 15:42:19 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2012/02/courtney-love-contains-multitudes-one-woman-two-dueling-twitter-accounts/</link>
			<dc:creator>Steve Huff</dc:creator>
				
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.observer.com/?p=218059</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><div id="attachment_200423" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 210px"><a rel="attachment wp-att-200423" href="http://www.observer.com/2011/11/the-world-premiere-of-scorceses-hugo/paramount-pictures-and-gk-films-present-the-world-premiere-of-hugo/"><img class="size-medium wp-image-200423" title="Courtney Love" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/11/63457531325203625015739450_5_hugo1_20111121_jic_159-e1321977008869.jpg?w=200&h=300" alt="" width="200" height="300" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Courtney Love, not tweeting.</p></div></p>
<p>In addition to her <a href="https://twitter.com/#!/courtney" target="_blank">@Courtney</a> Twitter account,  sometimes a source of entertainment, consternation and <a href="http://www.observer.com/2011/culture/coutney-love-slapped-first-ever-twitter-defamation-lawsuit" target="_blank">lawsuits</a>, kaleidoscopic rock queen <strong><a href="http://www.observer.com/term/courtney-love/" target="_blank">Courtney Love</a></strong> has a second, private and much more personal account on the microblogging site: <a href="https://twitter.com/#!/cbabymichelle" target="_blank">@Cbabymichelle</a>. "Personal" as in Cbabymichelle is actually written by Ms. Love and not an assistant. According to former <em>Radar</em> Magazine chief and current <a href="http://www.thefix.com/" target="_blank">Fix-meister</a> <strong>Maer Roshan</strong>'s new <a href="http://www.thefix.com/content/courtney-love-comes-clean-e-book-0709">eBook</a> about Ms. Love, <em><a href="http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/courtney-comes-clean-maer-roshan/1107090500" target="_blank">Courtney Comes Clean: The High Life and Dark Depths of Music's Most Controversial Icon</a>,</em> Ms. Love has used the lesser-known account to have barbarically yawping dialogues with her public persona, one online voice acting as a PR-friendly saint to Cbabymichelle's heckling sinner. Mr. Roshan writes:<!--more--></p>
<blockquote><p>Courtney hasn't shied away from using Twitter to blast her enemies. Last Spring, after she paid fashion designer Dawn Simorangkir $430,000 to settle the world's first Twitter defamation lawsuit, her handlers implored her to stay away from social media. Love announced that she was quitting Twitter for good. But total abstinence was apparently too much to bear for the singer, who went on to maintain two separate Twitter accounts, which her pals dubbed 'Good Sister' and 'Bad Sister', after the title of one of her songs. In September of 2011, Love reclaimed the handle @courtney that she'd abandoned years earlier. According to sources close to Love, @courtney was written by a staffer who was instructed to keep up a positive and press-friendly tone. But the real Courtney continued to tweet from a password-protected handle, @cbabymichelle, where she lashed out at a wide range of enemies, from Chelsea Handler to musician Dave Grohl. "So Edward Norton gets to be ambassador to Malawi?" cbabymichelle railed about her former boyfriend last August. "That's funny, he doesn't even like Madonna."</p>
<p>At the same time, @courtney was issuing a daily series of saccharine tweets, begging @kellyosbourne for forgiveness for Love's attacks on her, heaping praise on casino mogul @ElaineWynn and slathering @perezhilton with "xxoxoxxos" despite his trashing of her over the years. Many of Courtney's fans were confused by her chipper tune. Courtney was also displeased. Things took a surreal turn last October when Bad Courtney lashed out at Good Courtney for her embarrassing performance. Annoyed by a series of particularly cloying tweets @cbabymichelle chastised her counterpart for "not following the plot" of her life and over-tweeting in a style "that sounds nothing like me!!"</p>
<p>“Look, good Courtney, I know we have to be behaving cause were up for movie roles and people are watching,” raged Love, threatening to replace her alter-ego. “I’ll have you removed at once from doing the celeb-friendly/corporate act if you don’t get your shit together and stop making me look like a fool!” A day later, Bad Courtney’s inflammatory tweets disappeared.</p></blockquote>
<p>Cbabymichelle was still at it as recently as January 29, addressing the differences between "good Courtney" and Cbabymichelle in the following exchange:</p>
<p><div id="attachment_218084" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 410px"><a rel="attachment wp-att-218084" href="http://www.observer.com/2012/02/courtney-love-contains-multitudes-one-woman-two-dueling-twitter-accounts/recent-dueling-twitter-proof/"><img class="size-medium wp-image-218084 " title="Recent Dueling Twitter Proof" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2012/02/recent-dueling-twitter-proof.png?w=400&h=221" alt="" width="400" height="221" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">@Cbabymichelle explains (courtesy The Fix)</p></div></p>
<p>To add to all this fun, crazy Thai video news outfit <a href="http://www.nma.tv/" target="_blank">NMA.TV</a> has taken an interest Mr. Roshan's book, creating a high--(low?)--light reel of events in Ms. Love's life using details from <em>Courtney Comes Clean </em>and court records related to custody battles over Ms. Love's daughter, <strong>Frances Bean Cobain</strong>.</p>
<p><object width="425" height="350"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/cyHK9sxu1Tw" /><param name="wmode" value="transparent" /><embed type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="425" height="350" src="http://www.youtube.com/v/cyHK9sxu1Tw" wmode="transparent"></embed></object></p>
<p><a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cyHK9sxu1Tw">Frances Bean Cobain: Courtney Love was a bad mom - YouTube</a>.</p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><div id="attachment_200423" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 210px"><a rel="attachment wp-att-200423" href="http://www.observer.com/2011/11/the-world-premiere-of-scorceses-hugo/paramount-pictures-and-gk-films-present-the-world-premiere-of-hugo/"><img class="size-medium wp-image-200423" title="Courtney Love" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/11/63457531325203625015739450_5_hugo1_20111121_jic_159-e1321977008869.jpg?w=200&h=300" alt="" width="200" height="300" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Courtney Love, not tweeting.</p></div></p>
<p>In addition to her <a href="https://twitter.com/#!/courtney" target="_blank">@Courtney</a> Twitter account,  sometimes a source of entertainment, consternation and <a href="http://www.observer.com/2011/culture/coutney-love-slapped-first-ever-twitter-defamation-lawsuit" target="_blank">lawsuits</a>, kaleidoscopic rock queen <strong><a href="http://www.observer.com/term/courtney-love/" target="_blank">Courtney Love</a></strong> has a second, private and much more personal account on the microblogging site: <a href="https://twitter.com/#!/cbabymichelle" target="_blank">@Cbabymichelle</a>. "Personal" as in Cbabymichelle is actually written by Ms. Love and not an assistant. According to former <em>Radar</em> Magazine chief and current <a href="http://www.thefix.com/" target="_blank">Fix-meister</a> <strong>Maer Roshan</strong>'s new <a href="http://www.thefix.com/content/courtney-love-comes-clean-e-book-0709">eBook</a> about Ms. Love, <em><a href="http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/courtney-comes-clean-maer-roshan/1107090500" target="_blank">Courtney Comes Clean: The High Life and Dark Depths of Music's Most Controversial Icon</a>,</em> Ms. Love has used the lesser-known account to have barbarically yawping dialogues with her public persona, one online voice acting as a PR-friendly saint to Cbabymichelle's heckling sinner. Mr. Roshan writes:<!--more--></p>
<blockquote><p>Courtney hasn't shied away from using Twitter to blast her enemies. Last Spring, after she paid fashion designer Dawn Simorangkir $430,000 to settle the world's first Twitter defamation lawsuit, her handlers implored her to stay away from social media. Love announced that she was quitting Twitter for good. But total abstinence was apparently too much to bear for the singer, who went on to maintain two separate Twitter accounts, which her pals dubbed 'Good Sister' and 'Bad Sister', after the title of one of her songs. In September of 2011, Love reclaimed the handle @courtney that she'd abandoned years earlier. According to sources close to Love, @courtney was written by a staffer who was instructed to keep up a positive and press-friendly tone. But the real Courtney continued to tweet from a password-protected handle, @cbabymichelle, where she lashed out at a wide range of enemies, from Chelsea Handler to musician Dave Grohl. "So Edward Norton gets to be ambassador to Malawi?" cbabymichelle railed about her former boyfriend last August. "That's funny, he doesn't even like Madonna."</p>
<p>At the same time, @courtney was issuing a daily series of saccharine tweets, begging @kellyosbourne for forgiveness for Love's attacks on her, heaping praise on casino mogul @ElaineWynn and slathering @perezhilton with "xxoxoxxos" despite his trashing of her over the years. Many of Courtney's fans were confused by her chipper tune. Courtney was also displeased. Things took a surreal turn last October when Bad Courtney lashed out at Good Courtney for her embarrassing performance. Annoyed by a series of particularly cloying tweets @cbabymichelle chastised her counterpart for "not following the plot" of her life and over-tweeting in a style "that sounds nothing like me!!"</p>
<p>“Look, good Courtney, I know we have to be behaving cause were up for movie roles and people are watching,” raged Love, threatening to replace her alter-ego. “I’ll have you removed at once from doing the celeb-friendly/corporate act if you don’t get your shit together and stop making me look like a fool!” A day later, Bad Courtney’s inflammatory tweets disappeared.</p></blockquote>
<p>Cbabymichelle was still at it as recently as January 29, addressing the differences between "good Courtney" and Cbabymichelle in the following exchange:</p>
<p><div id="attachment_218084" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 410px"><a rel="attachment wp-att-218084" href="http://www.observer.com/2012/02/courtney-love-contains-multitudes-one-woman-two-dueling-twitter-accounts/recent-dueling-twitter-proof/"><img class="size-medium wp-image-218084 " title="Recent Dueling Twitter Proof" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2012/02/recent-dueling-twitter-proof.png?w=400&h=221" alt="" width="400" height="221" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">@Cbabymichelle explains (courtesy The Fix)</p></div></p>
<p>To add to all this fun, crazy Thai video news outfit <a href="http://www.nma.tv/" target="_blank">NMA.TV</a> has taken an interest Mr. Roshan's book, creating a high--(low?)--light reel of events in Ms. Love's life using details from <em>Courtney Comes Clean </em>and court records related to custody battles over Ms. Love's daughter, <strong>Frances Bean Cobain</strong>.</p>
<p><object width="425" height="350"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/cyHK9sxu1Tw" /><param name="wmode" value="transparent" /><embed type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="425" height="350" src="http://www.youtube.com/v/cyHK9sxu1Tw" wmode="transparent"></embed></object></p>
<p><a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cyHK9sxu1Tw">Frances Bean Cobain: Courtney Love was a bad mom - YouTube</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
		<wfw:commentRss>http://observer.com/2012/02/courtney-love-contains-multitudes-one-woman-two-dueling-twitter-accounts/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>3</slash:comments>
	
		<media:thumbnail url="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/11/63457531325203625015739450_5_hugo1_20111121_jic_159-e1321977008869.jpg?w=100" />
		<media:content url="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/11/63457531325203625015739450_5_hugo1_20111121_jic_159-e1321977008869.jpg?w=100" medium="image">
			<media:title type="html">Courtney Love</media:title>
		</media:content>

		<media:content url="http://2.gravatar.com/avatar/becf95fa833b8aeb13f7720732bd6dc6?s=96&#38;d=identicon&#38;r=G" medium="image">
			<media:title type="html">jhanasobserver</media:title>
		</media:content>

		<media:content url="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/11/63457531325203625015739450_5_hugo1_20111121_jic_159-e1321977008869.jpg?w=200&#38;h=300" medium="image">
			<media:title type="html">Courtney Love</media:title>
		</media:content>

		<media:content url="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2012/02/recent-dueling-twitter-proof.png?w=400&#38;h=221" medium="image">
			<media:title type="html">Recent Dueling Twitter Proof</media:title>
		</media:content>
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		<title>Three Editors Depart Details, The Fix Picks Up One</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2011/10/3-editors-depart-details-the-fix-picks-up-one/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 21 Oct 2011 16:41:10 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2011/10/3-editors-depart-details-the-fix-picks-up-one/</link>
			<dc:creator>Kat Stoeffel</dc:creator>
				
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.observer.com/?p=193120</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><em><a href="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/armie-hammer-details-magazine-cover.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-193156" title="armie-hammer-details-magazine-cover" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/armie-hammer-details-magazine-cover.jpg?w=220&h=300" alt="" width="220" height="300" /></a></em></p>
<p>Forget how many trend pieces it takes to make a genre: how many staff departures does it take to make an exodus?</p>
<p><em>Details</em> entertainment editor <strong>David Walters</strong> resigned late last week to take a job at The Daily, according to a Conde Nast source. Mr. Walters, formerly of <em>GQ</em>, is the third high-level departure from the men’s magazine in a month.</p>
<p>He follows <strong>Paul Katz</strong>, <a href="http://www.observer.com/2009/media/more-fashionably-late-conde-nast-hits-internet">launched and ran <em>Details</em>' website</a>, and articles editor <strong>Mike Guy</strong>. Mr. Katz now handles partner strategy and development for Flipboard, the startup social magazine for iPads. Mr. Guy was recently named editorial director at <strong>Maer Roshan</strong>’s addiction and recovery site, The Fix, which has been staffing up since it raised <a href="http://www.observer.com/2011/10/maer-roshan-raised-2-4-m-for-the-fix/">$2.4 million in equity financing</a> in April.</p>
<p>Reached for comment, Mr. Roshan said he is excited for Mr. Guy to bring his weighty men’s fashion journalism experience to the operation.</p>
<p>“Finding out that he used to be Hunter Thompson’s assistant sealed the deal for me,” he said.</p>
<p>According to our source, more departures are coming, but the masthead decimation may be a short-term headache. After all, <em>Details</em> is already among the leaner machines in the Conde Nast stable, a fact that helped it survive McKinsey &amp; Co.’s massacre-by-PowerPoint in 2009, which condemned the more popular titles <em>Gourmet</em> and <em>Domino</em>.</p>
<p>In the past, <em>Details</em> has also benefited from a longstanding strategic relationship with <em>GQ</em>. In the McKinsey purge, <em>GQ</em> publisher <strong>Peter Hunsinger</strong> lobbied for <em>Details</em>’ survival by arguing that if <em>Details</em> folded, its advertisers(<a href="http://www.observer.com/2010/media/details-answers-existential-questions">most of which overlapped with <em>GQ</em></a>) might go to <em>Esquire</em>, igniting a second <em>Hearst</em> vs. <em>Conde</em> advertising competition that would match <em>Elle</em> vs. <em>Vogue</em> in its ferocity.</p>
<p>“We are stronger together,” Mr. Hunsinger told <em>The Observer</em> in 2009. “We run the town.”</p>
<p>But today, Conde’s fraternal alliance does not run New York as smoothly as it once did. During the first half of 2011, both magazines posted roughly three percent losses in ad pages­—the only two men’s titles that posted declines, according to Women’s Wear Daily. although <em>GQ</em> still won the category). Hearst’s <em>Esquire </em>posted a 12.5 percent gain, Rodale’s <em>Men’s Health </em>climbed four percent and <strong>Jann Wenner</strong>’s <em>Men’s Journal </em>climbed five percent.</p>
<p><em>Details</em> editor <strong>Dan Peres</strong> did not respond to a request for comment.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em><a href="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/armie-hammer-details-magazine-cover.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-193156" title="armie-hammer-details-magazine-cover" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/armie-hammer-details-magazine-cover.jpg?w=220&h=300" alt="" width="220" height="300" /></a></em></p>
<p>Forget how many trend pieces it takes to make a genre: how many staff departures does it take to make an exodus?</p>
<p><em>Details</em> entertainment editor <strong>David Walters</strong> resigned late last week to take a job at The Daily, according to a Conde Nast source. Mr. Walters, formerly of <em>GQ</em>, is the third high-level departure from the men’s magazine in a month.</p>
<p>He follows <strong>Paul Katz</strong>, <a href="http://www.observer.com/2009/media/more-fashionably-late-conde-nast-hits-internet">launched and ran <em>Details</em>' website</a>, and articles editor <strong>Mike Guy</strong>. Mr. Katz now handles partner strategy and development for Flipboard, the startup social magazine for iPads. Mr. Guy was recently named editorial director at <strong>Maer Roshan</strong>’s addiction and recovery site, The Fix, which has been staffing up since it raised <a href="http://www.observer.com/2011/10/maer-roshan-raised-2-4-m-for-the-fix/">$2.4 million in equity financing</a> in April.</p>
<p>Reached for comment, Mr. Roshan said he is excited for Mr. Guy to bring his weighty men’s fashion journalism experience to the operation.</p>
<p>“Finding out that he used to be Hunter Thompson’s assistant sealed the deal for me,” he said.</p>
<p>According to our source, more departures are coming, but the masthead decimation may be a short-term headache. After all, <em>Details</em> is already among the leaner machines in the Conde Nast stable, a fact that helped it survive McKinsey &amp; Co.’s massacre-by-PowerPoint in 2009, which condemned the more popular titles <em>Gourmet</em> and <em>Domino</em>.</p>
<p>In the past, <em>Details</em> has also benefited from a longstanding strategic relationship with <em>GQ</em>. In the McKinsey purge, <em>GQ</em> publisher <strong>Peter Hunsinger</strong> lobbied for <em>Details</em>’ survival by arguing that if <em>Details</em> folded, its advertisers(<a href="http://www.observer.com/2010/media/details-answers-existential-questions">most of which overlapped with <em>GQ</em></a>) might go to <em>Esquire</em>, igniting a second <em>Hearst</em> vs. <em>Conde</em> advertising competition that would match <em>Elle</em> vs. <em>Vogue</em> in its ferocity.</p>
<p>“We are stronger together,” Mr. Hunsinger told <em>The Observer</em> in 2009. “We run the town.”</p>
<p>But today, Conde’s fraternal alliance does not run New York as smoothly as it once did. During the first half of 2011, both magazines posted roughly three percent losses in ad pages­—the only two men’s titles that posted declines, according to Women’s Wear Daily. although <em>GQ</em> still won the category). Hearst’s <em>Esquire </em>posted a 12.5 percent gain, Rodale’s <em>Men’s Health </em>climbed four percent and <strong>Jann Wenner</strong>’s <em>Men’s Journal </em>climbed five percent.</p>
<p><em>Details</em> editor <strong>Dan Peres</strong> did not respond to a request for comment.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
]]></content:encoded>
		<wfw:commentRss>http://observer.com/2011/10/3-editors-depart-details-the-fix-picks-up-one/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>1</slash:comments>
	
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			<media:title type="html">jhanasobserver</media:title>
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		<title>Maer Roshan Raised $2.4 M. for The Fix</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2011/10/maer-roshan-raised-2-4-m-for-the-fix/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 05 Oct 2011 16:37:11 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2011/10/maer-roshan-raised-2-4-m-for-the-fix/</link>
			<dc:creator>Kat Stoeffel</dc:creator>
				
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.observer.com/?p=189066</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/maer-roshan.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-189068" title="maer roshan" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/maer-roshan.jpg?w=300&h=199" alt="" width="300" height="199" /></a>Recovery Media, LLC, parent company of Maer Roshan's <a href="http://www.thefix.com/">The Fix</a>, raised $2.4 million in equity financing, according to an <a href="http://marketbrief.com/recovery-media-llc">S.E.C. filing</a>.</p>
<p>Named alongside Mr. Roshan are Allison Floam, founder of MicroDialogue, and Paul Allen McCulley, a former managing director at PIMCO, according to <a href="http://newyork.citybizlist.com/18/2011/10/3/Maer-Roshan%E2%80%99s-Recovery-Media-Feeling-Better-with-2.4M--cbl.aspx">CityBiz</a>.</p>
<p>Mr. Roshan, the wunderkind <em>New York</em> and <em>Talk </em>deputy who founded and edited <em>Radar </em>(all three times), launched the addiction recovery and rehab review website in March.</p>
<p>Learn everything there is to know about Mr. Roshan <a href="http://www.observer.com/maer-roshan-media">here</a>.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong><br />
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		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/maer-roshan.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-189068" title="maer roshan" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/maer-roshan.jpg?w=300&h=199" alt="" width="300" height="199" /></a>Recovery Media, LLC, parent company of Maer Roshan's <a href="http://www.thefix.com/">The Fix</a>, raised $2.4 million in equity financing, according to an <a href="http://marketbrief.com/recovery-media-llc">S.E.C. filing</a>.</p>
<p>Named alongside Mr. Roshan are Allison Floam, founder of MicroDialogue, and Paul Allen McCulley, a former managing director at PIMCO, according to <a href="http://newyork.citybizlist.com/18/2011/10/3/Maer-Roshan%E2%80%99s-Recovery-Media-Feeling-Better-with-2.4M--cbl.aspx">CityBiz</a>.</p>
<p>Mr. Roshan, the wunderkind <em>New York</em> and <em>Talk </em>deputy who founded and edited <em>Radar </em>(all three times), launched the addiction recovery and rehab review website in March.</p>
<p>Learn everything there is to know about Mr. Roshan <a href="http://www.observer.com/maer-roshan-media">here</a>.</p>
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		<title>The Adventures of Maer Roshan, Editorial Boy Wonder</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2011/06/the-adventures-of-maer-roshan-editorial-wonder-boy/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 07 Jun 2011 21:13:27 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2011/06/the-adventures-of-maer-roshan-editorial-wonder-boy/</link>
			<dc:creator>Aaron Gell</dc:creator>
				
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.observer.com/?p=155503</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><div id="attachment_155507" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 624px"><strong><a href="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/maer-roshan-use-this-one-e1307649079587.jpg"><img class="size-large wp-image-155507 " title="Maer Roshan The Fix" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/maer-roshan-use-this-one-e1307649079587.jpg?w=1024&h=682" alt="" width="614" height="409" /></a></strong><p class="wp-caption-text">Maer Roshan.</p></div></p>
<p>On or around April 5, a group of prominent New Yorkers—including Andre Balazs, Gwyneth Paltrow, Lindsay Lohan and Harvey Weinstein—received a curious group text.<!--more--></p>
<p>It was from Courtney Love, and she was pissed. Maer Roshan, she said, was fucking unethical. He was not to be trusted. He’d secretly tape recorded her, she claimed, and sold her out to the Internet.</p>
<p>What had prompted Ms. Love’s fury was a rambling video that had been posted by Mr. Roshan’s recently launched website, <a href="http://www.thefix.com/">The Fix</a>, in which <a href="http://www.thefix.com/content/how-long-have-you-been-sober-sobriety-relapse-and-kelly-osborne" target="_blank">Ms. Love assailed Kelly Osbourne</a> for calling her a crackhead on the E! Channel. “I’ve saved her life twice, physically,” Ms. Love fumed on camera. “Booze, Oxycontin and coke—foaming at the mouth … ”</p>
<p>A number of online outlets had immediately picked up the story. And since it was evident to any of the hundreds of thousands of viewers of the clip that it had clearly been recorded with Ms. Love’s full knowledge and consent, Mr. Roshan confronted her the next day. She replied via text. “I’m very sorryed,” she wrote. “Just Fuckkked upp. Hate the stuupid innternet. Want to hang out tonite?”</p>
<p>Did we mention this website is focused on sobriety?</p>
<p>I witnessed Mr. Roshan extinguishing any number of such flare-ups firsthand, back when I worked as executive editor of <em>Radar,</em> the energetic, endearingly scattershot magazine and website (I say without prejudice) that he launched to great fanfare in 2003 and then stuck with through one mercurial billionaire backer after another.</p>
<p>The new website marked a comeback for the editor, who’d watched helplessly as <em>Radar</em>’s backers sold the property out from under him in late 2008. The demise of the magazine had been brutal. At the end, he often seemed red-eyed and exhausted. And then we all packed up our boxes, and he disappeared. For a while, stories made the rounds among friends and colleagues (TV projects, big Web editing gigs), and then they didn’t. Anybody heard from Maer?</p>
<p>As it happens, The Fix’s subject matter was not chosen at random. Mr. Roshan had developed a serious drinking problem while struggling to launch and to then relaunch <em>Radar</em> and spent a good part of the past two years drying out in various rehabs, halfway houses and sober-living facilities.</p>
<p>A pricey treatment program “with trust-fund kids and rich celebrity people,” as he put it, didn’t do him much good. Eventually, he wound up at a rehab called Cri-Help, where the accommodations were spartan and many of the clients had arrived straight from jail. “It was in the Valley,” he noted meaningfully. “Need I say more?”</p>
<p>Mr. Roshan was standing in front of a crowded tea shop not far from his apartment off Union Square, smoking a cigarette. He was wearing a light gray shirt open to the third button, black pants and black woolen overcoat. He looked much better than when I’d seen him last—thinner, healthier, more bubbly—though a notably round pot belly persisted.</p>
<p>One of his bunkmates was a skinhead, “a swastikaed young gentleman,” he said, named Jared. “Of course, he was delighted to learn that his roommate was this gay Jew. And yet we ended up getting along really well! Except I really didn’t like his music.”</p>
<p>The experience doesn’t seem to have affected Mr. Roshan’s mischievous sense of humor, at least, not to judge by The Fix, a sobriety site as only he would conceive it. Along with rehab reviews, various resources for people seeking help, and hard-hitting pieces by the likes of Susan Cheever and Chris Byron, the site runs more unlikely stories, such as “AA’s Most Annoying Cliches” and “The Argument Against Abstinence.” And then there’s Ms. Love, listed among The Fix's “hand-picked pros,” who maintains she’s been sober for years, even while admitting to the occasional sip of rosé or bump of coke.</p>
<p>Whether The Fix—which can sometimes seem jaw-droppingly lighthearted—effectively promotes sobriety for its readers (or for its editors) isn’t entirely clear. Debates on the subject rage in the comment forums. But nobody who’s followed Mr. Roshan’s extraordinary whirl on the media thrill ride is surprised by The Fix’s nervy tone. Twenty years ago, as the 24-year-old editor of a short-lived gay weekly called <em>QW,</em> he outed right-wing icon Phyllis Schlafly’s son John. The story was picked up nationally and led to Mr. Roshan’s denunciation by the family-values crusader on <em>Meet the Press</em>. His 1997 <em>New York</em> magazine cover story “Trophy Boys,” co-written with Eric Konigsberg, about a cadre of attractive young “male courtesans … living in higher style than Andrew Cunanan ever imagined,” prompted angry letters from David Geffen and finance writer Andrew Tobias and seems to have been scrubbed from the magazine’s website (it lives on via Google Books). Another blockbuster feature, “Power Girls,” which Mr. Roshan assigned to a young party reporter named Vanessa Grigoriadis, went off like a media-gossip I.E.D., dismembering a number of the city’s hungriest young lifestyle flacks and scattering goody bags far and wide.</p>
<p>Working with Mr. Roshan taught her “that writing a story is about making jokes and gossiping with your editor and then putting it all in the piece,” Ms. Grigoriadis said. “You get so spoiled writing for Maer because he cares so much, he becomes a partner. For a long time I thought that’s what all editors were like.”</p>
<p>Later, as editorial director of <em>Talk, </em>he commissioned a fashion shoot featuring Barbara and Jenna Bush look-alikes on a booze-fueled bender, leading the White House to issue a fatwa barring staffers from having any further contact with the magazine. If the boss wants buzz, you give her buzz.</p>
<p><strong><!--nextpage-->One night during Memorial Day</strong> weekend, in 2002, Mr. Roshan sat in a carrel at the Astor Place Kinko’s working on a business plan. It was 4 in the morning. The place was bathed in fluorescent light. <em>Talk </em>had folded, and AMI C.E.O. David Pecker had reached out to Mr. Roshan to ask if he had any ideas for a new magazine. He bluffed and said he did, then grabbed a few colleagues from <em>Talk,</em> including Christopher Tennant and Drew Lee, and cooked up what would become <em>Radar.</em> The name<em> </em>was just a placeholder. They knew it was dumb.</p>
<p>He was, at that point, a media darling. “We’d watched the circulation at <em>Talk</em> rise by something like 19 percent in a few months,” he recalled. “If you read the press from that time, it was like, ‘It’s gotten good!’ Then 9/11 happened and they closed it. I’m like, ‘What just happened there?’”</p>
<p>Mr. Pecker never pulled the trigger. Mr. Roshan spoke with Jann Wenner about editing <em>Us,</em> but then took himself out of the running. Having a magazine of his own seemed like more fun. “In retrospect, it’s actually kind of bad-ass,” he said, draped over a chair in the crowded cafe and sipping an iced green tea. “But I was like, If I can’t find the place I want to work, I’ll just need to start something else.”</p>
<p>The process was draining. “I spend so much time with people at work that it becomes like a family,” he said. “So when everyone dispersed I was feeling really weird, like, ‘Where’s all my peeps?’ They went on to other things, and I went on to do this thing.”</p>
<p>While <em>New York Post</em> gossip writer<em> </em>Neal Travis was breathlessly reporting on Roshan sightings at the Four Seasons Grill Room (“One of the hottest media topics right now is where Maer Roshan will land next”), Mr. Roshan was mostly just waiting around for wealthy acquaintances to reply to his entreaties for funding.</p>
<p>“It was a lonely time,” he said. “And I remember thinking at one point: This would be a lot easier with a glass of wine. Because this is just not fun.”<em> </em>He let out a sigh. “That’s kind of how it started.”<!--nextpage--><strong>Full disclosure: I’m biased.</strong> I worked closely with Mr. Roshan for years under sometimes stressful circumstances. He assigned and edited two of my best stories and taught me more than any editor I’ve ever worked with—even if, O.K., he was occasionally a little bleary or zonked out on doctor-prescribed Klonopin (which as a recent article in The Fix points out, is one of the more destructive medications available).</p>
<p>Mostly, he was a blast to work for—mirthful, brilliant and routinely exasperating. Despite his editing prowess (he is amazing with structure and narrative), he types with two fingers and often leaves caps-lock on by mistake. He has yet to master the technical nuances of website bookmarking, and typically checks his own sites by typing in the U.R.L. He cares little for food and seems happiest with a tuna melt. “Maer has lived off pizza his entire life,” marveled Mr. Tennant, who recalled Mr. Roshan at a business lunch at Masa “holding chopsticks in his hand like a 4-year-old.”</p>
<p>He tends to smoke only a few drags of a Marlboro Light before firing up another, sometimes without extinguishing the first. He can be the same way with stories. I once arrived on a movie set in Williamsburg to profile a hipster porn star only to find another <em>Radar</em> writer who’d been sent for the same purpose. (<em>Radar</em> 2.0 folded before either piece ran.) During features meetings, he could often be counted on to propose pieces that seemed oddly familiar, leaving it to Mr. Tennant to remind him the story had run in an earlier generation of the magazine. That said, they were almost always a good idea, both times around.</p>
<p>At times, I was one Mr. Roshan’s most effective enablers. When his hands would shake, or he’d disappear for a while, I helped maintain the illusion that everything was fine, sometimes blatantly misleading colleagues about his whereabouts. Not that I invented the lies, but I dutifully repeated them: family emergencies, medical emergencies, much-needed vacations. It seemed like part of the gig.</p>
<p>I also cursed his name on a number of occasions, watching more or less impotently as the magazine he’d bled for went down for the final time, despite an ASME nomination for general excellence not six months before. That it later resurfaced as a shady Octomom gossip portal overseen—in an injustice that seems almost cosmic—by AMI’s David Pecker somehow made the whole thing worse, especially when they stripped the old content from the site and adopted a pink and green color scheme.</p>
<p>For those last few months of <em>Radar,</em> I was plagued by bouts of insomnia, episodes my wife took to calling “nightmaers.”</p>
<p>Conflicted doesn’t begin to cover it.</p>
<p>Then again, lots of people seem to be conflicted about Mr. Roshan. To read through <em>Radar</em>’s old press is to step into media steam room so cloudy with schadenfreude, you have to squint to make out the hazy figures in the corner and what exactly they’re up to. Kurt Andersen wrote a strongly worded critique of the magazine in 2005, nailing it for, among other things, its many similarities to <em>Spy</em> (“like a tribute band”), and published the piece in <em>New York, </em>the magazine where he’d hired Mr. Roshan as a senior editor a few years before.</p>
<p>Then there was Gawker—the outlet that had most assiduously followed the magazine’s ups and downs (branding its blanket coverage “The Greatest American Magazine Re-Relaunch”) even as the site’s own mordant take on media and celebrity arguably made the whole idea of <em>Radar</em> seem superfluous. <em>Radar </em>was a classic Gawker story. Despite having been a fan, Gawker Media founder Nick Denton remarked in a GChat, “We quite quickly made it a target. Such a lurid cast of characters.” He was referring not to the editorial staff but to the rogues’ gallery of backers, including Mr. Zuckerman and financier and sex offender Jeffrey Epstein—news of whose proclivities are thought to have led Mr. Zuckerman to dump his share of the property—and subsequently supermarket tycoon Ron Burkle and his aide-de-camp Yusef Jackson (a beer distributor and son of the Rev. Jesse Jackson, who perched on a stability ball during meetings and employed the disconcerting email sign-off “God Bless”).</p>
<p><em>“Radar </em>was the charge of the light brigade,” Mr. Denton added. “Glorious, but not good business. It was a throwback.”</p>
<p>Somewhat infamously, Team Radar sought revenge during the magazine’s 2005 launch party when somebody pushed a pie into Mr. Denton’s face—a throwback sort of stunt, to be sure, but one that made for a good photo op and a Drudge pickup. Not that it quashed the beef. At one point, Gawker writer Choire Sicha posted an item suggesting <em>Radar</em> wasn’t paying freelancers (we were), without mentioning that he himself had freelanced for and been paid by <em>Radar</em> not long before<em>.</em> “Don’t your readers deserve to know that?” I demanded over the phone, to which he replied that it could all be sorted out in the comments. Eventually, he did append an update: “Good news! We haven’t heard from any other contributors to the new <em>Radar</em> who’ve had trouble! Isn’t that lovely?”</p>
<p>That it had by then become easier for a freelance writer to fire off an anonymous complaint to Gawker than to return an assignment contract seemed indicative of the weirdly intimate love-hate relationship a certain group of journalists had developed with Mr. Roshan. Shortly thereafter, when Mr. Sicha wound up as a <em>Radar </em>colleague, it seemed not only farcical but somehow par for the course. It was always complicated with <em>Radar.<!--nextpage--></em><strong>Mr. Roshan’s first serious</strong> dalliance with magazines occurred in the late 70’s, and it seems to have made a powerful impression. He was a Jewish kid growing up in prerevolutionary Tehran, the son of a Persian-Jewish father and an American mother. The Roshans subscribed to <em>Time—</em>but their issues inevitably arrived late and incomplete.</p>
<p>“I don’t know how they found the time to do this,” Mr. Roshan recalled, referring to the Shah’s regime, “but they would go in and cut out everything they didn’t like, so you’d get magazines with whole articles missing.” Tidy though it sounds, Mr. Roshan’s subsequent career can be seen on some level as an ongoing campaign to shovel copy, the more provocative the better, into those mysterious blank spaces.</p>
<p>This did not always please <em>Radar</em>’s various backers, who might have wished he held certain of their sacred cows in higher regard. During my tenure, Hillary Clinton was the most sacred of all (Bill was, at the time, a frequent flyer on Mr. Burkle’s 757, “Air Ron”). I recall one dramatic showdown over a fairly tame web roundup of Hillary’s “cronies.” The story ultimately ran, but at some cost to Mr. Roshan’s relationship with our funders.</p>
<p>“Some would say it’s a little reckless but he does what he believes in,” noted Mr. Tennant, who pointed out that Mr. Roshan had gleefully alienated the gay mafia with “Trophy Boys” just when he was set to become a made member. “He could have been sipping Cosmos at Calvin’s beach house!” Mr. Tennant said. “And it would probably more advantageous <em>not </em>to put Courtney in The Fix. But to his credit, Maer is always ready to absolutely piss someone off.”</p>
<p>“If I’d been more willing to compromise, I probably would have gotten a lot further,” Mr. Roshan conceded.</p>
<p>Another formative and cinematic memory: It’s the Fourth of July at the Community School in Tehran, an academy for the children of American expats. As Maer and his schoolmates look on awestruck, a helicopter buzzes into view and hovers over the school’s courtyard, whipping up a swirl of dust. The chopper’s door slides open. The children raise their eyes to the blue sky, and McDonalds hamburgers rain down.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, demonstrations against the Shah were gathering steam: fevered protest marches passing right outside the school’s gates, guys beating themselves with chains, tanks rumbling in the streets, people throwing rocks and lighting piles of garbage on fire.</p>
<p>In 1979, Mr. Roshan’s mother whisked him and his two younger brothers back to her parents’ house on Long Island while his father stayed behind to deal with the family’s property. The Shah’s puppet government soon fell, and Ayatollah Khomeini was swept into power. Mr. Roshan’s father escaped seven years later, but the once-colorful figure was diminished. He died of cancer within a year.</p>
<p>After arriving on Long Island, Mr. Roshan’s mother set up a flea market booth at Aqueduct racetrack, peddling $3 belts to make ends meet. Somehow she eventually earned enough to buy a house in Five Towns and to send Maer and his brothers to an Orthodox yeshiva. Though he wasn’t religious and already knew he was gay, he seems to have fit in well. His second year, he ran for vice president of his class, and despite having to deliver his Hebrew campaign speech phonetically, he won.</p>
<p>Before long, he was zipping into town on weekends with a female friend to hit the nightclubs he’d read about in <em>New York</em> and <em>Interview.</em> Their first such excursion was to Area. The high-schoolers took one look at the crowd outside and quickly determined that standing at the back of the line would never do, especially if they wanted to be home for curfew. Instead, they planted themselves at a distance from the scrum in front and pretended they didn’t want to go in at all. “The bouncers were like, ‘<em>You,</em>’” Mr. Roshan recalled incredulously.</p>
<p>Inside, the theme was Religion. A guy was hanging from a cross. There was a pool of fire on the dance floor.</p>
<p>Mr. Roshan attended N.Y.U. as a journalism and politics major and got to know club kids Lisa E. and James St. James. Dressing for a night out was a two-and-a-half-hour process and often involved the company of a posse of drag queens. Asked to describe his look at the time, he said merely, “I wouldn’t want those pictures to surface, that’s for sure.”</p>
<p>After a short stint in Key West, where Mr. Roshan covered the police beat for a local paper (making sure to boldface the names in the crime blotter), he became an editor at <em>Interview</em>. His first article to cause a stir was a freelance piece, an exclusive Q&amp;A he landed with Liz Smith for <em>Outweek, </em>despite the fact that the magazine had excoriated her for months over her refusal to come out as a lesbian. “I was being attacked constantly!” Ms. Smith recalled. “But Maer was so convincing. I honestly don’t know how he did it.” <!--nextpage-->The cover story, entitled “Liz Smith: ‘I Hate <em>Outweek</em>!’” ran in June 1991. “I was prepared to think of him as an adversarial reporter,” Ms. Smith said. “But he was so intelligent and nice and sweet. I’ve followed his career with a great deal of proprietary interest ever since.”</p>
<p>The story helped win Mr. Roshan the gig as editor-in-chief of <em>QW, </em>his first of many start-ups. The AIDS crisis was at its height, and major staff battles over politics were routine. “There was this contingent that was, like, ‘Magic Johnson is <em>not</em> our hero!’”Mr. Roshan recalled.)</p>
<p>Mr. Roshan was part of the generation that had been educated about safe sex, he said, “which didn’t make it any less scary. But I got to see the transformation of a community,” from one that was underground and marginalized to one that was aggressively visible—a dynamic he sees happening now for addicts, and that The Fix aims to capture and accelerate.</p>
<p>After <em>QW</em>’s owner died of AIDS, Gil Rogin, the legendary managing editor of <em>Sports Illustrated </em>and co-founder of <em>Vibe,</em> hatched a plan to bring a retooled version of the magazine to Time Inc., to be called <em>Tribe. </em>But after Mr. Roshan presented a prototype, and then another, to the company’s board, the project was shelved, in part, it was speculated, due to fear of a boycott by the Christian right, which had recently targeted <em>Sassy</em>.</p>
<p>Mr. Roshan was subsequently hired by Mr. Andersen at <em>New York,</em> eventually becoming deputy editor under Caroline Miller. He became known there for an uncanny ability to nail the city’s zeitgeist, and for a playful streak. “His stories were always brilliantly full of angles,” said Ms. Brown, who was then at <em>The New Yorker.</em> For instance, he spearheaded a singles issue with companion-wanted ads by Star Jones, Marcus Schenkenberg, Ann Coulter and Ed Koch on the cover. (“They all got a ton of responses but Star only got three letters!” he recalled. “Poor thing.”) For a package, Gay Life Now—a first for a mainstream magazine<em>—</em>Mr. Roshan invited just about every prominent homosexual in town to pose together on the cover, then wrote a provocative piece wondering why so many had demurred. He initiated a column with Mayor Koch and Senator Al D’Amato kibitzing about politics at the Four Seasons, and another, “Cindy Undercover,” in which gossip writer Cindy Adams would take a job as a bartender at Scores, or a waitress at Katz’s.</p>
<p>“He knew absolutely everybody,” Mr. Tennant recalled. “The phone would ring every five seconds. ‘Hey, it’s Candace [Bushnell], where’s Maer?’ ‘It’s Ed Koch, where’s Maer?’ It was like, ‘Please hold. Please hold … ’”</p>
<p>Mr. Roshan nabbed the first postscandal interview with Monica Lewinsky, by accident. “We were at a club, and she was like, ‘You look really familiar,’ and I’m like, ‘That’s funny, you look very familiar as well!’” He also wrangled a profile of Denise Rich and noted proudly, “I think I’m the only person who was simultaneously friends with Denise, Monica and Lucianne Goldberg.”</p>
<p>“God bless Maer,” offered Ms. Goldberg. “He’s smart and kind, and he doesn’t stab people in the back.” They remain friends, though they steer clear of political discussions, added Ms. Goldberg, who now runs a right-wing website, Lucianne.com. “What we do is laugh about life’s situation. He’s hilarious.”</p>
<p>A lot of people say that about Mr. Roshan.</p>
<p>“He’s the most fun ever,” Ms. Grigoriadis gushed. “We would just hang out in his office, laughing all day. There’s a whole new breed of editors now who just want to email back and forth. They don’t dish. But that’s not the way to get people to tell you stuff.”</p>
<p>Lisa DePaulo, who wrote the Lucianne Goldberg and Denise Rich profiles, called Mr. Roshan the most enthusiastic editor she’d ever worked with. “You can’t lose your erection when you’re working with him,” she said. “The best stories in the world are the ones where you have these amazing conversations before you write. That’s Maer. You cannot <em>not</em> be excited. It’s impossible to punt.”</p>
<p>Bigger jobs soon beckoned. In 2000, Jason Binn tried to hire him to run <em>Gotham.</em> Mr. Roshan agreed. But after he resigned from <em>New York,</em> his new boss presented him with a list of “friends” who he said should be treated gently in print. There were more than 30 names on it.Mr. Roshan quickly dashed back to his old job.</p>
<p>Tina Brown came calling a year later, after deciding to step back from editing <em>Talk</em> and concentrate on the books and conferences divisions. She saw Mr. Roshan as an ideal replacement. “He just knew how to spin the news, and he could go high or low,” Ms. Brown said. “He could do hard news but he also had a great sense of humor.”</p>
<p>After a bit of high-level negotiation (Ms. Brown would send a limo driver over with terms, which Mr. Roshan would review, mark up and hand to the driver for the return trip), he took the job. Ms. Brown granted him the right to tinker with the magazine as he saw fit, and he engineered a redesign, changing the trim size, adding new sections and hiring a new columnist, Tina Brown.</p>
<p>Which isn’t to say he had total control. “Our biggest fight was she wanted to have this cover line, ‘My Aching Vagina,’” he remembered with a laugh (the story was an excerpt from Susanna Kaysen’s memoir of genital pain). “And I was like, ‘That’s not happening.’” He adopted a voice I’d heard him use before when channeling Ms. Brown, a voice that sounds absolutely nothing like her: “‘I don’t know why! It’s a very important story! I’m sure if it was called ‘My Aching Penis’ you’d have no problem with it!’”</p>
<p>“That sounds like Maer’s fevered imagining,” Ms. Brown said.</p>
<p>In the end, they went with “Susanna Kaysen’s Private Parts.”</p>
<p>“But those disputes were very few and far between,” Mr. Roshan went on. “I really do love her, There’s nobody more fun or funnier to work with,” he said.</p>
<p>To those who don’t know him, Mr. Roshan’s penchant for such dish can sound snarky. But he relates these stories with deep affection. “He just has a great eye for the tragicomedy of New York,” Mr. Tennant said. “But it’s from a good place. He has a huge heart.”</p>
<p>Harvey Weinstein, despite having shut down <em>Talk not </em>long before<em>, </em>was impressed enough with Mr. Roshan to join an investment group to back the original test issues of <em>Radar.</em> "Maer has an unbelievable weather vane for what’s going on," Mr. Weinstein said. "He had this incredible energy, and his people really loved him. He always made sure people who worked for him and with him had fun."</p>
<p><!--nextpage--><strong>Mr. Roshan has always had</strong> a soft spot for “damaged-wing birds,” as Mr. Tennant put it. And in the latter days of <em>Radar,</em> he was well on his way to becoming one of them himself.</p>
<p>“You’re going to tell the steak story, aren’t you,” he declared one afternoon last month as we walked down Broadway toward Union Square.</p>
<p>“Probably,” I replied. “It’s kind of a funny story.”</p>
<p>The steak story, on reflection, isn’t all that funny. Basically, sometime in 2008, Maer and I went out to lunch at the Palm on Second Avenue. He hadn’t been himself. His skin looked yellow. He’d had a break up with his boyfriend, Matt, who’d refused to see him anymore until he got sober, and he was having bouts of paranoia, raving that Matt was secretly draining his bank account, which nobody who knew either of them believed for a second. My goal was to try to persuade Maer to quit <em>Radar</em>—to become a figurehead, go get well, and allow me to take over the magazine. I was looking out for him, but also for myself. It was complicated.</p>
<p>He promised to think about the idea. And then he looked down and declared that his steak was … <em>moving.</em> “No, seriously,” he insisted. “My God, look at that.”</p>
<p>Entering Union Square Park, we grabbed an empty bench on the west side.</p>
<p>“Whatever,” he said. “Just don’t make it your lede. And you might note that hallucination was a side-effect of Klonopin, which my doctor prescribed.”</p>
<p>“Okay, but you’re actually not my editor on this,” I taunted.</p>
<p>“Thank God!” he said with a hearty laugh.</p>
<p>Mr. Roshan was going to be late for an interview with <em>The New York Times,</em> but first he had something to show me. He pulled an iPad out of his satchel. He wanted to give me a taste of his latest project, a tablet magazine called <em>Punch, </em>after the satirical British weekly. The project’s partners include Dany Levy, the creator of DailyCandy, David Bennahum, ceo of the American Independent News Network, and designer Luke Hayman, of Pentagram, who was responsible for the last redesign of <em>Radar.</em></p>
<p>Whether <em>Punch</em> would be a monthly with a daily component or a series of individual apps was up in the air. But Mr. Roshan, who has taken quite a few meetings with investors over the years, was at it again. Most of the major publishers in town had seen it and were impressed. Mr. Roshan was hopeful. Hamburgers actually fall from the sky more often than people think.</p>
<p>“You’re going to love this,” he said excitedly, punching at the touch-screen and loading up a feature about drunk driving Hollywood celebrities. “Pick a star,” he prompted. The options were Lindsay Lohan, Mel Gibson, Britney Spears and Charlie Sheen. I chose Lindsay, and her face appeared in the rear view mirror. He selected a car for her; then he “picked her poison.”</p>
<p>“Now she drives drive home through LA and tries not to hit any pedestrians,” he explained.</p>
<p><em>Punch </em>looked awesome—by far the best iPad magazine I’d seen, and probably what <em>Radar</em> was always supposed to be. Still, I wondered what the recovery community would think of the game.</p>
<p>He took a deep breath. “That will be interesting,” he said. “But you know, I never really wanted to be a poster child for alcoholism. The Fix is a project that needed to be done, but it’s not my life’s calling. I don’t really see myself on Oprah’s couch, do you?”</p>
<p>Mr. Roshan cracked up. Then he added, “Is this not the fucking coolest thing ever?” and he tapped the gas.</p>
<p><em>agell@observer.com</em></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
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		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><div id="attachment_155507" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 624px"><strong><a href="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/maer-roshan-use-this-one-e1307649079587.jpg"><img class="size-large wp-image-155507 " title="Maer Roshan The Fix" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/maer-roshan-use-this-one-e1307649079587.jpg?w=1024&h=682" alt="" width="614" height="409" /></a></strong><p class="wp-caption-text">Maer Roshan.</p></div></p>
<p>On or around April 5, a group of prominent New Yorkers—including Andre Balazs, Gwyneth Paltrow, Lindsay Lohan and Harvey Weinstein—received a curious group text.<!--more--></p>
<p>It was from Courtney Love, and she was pissed. Maer Roshan, she said, was fucking unethical. He was not to be trusted. He’d secretly tape recorded her, she claimed, and sold her out to the Internet.</p>
<p>What had prompted Ms. Love’s fury was a rambling video that had been posted by Mr. Roshan’s recently launched website, <a href="http://www.thefix.com/">The Fix</a>, in which <a href="http://www.thefix.com/content/how-long-have-you-been-sober-sobriety-relapse-and-kelly-osborne" target="_blank">Ms. Love assailed Kelly Osbourne</a> for calling her a crackhead on the E! Channel. “I’ve saved her life twice, physically,” Ms. Love fumed on camera. “Booze, Oxycontin and coke—foaming at the mouth … ”</p>
<p>A number of online outlets had immediately picked up the story. And since it was evident to any of the hundreds of thousands of viewers of the clip that it had clearly been recorded with Ms. Love’s full knowledge and consent, Mr. Roshan confronted her the next day. She replied via text. “I’m very sorryed,” she wrote. “Just Fuckkked upp. Hate the stuupid innternet. Want to hang out tonite?”</p>
<p>Did we mention this website is focused on sobriety?</p>
<p>I witnessed Mr. Roshan extinguishing any number of such flare-ups firsthand, back when I worked as executive editor of <em>Radar,</em> the energetic, endearingly scattershot magazine and website (I say without prejudice) that he launched to great fanfare in 2003 and then stuck with through one mercurial billionaire backer after another.</p>
<p>The new website marked a comeback for the editor, who’d watched helplessly as <em>Radar</em>’s backers sold the property out from under him in late 2008. The demise of the magazine had been brutal. At the end, he often seemed red-eyed and exhausted. And then we all packed up our boxes, and he disappeared. For a while, stories made the rounds among friends and colleagues (TV projects, big Web editing gigs), and then they didn’t. Anybody heard from Maer?</p>
<p>As it happens, The Fix’s subject matter was not chosen at random. Mr. Roshan had developed a serious drinking problem while struggling to launch and to then relaunch <em>Radar</em> and spent a good part of the past two years drying out in various rehabs, halfway houses and sober-living facilities.</p>
<p>A pricey treatment program “with trust-fund kids and rich celebrity people,” as he put it, didn’t do him much good. Eventually, he wound up at a rehab called Cri-Help, where the accommodations were spartan and many of the clients had arrived straight from jail. “It was in the Valley,” he noted meaningfully. “Need I say more?”</p>
<p>Mr. Roshan was standing in front of a crowded tea shop not far from his apartment off Union Square, smoking a cigarette. He was wearing a light gray shirt open to the third button, black pants and black woolen overcoat. He looked much better than when I’d seen him last—thinner, healthier, more bubbly—though a notably round pot belly persisted.</p>
<p>One of his bunkmates was a skinhead, “a swastikaed young gentleman,” he said, named Jared. “Of course, he was delighted to learn that his roommate was this gay Jew. And yet we ended up getting along really well! Except I really didn’t like his music.”</p>
<p>The experience doesn’t seem to have affected Mr. Roshan’s mischievous sense of humor, at least, not to judge by The Fix, a sobriety site as only he would conceive it. Along with rehab reviews, various resources for people seeking help, and hard-hitting pieces by the likes of Susan Cheever and Chris Byron, the site runs more unlikely stories, such as “AA’s Most Annoying Cliches” and “The Argument Against Abstinence.” And then there’s Ms. Love, listed among The Fix's “hand-picked pros,” who maintains she’s been sober for years, even while admitting to the occasional sip of rosé or bump of coke.</p>
<p>Whether The Fix—which can sometimes seem jaw-droppingly lighthearted—effectively promotes sobriety for its readers (or for its editors) isn’t entirely clear. Debates on the subject rage in the comment forums. But nobody who’s followed Mr. Roshan’s extraordinary whirl on the media thrill ride is surprised by The Fix’s nervy tone. Twenty years ago, as the 24-year-old editor of a short-lived gay weekly called <em>QW,</em> he outed right-wing icon Phyllis Schlafly’s son John. The story was picked up nationally and led to Mr. Roshan’s denunciation by the family-values crusader on <em>Meet the Press</em>. His 1997 <em>New York</em> magazine cover story “Trophy Boys,” co-written with Eric Konigsberg, about a cadre of attractive young “male courtesans … living in higher style than Andrew Cunanan ever imagined,” prompted angry letters from David Geffen and finance writer Andrew Tobias and seems to have been scrubbed from the magazine’s website (it lives on via Google Books). Another blockbuster feature, “Power Girls,” which Mr. Roshan assigned to a young party reporter named Vanessa Grigoriadis, went off like a media-gossip I.E.D., dismembering a number of the city’s hungriest young lifestyle flacks and scattering goody bags far and wide.</p>
<p>Working with Mr. Roshan taught her “that writing a story is about making jokes and gossiping with your editor and then putting it all in the piece,” Ms. Grigoriadis said. “You get so spoiled writing for Maer because he cares so much, he becomes a partner. For a long time I thought that’s what all editors were like.”</p>
<p>Later, as editorial director of <em>Talk, </em>he commissioned a fashion shoot featuring Barbara and Jenna Bush look-alikes on a booze-fueled bender, leading the White House to issue a fatwa barring staffers from having any further contact with the magazine. If the boss wants buzz, you give her buzz.</p>
<p><strong><!--nextpage-->One night during Memorial Day</strong> weekend, in 2002, Mr. Roshan sat in a carrel at the Astor Place Kinko’s working on a business plan. It was 4 in the morning. The place was bathed in fluorescent light. <em>Talk </em>had folded, and AMI C.E.O. David Pecker had reached out to Mr. Roshan to ask if he had any ideas for a new magazine. He bluffed and said he did, then grabbed a few colleagues from <em>Talk,</em> including Christopher Tennant and Drew Lee, and cooked up what would become <em>Radar.</em> The name<em> </em>was just a placeholder. They knew it was dumb.</p>
<p>He was, at that point, a media darling. “We’d watched the circulation at <em>Talk</em> rise by something like 19 percent in a few months,” he recalled. “If you read the press from that time, it was like, ‘It’s gotten good!’ Then 9/11 happened and they closed it. I’m like, ‘What just happened there?’”</p>
<p>Mr. Pecker never pulled the trigger. Mr. Roshan spoke with Jann Wenner about editing <em>Us,</em> but then took himself out of the running. Having a magazine of his own seemed like more fun. “In retrospect, it’s actually kind of bad-ass,” he said, draped over a chair in the crowded cafe and sipping an iced green tea. “But I was like, If I can’t find the place I want to work, I’ll just need to start something else.”</p>
<p>The process was draining. “I spend so much time with people at work that it becomes like a family,” he said. “So when everyone dispersed I was feeling really weird, like, ‘Where’s all my peeps?’ They went on to other things, and I went on to do this thing.”</p>
<p>While <em>New York Post</em> gossip writer<em> </em>Neal Travis was breathlessly reporting on Roshan sightings at the Four Seasons Grill Room (“One of the hottest media topics right now is where Maer Roshan will land next”), Mr. Roshan was mostly just waiting around for wealthy acquaintances to reply to his entreaties for funding.</p>
<p>“It was a lonely time,” he said. “And I remember thinking at one point: This would be a lot easier with a glass of wine. Because this is just not fun.”<em> </em>He let out a sigh. “That’s kind of how it started.”<!--nextpage--><strong>Full disclosure: I’m biased.</strong> I worked closely with Mr. Roshan for years under sometimes stressful circumstances. He assigned and edited two of my best stories and taught me more than any editor I’ve ever worked with—even if, O.K., he was occasionally a little bleary or zonked out on doctor-prescribed Klonopin (which as a recent article in The Fix points out, is one of the more destructive medications available).</p>
<p>Mostly, he was a blast to work for—mirthful, brilliant and routinely exasperating. Despite his editing prowess (he is amazing with structure and narrative), he types with two fingers and often leaves caps-lock on by mistake. He has yet to master the technical nuances of website bookmarking, and typically checks his own sites by typing in the U.R.L. He cares little for food and seems happiest with a tuna melt. “Maer has lived off pizza his entire life,” marveled Mr. Tennant, who recalled Mr. Roshan at a business lunch at Masa “holding chopsticks in his hand like a 4-year-old.”</p>
<p>He tends to smoke only a few drags of a Marlboro Light before firing up another, sometimes without extinguishing the first. He can be the same way with stories. I once arrived on a movie set in Williamsburg to profile a hipster porn star only to find another <em>Radar</em> writer who’d been sent for the same purpose. (<em>Radar</em> 2.0 folded before either piece ran.) During features meetings, he could often be counted on to propose pieces that seemed oddly familiar, leaving it to Mr. Tennant to remind him the story had run in an earlier generation of the magazine. That said, they were almost always a good idea, both times around.</p>
<p>At times, I was one Mr. Roshan’s most effective enablers. When his hands would shake, or he’d disappear for a while, I helped maintain the illusion that everything was fine, sometimes blatantly misleading colleagues about his whereabouts. Not that I invented the lies, but I dutifully repeated them: family emergencies, medical emergencies, much-needed vacations. It seemed like part of the gig.</p>
<p>I also cursed his name on a number of occasions, watching more or less impotently as the magazine he’d bled for went down for the final time, despite an ASME nomination for general excellence not six months before. That it later resurfaced as a shady Octomom gossip portal overseen—in an injustice that seems almost cosmic—by AMI’s David Pecker somehow made the whole thing worse, especially when they stripped the old content from the site and adopted a pink and green color scheme.</p>
<p>For those last few months of <em>Radar,</em> I was plagued by bouts of insomnia, episodes my wife took to calling “nightmaers.”</p>
<p>Conflicted doesn’t begin to cover it.</p>
<p>Then again, lots of people seem to be conflicted about Mr. Roshan. To read through <em>Radar</em>’s old press is to step into media steam room so cloudy with schadenfreude, you have to squint to make out the hazy figures in the corner and what exactly they’re up to. Kurt Andersen wrote a strongly worded critique of the magazine in 2005, nailing it for, among other things, its many similarities to <em>Spy</em> (“like a tribute band”), and published the piece in <em>New York, </em>the magazine where he’d hired Mr. Roshan as a senior editor a few years before.</p>
<p>Then there was Gawker—the outlet that had most assiduously followed the magazine’s ups and downs (branding its blanket coverage “The Greatest American Magazine Re-Relaunch”) even as the site’s own mordant take on media and celebrity arguably made the whole idea of <em>Radar</em> seem superfluous. <em>Radar </em>was a classic Gawker story. Despite having been a fan, Gawker Media founder Nick Denton remarked in a GChat, “We quite quickly made it a target. Such a lurid cast of characters.” He was referring not to the editorial staff but to the rogues’ gallery of backers, including Mr. Zuckerman and financier and sex offender Jeffrey Epstein—news of whose proclivities are thought to have led Mr. Zuckerman to dump his share of the property—and subsequently supermarket tycoon Ron Burkle and his aide-de-camp Yusef Jackson (a beer distributor and son of the Rev. Jesse Jackson, who perched on a stability ball during meetings and employed the disconcerting email sign-off “God Bless”).</p>
<p><em>“Radar </em>was the charge of the light brigade,” Mr. Denton added. “Glorious, but not good business. It was a throwback.”</p>
<p>Somewhat infamously, Team Radar sought revenge during the magazine’s 2005 launch party when somebody pushed a pie into Mr. Denton’s face—a throwback sort of stunt, to be sure, but one that made for a good photo op and a Drudge pickup. Not that it quashed the beef. At one point, Gawker writer Choire Sicha posted an item suggesting <em>Radar</em> wasn’t paying freelancers (we were), without mentioning that he himself had freelanced for and been paid by <em>Radar</em> not long before<em>.</em> “Don’t your readers deserve to know that?” I demanded over the phone, to which he replied that it could all be sorted out in the comments. Eventually, he did append an update: “Good news! We haven’t heard from any other contributors to the new <em>Radar</em> who’ve had trouble! Isn’t that lovely?”</p>
<p>That it had by then become easier for a freelance writer to fire off an anonymous complaint to Gawker than to return an assignment contract seemed indicative of the weirdly intimate love-hate relationship a certain group of journalists had developed with Mr. Roshan. Shortly thereafter, when Mr. Sicha wound up as a <em>Radar </em>colleague, it seemed not only farcical but somehow par for the course. It was always complicated with <em>Radar.<!--nextpage--></em><strong>Mr. Roshan’s first serious</strong> dalliance with magazines occurred in the late 70’s, and it seems to have made a powerful impression. He was a Jewish kid growing up in prerevolutionary Tehran, the son of a Persian-Jewish father and an American mother. The Roshans subscribed to <em>Time—</em>but their issues inevitably arrived late and incomplete.</p>
<p>“I don’t know how they found the time to do this,” Mr. Roshan recalled, referring to the Shah’s regime, “but they would go in and cut out everything they didn’t like, so you’d get magazines with whole articles missing.” Tidy though it sounds, Mr. Roshan’s subsequent career can be seen on some level as an ongoing campaign to shovel copy, the more provocative the better, into those mysterious blank spaces.</p>
<p>This did not always please <em>Radar</em>’s various backers, who might have wished he held certain of their sacred cows in higher regard. During my tenure, Hillary Clinton was the most sacred of all (Bill was, at the time, a frequent flyer on Mr. Burkle’s 757, “Air Ron”). I recall one dramatic showdown over a fairly tame web roundup of Hillary’s “cronies.” The story ultimately ran, but at some cost to Mr. Roshan’s relationship with our funders.</p>
<p>“Some would say it’s a little reckless but he does what he believes in,” noted Mr. Tennant, who pointed out that Mr. Roshan had gleefully alienated the gay mafia with “Trophy Boys” just when he was set to become a made member. “He could have been sipping Cosmos at Calvin’s beach house!” Mr. Tennant said. “And it would probably more advantageous <em>not </em>to put Courtney in The Fix. But to his credit, Maer is always ready to absolutely piss someone off.”</p>
<p>“If I’d been more willing to compromise, I probably would have gotten a lot further,” Mr. Roshan conceded.</p>
<p>Another formative and cinematic memory: It’s the Fourth of July at the Community School in Tehran, an academy for the children of American expats. As Maer and his schoolmates look on awestruck, a helicopter buzzes into view and hovers over the school’s courtyard, whipping up a swirl of dust. The chopper’s door slides open. The children raise their eyes to the blue sky, and McDonalds hamburgers rain down.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, demonstrations against the Shah were gathering steam: fevered protest marches passing right outside the school’s gates, guys beating themselves with chains, tanks rumbling in the streets, people throwing rocks and lighting piles of garbage on fire.</p>
<p>In 1979, Mr. Roshan’s mother whisked him and his two younger brothers back to her parents’ house on Long Island while his father stayed behind to deal with the family’s property. The Shah’s puppet government soon fell, and Ayatollah Khomeini was swept into power. Mr. Roshan’s father escaped seven years later, but the once-colorful figure was diminished. He died of cancer within a year.</p>
<p>After arriving on Long Island, Mr. Roshan’s mother set up a flea market booth at Aqueduct racetrack, peddling $3 belts to make ends meet. Somehow she eventually earned enough to buy a house in Five Towns and to send Maer and his brothers to an Orthodox yeshiva. Though he wasn’t religious and already knew he was gay, he seems to have fit in well. His second year, he ran for vice president of his class, and despite having to deliver his Hebrew campaign speech phonetically, he won.</p>
<p>Before long, he was zipping into town on weekends with a female friend to hit the nightclubs he’d read about in <em>New York</em> and <em>Interview.</em> Their first such excursion was to Area. The high-schoolers took one look at the crowd outside and quickly determined that standing at the back of the line would never do, especially if they wanted to be home for curfew. Instead, they planted themselves at a distance from the scrum in front and pretended they didn’t want to go in at all. “The bouncers were like, ‘<em>You,</em>’” Mr. Roshan recalled incredulously.</p>
<p>Inside, the theme was Religion. A guy was hanging from a cross. There was a pool of fire on the dance floor.</p>
<p>Mr. Roshan attended N.Y.U. as a journalism and politics major and got to know club kids Lisa E. and James St. James. Dressing for a night out was a two-and-a-half-hour process and often involved the company of a posse of drag queens. Asked to describe his look at the time, he said merely, “I wouldn’t want those pictures to surface, that’s for sure.”</p>
<p>After a short stint in Key West, where Mr. Roshan covered the police beat for a local paper (making sure to boldface the names in the crime blotter), he became an editor at <em>Interview</em>. His first article to cause a stir was a freelance piece, an exclusive Q&amp;A he landed with Liz Smith for <em>Outweek, </em>despite the fact that the magazine had excoriated her for months over her refusal to come out as a lesbian. “I was being attacked constantly!” Ms. Smith recalled. “But Maer was so convincing. I honestly don’t know how he did it.” <!--nextpage-->The cover story, entitled “Liz Smith: ‘I Hate <em>Outweek</em>!’” ran in June 1991. “I was prepared to think of him as an adversarial reporter,” Ms. Smith said. “But he was so intelligent and nice and sweet. I’ve followed his career with a great deal of proprietary interest ever since.”</p>
<p>The story helped win Mr. Roshan the gig as editor-in-chief of <em>QW, </em>his first of many start-ups. The AIDS crisis was at its height, and major staff battles over politics were routine. “There was this contingent that was, like, ‘Magic Johnson is <em>not</em> our hero!’”Mr. Roshan recalled.)</p>
<p>Mr. Roshan was part of the generation that had been educated about safe sex, he said, “which didn’t make it any less scary. But I got to see the transformation of a community,” from one that was underground and marginalized to one that was aggressively visible—a dynamic he sees happening now for addicts, and that The Fix aims to capture and accelerate.</p>
<p>After <em>QW</em>’s owner died of AIDS, Gil Rogin, the legendary managing editor of <em>Sports Illustrated </em>and co-founder of <em>Vibe,</em> hatched a plan to bring a retooled version of the magazine to Time Inc., to be called <em>Tribe. </em>But after Mr. Roshan presented a prototype, and then another, to the company’s board, the project was shelved, in part, it was speculated, due to fear of a boycott by the Christian right, which had recently targeted <em>Sassy</em>.</p>
<p>Mr. Roshan was subsequently hired by Mr. Andersen at <em>New York,</em> eventually becoming deputy editor under Caroline Miller. He became known there for an uncanny ability to nail the city’s zeitgeist, and for a playful streak. “His stories were always brilliantly full of angles,” said Ms. Brown, who was then at <em>The New Yorker.</em> For instance, he spearheaded a singles issue with companion-wanted ads by Star Jones, Marcus Schenkenberg, Ann Coulter and Ed Koch on the cover. (“They all got a ton of responses but Star only got three letters!” he recalled. “Poor thing.”) For a package, Gay Life Now—a first for a mainstream magazine<em>—</em>Mr. Roshan invited just about every prominent homosexual in town to pose together on the cover, then wrote a provocative piece wondering why so many had demurred. He initiated a column with Mayor Koch and Senator Al D’Amato kibitzing about politics at the Four Seasons, and another, “Cindy Undercover,” in which gossip writer Cindy Adams would take a job as a bartender at Scores, or a waitress at Katz’s.</p>
<p>“He knew absolutely everybody,” Mr. Tennant recalled. “The phone would ring every five seconds. ‘Hey, it’s Candace [Bushnell], where’s Maer?’ ‘It’s Ed Koch, where’s Maer?’ It was like, ‘Please hold. Please hold … ’”</p>
<p>Mr. Roshan nabbed the first postscandal interview with Monica Lewinsky, by accident. “We were at a club, and she was like, ‘You look really familiar,’ and I’m like, ‘That’s funny, you look very familiar as well!’” He also wrangled a profile of Denise Rich and noted proudly, “I think I’m the only person who was simultaneously friends with Denise, Monica and Lucianne Goldberg.”</p>
<p>“God bless Maer,” offered Ms. Goldberg. “He’s smart and kind, and he doesn’t stab people in the back.” They remain friends, though they steer clear of political discussions, added Ms. Goldberg, who now runs a right-wing website, Lucianne.com. “What we do is laugh about life’s situation. He’s hilarious.”</p>
<p>A lot of people say that about Mr. Roshan.</p>
<p>“He’s the most fun ever,” Ms. Grigoriadis gushed. “We would just hang out in his office, laughing all day. There’s a whole new breed of editors now who just want to email back and forth. They don’t dish. But that’s not the way to get people to tell you stuff.”</p>
<p>Lisa DePaulo, who wrote the Lucianne Goldberg and Denise Rich profiles, called Mr. Roshan the most enthusiastic editor she’d ever worked with. “You can’t lose your erection when you’re working with him,” she said. “The best stories in the world are the ones where you have these amazing conversations before you write. That’s Maer. You cannot <em>not</em> be excited. It’s impossible to punt.”</p>
<p>Bigger jobs soon beckoned. In 2000, Jason Binn tried to hire him to run <em>Gotham.</em> Mr. Roshan agreed. But after he resigned from <em>New York,</em> his new boss presented him with a list of “friends” who he said should be treated gently in print. There were more than 30 names on it.Mr. Roshan quickly dashed back to his old job.</p>
<p>Tina Brown came calling a year later, after deciding to step back from editing <em>Talk</em> and concentrate on the books and conferences divisions. She saw Mr. Roshan as an ideal replacement. “He just knew how to spin the news, and he could go high or low,” Ms. Brown said. “He could do hard news but he also had a great sense of humor.”</p>
<p>After a bit of high-level negotiation (Ms. Brown would send a limo driver over with terms, which Mr. Roshan would review, mark up and hand to the driver for the return trip), he took the job. Ms. Brown granted him the right to tinker with the magazine as he saw fit, and he engineered a redesign, changing the trim size, adding new sections and hiring a new columnist, Tina Brown.</p>
<p>Which isn’t to say he had total control. “Our biggest fight was she wanted to have this cover line, ‘My Aching Vagina,’” he remembered with a laugh (the story was an excerpt from Susanna Kaysen’s memoir of genital pain). “And I was like, ‘That’s not happening.’” He adopted a voice I’d heard him use before when channeling Ms. Brown, a voice that sounds absolutely nothing like her: “‘I don’t know why! It’s a very important story! I’m sure if it was called ‘My Aching Penis’ you’d have no problem with it!’”</p>
<p>“That sounds like Maer’s fevered imagining,” Ms. Brown said.</p>
<p>In the end, they went with “Susanna Kaysen’s Private Parts.”</p>
<p>“But those disputes were very few and far between,” Mr. Roshan went on. “I really do love her, There’s nobody more fun or funnier to work with,” he said.</p>
<p>To those who don’t know him, Mr. Roshan’s penchant for such dish can sound snarky. But he relates these stories with deep affection. “He just has a great eye for the tragicomedy of New York,” Mr. Tennant said. “But it’s from a good place. He has a huge heart.”</p>
<p>Harvey Weinstein, despite having shut down <em>Talk not </em>long before<em>, </em>was impressed enough with Mr. Roshan to join an investment group to back the original test issues of <em>Radar.</em> "Maer has an unbelievable weather vane for what’s going on," Mr. Weinstein said. "He had this incredible energy, and his people really loved him. He always made sure people who worked for him and with him had fun."</p>
<p><!--nextpage--><strong>Mr. Roshan has always had</strong> a soft spot for “damaged-wing birds,” as Mr. Tennant put it. And in the latter days of <em>Radar,</em> he was well on his way to becoming one of them himself.</p>
<p>“You’re going to tell the steak story, aren’t you,” he declared one afternoon last month as we walked down Broadway toward Union Square.</p>
<p>“Probably,” I replied. “It’s kind of a funny story.”</p>
<p>The steak story, on reflection, isn’t all that funny. Basically, sometime in 2008, Maer and I went out to lunch at the Palm on Second Avenue. He hadn’t been himself. His skin looked yellow. He’d had a break up with his boyfriend, Matt, who’d refused to see him anymore until he got sober, and he was having bouts of paranoia, raving that Matt was secretly draining his bank account, which nobody who knew either of them believed for a second. My goal was to try to persuade Maer to quit <em>Radar</em>—to become a figurehead, go get well, and allow me to take over the magazine. I was looking out for him, but also for myself. It was complicated.</p>
<p>He promised to think about the idea. And then he looked down and declared that his steak was … <em>moving.</em> “No, seriously,” he insisted. “My God, look at that.”</p>
<p>Entering Union Square Park, we grabbed an empty bench on the west side.</p>
<p>“Whatever,” he said. “Just don’t make it your lede. And you might note that hallucination was a side-effect of Klonopin, which my doctor prescribed.”</p>
<p>“Okay, but you’re actually not my editor on this,” I taunted.</p>
<p>“Thank God!” he said with a hearty laugh.</p>
<p>Mr. Roshan was going to be late for an interview with <em>The New York Times,</em> but first he had something to show me. He pulled an iPad out of his satchel. He wanted to give me a taste of his latest project, a tablet magazine called <em>Punch, </em>after the satirical British weekly. The project’s partners include Dany Levy, the creator of DailyCandy, David Bennahum, ceo of the American Independent News Network, and designer Luke Hayman, of Pentagram, who was responsible for the last redesign of <em>Radar.</em></p>
<p>Whether <em>Punch</em> would be a monthly with a daily component or a series of individual apps was up in the air. But Mr. Roshan, who has taken quite a few meetings with investors over the years, was at it again. Most of the major publishers in town had seen it and were impressed. Mr. Roshan was hopeful. Hamburgers actually fall from the sky more often than people think.</p>
<p>“You’re going to love this,” he said excitedly, punching at the touch-screen and loading up a feature about drunk driving Hollywood celebrities. “Pick a star,” he prompted. The options were Lindsay Lohan, Mel Gibson, Britney Spears and Charlie Sheen. I chose Lindsay, and her face appeared in the rear view mirror. He selected a car for her; then he “picked her poison.”</p>
<p>“Now she drives drive home through LA and tries not to hit any pedestrians,” he explained.</p>
<p><em>Punch </em>looked awesome—by far the best iPad magazine I’d seen, and probably what <em>Radar</em> was always supposed to be. Still, I wondered what the recovery community would think of the game.</p>
<p>He took a deep breath. “That will be interesting,” he said. “But you know, I never really wanted to be a poster child for alcoholism. The Fix is a project that needed to be done, but it’s not my life’s calling. I don’t really see myself on Oprah’s couch, do you?”</p>
<p>Mr. Roshan cracked up. Then he added, “Is this not the fucking coolest thing ever?” and he tapped the gas.</p>
<p><em>agell@observer.com</em></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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			<media:title type="html">Maer Roshan The Fix</media:title>
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		<title>The Fix Goes Longform on Four Loko&#8217;s Founding Fathers</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2011/04/the-fix-goes-longform-on-four-lokos-founding-fathers/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 25 Apr 2011 17:53:45 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2011/04/the-fix-goes-longform-on-four-lokos-founding-fathers/</link>
			<dc:creator>Nate Freeman</dc:creator>
				
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.observer.com/2011/04/the-fix-goes-longform-on-four-lokos-founding-fathers/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/four-loko_01.jpg?w=300&h=223" />Months after the beloved caffeine-blasted booze got banned from New York's bodegas, Phusion Projects is hoping Four Loko can still sell without the kick.&nbsp;</p>
<p>Maer Roshan's new addiction news site, The Fix, has published <a href="http://www.thefix.com/content/four-loko?page=all">a sprawling 5,000-word profile</a> of the parent company that gifted the world with Four Loko. So who are these princes of the night? Jaisen Freeman is "a hulking athlete with a Vin Diesel crew cut." Jeff Wright is "a barrel-chested redhead with piercing blue eyes." Chris Hunter is "a smooth-talking charmer with a Tom Cruise grin."</p>
<p>You can relive the entire wired-but-also nicely buzzed saga: the sudden and stunning rise to fame, the fierce backlash, the quiet denouement.</p>
<p>Despite the alteration of the original recipe, Phusion Projects is charging ahead, banking on dedication to the brand despite the authority-inposed removal of the caffeine in the drink. They also claim to have a number of hush-hush concoctions to roll out in the future.</p>
<p>Bottoms up!</p>
<p><strong><strong><a href="mailto:nfreeman@observer.com">nfreeman [at] observer.com</a>&nbsp;|&nbsp;<a href="http://twitter.com/#%21/NFreeman1234">@nfreeman1234</a> </strong></strong></p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/four-loko_01.jpg?w=300&h=223" />Months after the beloved caffeine-blasted booze got banned from New York's bodegas, Phusion Projects is hoping Four Loko can still sell without the kick.&nbsp;</p>
<p>Maer Roshan's new addiction news site, The Fix, has published <a href="http://www.thefix.com/content/four-loko?page=all">a sprawling 5,000-word profile</a> of the parent company that gifted the world with Four Loko. So who are these princes of the night? Jaisen Freeman is "a hulking athlete with a Vin Diesel crew cut." Jeff Wright is "a barrel-chested redhead with piercing blue eyes." Chris Hunter is "a smooth-talking charmer with a Tom Cruise grin."</p>
<p>You can relive the entire wired-but-also nicely buzzed saga: the sudden and stunning rise to fame, the fierce backlash, the quiet denouement.</p>
<p>Despite the alteration of the original recipe, Phusion Projects is charging ahead, banking on dedication to the brand despite the authority-inposed removal of the caffeine in the drink. They also claim to have a number of hush-hush concoctions to roll out in the future.</p>
<p>Bottoms up!</p>
<p><strong><strong><a href="mailto:nfreeman@observer.com">nfreeman [at] observer.com</a>&nbsp;|&nbsp;<a href="http://twitter.com/#%21/NFreeman1234">@nfreeman1234</a> </strong></strong></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Roshan Redux! Radar Founder Launches Addiction Site</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2011/03/roshan-redux-iradari-founder-launches-addiction-site/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 28 Mar 2011 04:21:32 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2011/03/roshan-redux-iradari-founder-launches-addiction-site/</link>
			<dc:creator>Aaron Gell</dc:creator>
				
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.observer.com/2011/03/roshan-redux-iradari-founder-launches-addiction-site/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/picture-81.png" />More than two years after bidding farewell to <em>Radar,</em> the magazine he shepherded through...what was it?&mdash;19 or 20 separate incarnations and which lives on in name if not in spirit as an awful TMZ manque owned by American Media, Maer Roshan unveiled his latest creation on Monday, a website called <a href="http://www.thefix.com" target="_blank">The Fix</a>, focused on addiction and recovery.</p>
<p>Despite its serious subject matter, the site displays certain Roshanian hallmarks, including some cheeky humor (a story on drug interdiction is entitled "Mexico Goes Medieval on Your Grass"); a mix of celebrity content (Charlie Sheen) and hard news (a takedown of Narconon); and a measure of literary heft, provided by Susan Cheever, a regular columnist.</p>
<p>There's also a section devoted to rating rehab facilities&mdash;a conceit that also appeared in <em>Radar</em> as a one-off "Zagat's Guide to Rehab" (disclosure: as executive editor of <em>Radar</em> at the time, I edited that piece, and as I recall it was excellent).&nbsp;</p>
<p>In addition to Mr. Roshan, the new website is edited by Anna David (of "Attack of the Show!" fame) and Walter Armstrong. Joe Schrank, who heads the recovery group The Core Company, is The Fix's cofounder and editor-at-large.</p>
<p>Asked whether it's appropriate to apply humor to a subject like substance abuse, Mr. Roshan, who has spoken of his struggles with alcoholism, told <em>The Observer,</em> "Addiction is a serious thing, but I don't think it has to be treated in a deadly serious manner."</p>
<p>He added, "There's no rule out there that sobriety is supposed to be this dull, earnest monastic exercise. There's tons of humor in the surreal situations that we find ourselves in. The Fix is certaily not going to ignore that."</p>
<p><a id="reyc" title="agell [at] observer.com" href="mailto:agell@observer.com">agell [at] observer.com</a>&nbsp;|&nbsp;<a id="ne5e" title="@aarongell" href="http://www.twitter.com/aarongell">@aarongell</a></p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/picture-81.png" />More than two years after bidding farewell to <em>Radar,</em> the magazine he shepherded through...what was it?&mdash;19 or 20 separate incarnations and which lives on in name if not in spirit as an awful TMZ manque owned by American Media, Maer Roshan unveiled his latest creation on Monday, a website called <a href="http://www.thefix.com" target="_blank">The Fix</a>, focused on addiction and recovery.</p>
<p>Despite its serious subject matter, the site displays certain Roshanian hallmarks, including some cheeky humor (a story on drug interdiction is entitled "Mexico Goes Medieval on Your Grass"); a mix of celebrity content (Charlie Sheen) and hard news (a takedown of Narconon); and a measure of literary heft, provided by Susan Cheever, a regular columnist.</p>
<p>There's also a section devoted to rating rehab facilities&mdash;a conceit that also appeared in <em>Radar</em> as a one-off "Zagat's Guide to Rehab" (disclosure: as executive editor of <em>Radar</em> at the time, I edited that piece, and as I recall it was excellent).&nbsp;</p>
<p>In addition to Mr. Roshan, the new website is edited by Anna David (of "Attack of the Show!" fame) and Walter Armstrong. Joe Schrank, who heads the recovery group The Core Company, is The Fix's cofounder and editor-at-large.</p>
<p>Asked whether it's appropriate to apply humor to a subject like substance abuse, Mr. Roshan, who has spoken of his struggles with alcoholism, told <em>The Observer,</em> "Addiction is a serious thing, but I don't think it has to be treated in a deadly serious manner."</p>
<p>He added, "There's no rule out there that sobriety is supposed to be this dull, earnest monastic exercise. There's tons of humor in the surreal situations that we find ourselves in. The Fix is certaily not going to ignore that."</p>
<p><a id="reyc" title="agell [at] observer.com" href="mailto:agell@observer.com">agell [at] observer.com</a>&nbsp;|&nbsp;<a id="ne5e" title="@aarongell" href="http://www.twitter.com/aarongell">@aarongell</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Where in the World Is Maer Roshan?</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2009/08/where-in-the-world-is-maer-roshan/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 25 Aug 2009 23:13:10 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2009/08/where-in-the-world-is-maer-roshan/</link>
			<dc:creator>John Koblin</dc:creator>
				
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.observer.com/2009/08/where-in-the-world-is-maer-roshan/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/maer-roshan-getty.jpg?w=300&h=199" />It hardly seems like a year ago, but remember last September? Just after Lehman declared bankruptcy, we dealt with a rapid wave of media closures here in the city: The Sun, 02138 and, for a third time, Radar.</p>
<p class="TEXT">But we didn&rsquo;t expect that it would take long for Maer Roshan, <em>Radar</em>&rsquo;s editor, to get up to a new trick. However many times he&rsquo;d fallen before, he&rsquo;d also proven, with dogged determination, that year after year he&rsquo;ll return. Sure enough, in the weeks after <em>Radar</em> shut down, he tried, furiously, to get the last issue printed. It never hit the presses.</p>
<p class="TEXT">But then things got quiet. We heard that Mr. Roshan had gotten a gig as editor at large with the <em>Daily Beast</em>. There was a byline in February about red carpet snafus, then radio silence. No one knew quite where Mr. Roshan was, other than that he might be in Los Angeles.</p>
<p class="TEXT">In May, he resurfaced! A Keith Kelly item in the <em>Post</em> told us that Mr. Roshan had landed at <em>The Week</em>, where <em>Daily Beast</em> editor Tina Brown&rsquo;s hubby, Harry Evans, is an editor at large. The item reported that Mr. Roshan was going to be the online editor of theweek.com.</p>
<p class="TEXT">But then, we didn&rsquo;t see him on the masthead.<span>&nbsp;&nbsp; </span></p>
<p class="TEXT">So we decided to check in with Mr. Roshan. We found him late Monday afternoon on his cell from Los   Angeles.</p>
<p class="TEXT">&ldquo;It&rsquo;s kind of great here! It&rsquo;s sunny!&rdquo; he said.</p>
<p class="TEXT">Mr. Roshan said he was never the online editor.</p>
<p class="TEXT">&ldquo;It was an acting editor job,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It was to give [<em>The Week</em>] a little direction. It was never supposed to be a long-term thing. It was a consultancy job.&rdquo;</p>
<p class="TEXT">So what does one do out in L.A.?</p>
<p class="TEXT">&ldquo;You do things like go to the beach and work out,&rdquo; he said.</p>
<p class="TEXT">Isn&rsquo;t that the sort of stuff of which L.A. dreams are made!</p>
<p class="TEXT">More seriously, Mr. Roshan said he&rsquo;s working on some TV projects</p>
<p class="TEXT">&ldquo;I&rsquo;m working on a project which has me here for four or five months,&rdquo; he said.</p>
<p class="TEXT">Naturally, he wouldn&rsquo;t give us a tell-all, nor even a hint of what it is he&rsquo;s working on, but he told us he originally moved out to L.A. with TV in mind. And, he said, the TV gig is looking good. &ldquo;Things have firmed up since I&rsquo;ve been out here,&rdquo; he said.</p>
<p class="TEXT">Does that mean he&rsquo;s giving up on the city for good?</p>
<p class="TEXT">&ldquo;I still have my apartment in New York, and I still love New York,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m not giving that up.&rdquo;</p>
<p class="TEXT" style="text-align: left" align="left"><em>jkoblin@observer.com</em></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/maer-roshan-getty.jpg?w=300&h=199" />It hardly seems like a year ago, but remember last September? Just after Lehman declared bankruptcy, we dealt with a rapid wave of media closures here in the city: The Sun, 02138 and, for a third time, Radar.</p>
<p class="TEXT">But we didn&rsquo;t expect that it would take long for Maer Roshan, <em>Radar</em>&rsquo;s editor, to get up to a new trick. However many times he&rsquo;d fallen before, he&rsquo;d also proven, with dogged determination, that year after year he&rsquo;ll return. Sure enough, in the weeks after <em>Radar</em> shut down, he tried, furiously, to get the last issue printed. It never hit the presses.</p>
<p class="TEXT">But then things got quiet. We heard that Mr. Roshan had gotten a gig as editor at large with the <em>Daily Beast</em>. There was a byline in February about red carpet snafus, then radio silence. No one knew quite where Mr. Roshan was, other than that he might be in Los Angeles.</p>
<p class="TEXT">In May, he resurfaced! A Keith Kelly item in the <em>Post</em> told us that Mr. Roshan had landed at <em>The Week</em>, where <em>Daily Beast</em> editor Tina Brown&rsquo;s hubby, Harry Evans, is an editor at large. The item reported that Mr. Roshan was going to be the online editor of theweek.com.</p>
<p class="TEXT">But then, we didn&rsquo;t see him on the masthead.<span>&nbsp;&nbsp; </span></p>
<p class="TEXT">So we decided to check in with Mr. Roshan. We found him late Monday afternoon on his cell from Los   Angeles.</p>
<p class="TEXT">&ldquo;It&rsquo;s kind of great here! It&rsquo;s sunny!&rdquo; he said.</p>
<p class="TEXT">Mr. Roshan said he was never the online editor.</p>
<p class="TEXT">&ldquo;It was an acting editor job,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It was to give [<em>The Week</em>] a little direction. It was never supposed to be a long-term thing. It was a consultancy job.&rdquo;</p>
<p class="TEXT">So what does one do out in L.A.?</p>
<p class="TEXT">&ldquo;You do things like go to the beach and work out,&rdquo; he said.</p>
<p class="TEXT">Isn&rsquo;t that the sort of stuff of which L.A. dreams are made!</p>
<p class="TEXT">More seriously, Mr. Roshan said he&rsquo;s working on some TV projects</p>
<p class="TEXT">&ldquo;I&rsquo;m working on a project which has me here for four or five months,&rdquo; he said.</p>
<p class="TEXT">Naturally, he wouldn&rsquo;t give us a tell-all, nor even a hint of what it is he&rsquo;s working on, but he told us he originally moved out to L.A. with TV in mind. And, he said, the TV gig is looking good. &ldquo;Things have firmed up since I&rsquo;ve been out here,&rdquo; he said.</p>
<p class="TEXT">Does that mean he&rsquo;s giving up on the city for good?</p>
<p class="TEXT">&ldquo;I still have my apartment in New York, and I still love New York,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m not giving that up.&rdquo;</p>
<p class="TEXT" style="text-align: left" align="left"><em>jkoblin@observer.com</em></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Gawker Hires John Cook</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2009/03/gawker-hires-john-cook/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 06 Mar 2009 17:12:40 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2009/03/gawker-hires-john-cook/</link>
			<dc:creator>John Koblin</dc:creator>
				
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.observer.com/2009/03/gawker-hires-john-cook/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/cook2.jpg?w=263&h=300" />John Cook, <a href="http://referencetone.com/">the longtime <em>Radar</em> contributor and the crackerjack TV reporter for the <em>Chicago Tribune</em></a>, is heading to Gawker. His first day is Monday.</p>
<p>He'll be covering covering a variety of things: his old beat in television; he'll respond to the day's news when he's got something to say; and he'll be digging through FOIAs and courthouse documents for topics "that align with the stuff Gawker does," something the Web site has long been after but hasn't found anyone with the time or resources to do.</p>
<p>And Mr. Cook, a writer whom Nick Denton has coveted for some time, seems like he has finally relented to Mr. Denton's way of thinking.</p>
<p>"Look, if the <em>Daily News</em> isn't there in three years or in two years or in however many years it takes, there's still going to be an appetite for the things they do and there will be places like Gawker to fill that role."</p>
<p>Mr. Cook said that Gawker will pick up the slack from fading newspapers and magazines.</p>
<p>"Nick and [Gawker editor] Gabriel [Snyder] and I had been talking about&mdash;and this is Nick&rsquo;s term&mdash;is iterative reporting, or iterative journalism," he said. "One of the things we want to do is the kind of story that would be potentially a two-, a three-, a four-, or five-thousand-word investigative-type story that might be in a magazine or newspaper but do it one post at a time and toss seeds out and threads out and see what happens."</p>
<p>He pointed to the <a href="http://www.talkingpointsmemo.com/">Josh Marshall</a> method.</p>
<p>"We don&rsquo;t want to do things that are long," he said. "That stuff doesn&rsquo;t work. I was accustomed to doing the kind of thing where you spend six weeks reporting and working on a story and developing sources and finding new information and doing all the things you do for a 5,000-word story, and then you sit down, you collect it all and you write it, and it's edited and published. You take that amount of work and the amount of the skill that it requires and here you'd just do it live. You start with whatever your first nugget of information is and put it out there and see what develops. It's an opening-up-the-notebook kind of thing."</p>
<p>Mr. Cook has been out of work ever since <em>Radar</em> folded last September. He was a longtime ally to Maer Roshan, so we wondered if he's been sitting on his hands the last few months waiting and hoping if Mr. Roshan would be developing something else he could jump on board for.</p>
<p>"<em>Radar</em> went under nine days after my son was born," he said. "I got a call, while I was on paternity leave, that said come in and get your stuff. And so the upside is, I've been able to raise him for his first couple of months. The downside is, I didn't have any income from my side. Maer&rsquo;s an editor at large for the Daily Beast and I&rsquo;ve talked to him about stuff about the Daily Beast and freelance stuff. I haven&rsquo;t been waiting for his next move."</p>
<p>And would Gawker's notoriously stressful pace finally drive Mr. Cook back to cigarettes? No, he assures, his Nicorette pack will take care of that.</p>
<p>"I'm chewing it right now," he said. "It increases efficiency."</p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/cook2.jpg?w=263&h=300" />John Cook, <a href="http://referencetone.com/">the longtime <em>Radar</em> contributor and the crackerjack TV reporter for the <em>Chicago Tribune</em></a>, is heading to Gawker. His first day is Monday.</p>
<p>He'll be covering covering a variety of things: his old beat in television; he'll respond to the day's news when he's got something to say; and he'll be digging through FOIAs and courthouse documents for topics "that align with the stuff Gawker does," something the Web site has long been after but hasn't found anyone with the time or resources to do.</p>
<p>And Mr. Cook, a writer whom Nick Denton has coveted for some time, seems like he has finally relented to Mr. Denton's way of thinking.</p>
<p>"Look, if the <em>Daily News</em> isn't there in three years or in two years or in however many years it takes, there's still going to be an appetite for the things they do and there will be places like Gawker to fill that role."</p>
<p>Mr. Cook said that Gawker will pick up the slack from fading newspapers and magazines.</p>
<p>"Nick and [Gawker editor] Gabriel [Snyder] and I had been talking about&mdash;and this is Nick&rsquo;s term&mdash;is iterative reporting, or iterative journalism," he said. "One of the things we want to do is the kind of story that would be potentially a two-, a three-, a four-, or five-thousand-word investigative-type story that might be in a magazine or newspaper but do it one post at a time and toss seeds out and threads out and see what happens."</p>
<p>He pointed to the <a href="http://www.talkingpointsmemo.com/">Josh Marshall</a> method.</p>
<p>"We don&rsquo;t want to do things that are long," he said. "That stuff doesn&rsquo;t work. I was accustomed to doing the kind of thing where you spend six weeks reporting and working on a story and developing sources and finding new information and doing all the things you do for a 5,000-word story, and then you sit down, you collect it all and you write it, and it's edited and published. You take that amount of work and the amount of the skill that it requires and here you'd just do it live. You start with whatever your first nugget of information is and put it out there and see what develops. It's an opening-up-the-notebook kind of thing."</p>
<p>Mr. Cook has been out of work ever since <em>Radar</em> folded last September. He was a longtime ally to Maer Roshan, so we wondered if he's been sitting on his hands the last few months waiting and hoping if Mr. Roshan would be developing something else he could jump on board for.</p>
<p>"<em>Radar</em> went under nine days after my son was born," he said. "I got a call, while I was on paternity leave, that said come in and get your stuff. And so the upside is, I've been able to raise him for his first couple of months. The downside is, I didn't have any income from my side. Maer&rsquo;s an editor at large for the Daily Beast and I&rsquo;ve talked to him about stuff about the Daily Beast and freelance stuff. I haven&rsquo;t been waiting for his next move."</p>
<p>And would Gawker's notoriously stressful pace finally drive Mr. Cook back to cigarettes? No, he assures, his Nicorette pack will take care of that.</p>
<p>"I'm chewing it right now," he said. "It increases efficiency."</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Radar Attracts Media&#8217;s Living Dead to Posthumous Party at Citrine</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2008/10/iradari-attracts-medias-living-dead-to-posthumous-party-at-citrine/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 31 Oct 2008 12:02:05 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2008/10/iradari-attracts-medias-living-dead-to-posthumous-party-at-citrine/</link>
			<dc:creator>John Koblin</dc:creator>
				
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.observer.com/2008/10/iradari-attracts-medias-living-dead-to-posthumous-party-at-citrine/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/otrmaer_0.jpg?w=300&h=205" />&quot;I basically started <em>Radar </em>because I didn't want to work at any other magazine,&quot; said Maer Roshan, the editor of the recently folded magazine. &quot;And after six years, all of it came down to <em>this</em>.&quot;
<p>Mr. Roshan was surveying his party, the night before Halloween, which had become a kind of Night of the Living Dead for journalism. &quot;PRINT IS DEAD! LONG LIVE RADAR!&quot; read the invitation, which was retooled after a recent development at the magazine. </p>
<p>Six days before his staff had been given a couple of hours to pack everything at their desks into collapsible white boxes and shove out, after <a href="/2008/media/radar-shutting-down-again">the sudden declaration from his sponsors that the magazine was officially kaput</a>, his staffers, many of whom have been fixtures in the young journalism scene in New York for years now, mingled with their media friends at the bar, Citrine, in Chelsea; not yet officially opened, the walk-up spot, which looks a bit like a Hell's Kitchen gay bar, has already held parties for Edgar Bronfman Jr.'s daughter and Heatherette seamstress Richie Rich. </p>
<p>Mr. Roshan's was a glossy magazine, so there were loads of stylists and photographers around, too, and Shannen Doherty, the magazine's last cover star, who added a weird gallowsy punch line to the invite list.</p>
<p>&quot;When I started <em>Radar</em>, I kept thinking about Jann Wenner, Hugh Heffner and Gloria Steinem and a time when you could actually say, 'I want to start a magazine!' And do it,&quot; he said. &quot;That's what always compelled me. I felt like we could be like that.&quot;</p>
<p>Instead, this. Free drinks at Citrine, unemployed.</p>
<p>Free for a time from the immediate postmortems, Mr. Roshan was able to take a more general picture of the Manhattan media universe.</p>
<p>&quot;People are much less willing to gamble on ideas,&quot; he said. &quot;Those magazines worked because those were visions that people struggled for. All of that has been rounded down by bureaucrats that come up with things like <em>Men's Vogue</em>.&quot;</p>
<p>And after all, the bureaucrats aren't doing much better. Earlier that day, <a href="/2008/media/confirmed-i-mens-vogue-i-folds-i-vogue-i-will-publish-only-twice-year"><em>Men's Vogue</em> was scaled back from a monthly to a twice-a-year affair</a>. Only so many watches you can sell against fey photo spreads of men in outfits.</p>
<p>The chill even radiated from the gainfully employed.</p>
<p>&quot;I've actually been looking into worst-case-scenario ideas, like being a waiter at Oscar at the Waldorf because I know they're really old there,&quot; said Michael Musto, veteran columnist of <em>The Village Voice</em>. &quot;But I've been told those are union positions, so you can't just break into that! I guess I'll be stuck working in an elevator. I don't have any skills.&quot; But you know what they say about working in an elevator …
<p>Gabriel Snyder, the new managing editor of Gawker (and a former writer of the Off the Record column at this newspaper), may have taken the last available media job in Manhattan. He was telling us a story about how these sort of crashes have happened before. Remember the dot-com crash? It happened to inside.com. And when they were laid off they were talking about the new jobs they were getting--and David Carr and Kurt Andersen were there!</p>
<p>&quot;Everyone was talking about what their passion was,&quot; he said. &quot;'I want to get a job at a fashion company!' Or 'I want to go to cooking school!' A lot of them did get jobs. But a lot of them …&quot;</p>
<p>That's part of the morbid appeal of a party like this—not just to a still-working observer but to everyone, like Graduation Day. Where will we all be five years from now?</p>
<p>Neel Shah, a <em>Radar</em> reporter until a week ago, is one guy we happen to know has not been short on job offers lately. But not even he was sounding very optimistic.</p>
<p>&quot;A friend of mine is an editorial assistant at a magazine,&quot; he said. &quot;He's going to go into grad school in visual arts or photography.&quot;</p>
<p>Is there no hope left in our line of work?</p>
<p>&quot;You probably can go into the PR world,&quot; he said.</p>
<p>Of course the other big news out of Oct. 30 was that at <em>Portfolio</em>, the Condé Nast business glossy, <a href="/2008/media/empty-nast-syndrome-i-portfolio-i-cuts-20-percent-its-staff-reduces-publishing-10x-year">20 percent of the budget was being cut, and much of the Web staff would be laid off</a>. We found Jeff Bercovici, writer of the Mixed Media blog on portfolio.com, who has missed much of the on-the-ground action this week due to a bout of jury duty. He hasn't been fired, but it was unclear whether he was safe.</p>
<p>&quot;If I were breaking in now, I would learn how to shoot and edit video,&quot; he said. He's one of those people with a charming story about falling into his journalism career by accident. A classic tale. That's how all the old greats did it. But it's rare now. There's journalism school. And the inexplicable desirability of this line of work among Ivy Leaguers, which, if you think about it, is a fairly recent development.</p>
<p>&quot;You can't fall on your ass backwards and get into journalism anymore,&quot; he said. The question of the night, though, was whether you can fall on your ass backwards and get out.</p>
<p>Ben Widdicombe, former gossip columnist for the <em>Daily News</em>, and currently an editor at large at <em>Star</em>, is spending less time writing and lots of time on TV. What a medium!</p>
<p>&quot;New York is one of the tough cities,&quot; he said. &quot;The strong survive, and the weak move to Pittsburgh.&quot;</p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/otrmaer_0.jpg?w=300&h=205" />&quot;I basically started <em>Radar </em>because I didn't want to work at any other magazine,&quot; said Maer Roshan, the editor of the recently folded magazine. &quot;And after six years, all of it came down to <em>this</em>.&quot;
<p>Mr. Roshan was surveying his party, the night before Halloween, which had become a kind of Night of the Living Dead for journalism. &quot;PRINT IS DEAD! LONG LIVE RADAR!&quot; read the invitation, which was retooled after a recent development at the magazine. </p>
<p>Six days before his staff had been given a couple of hours to pack everything at their desks into collapsible white boxes and shove out, after <a href="/2008/media/radar-shutting-down-again">the sudden declaration from his sponsors that the magazine was officially kaput</a>, his staffers, many of whom have been fixtures in the young journalism scene in New York for years now, mingled with their media friends at the bar, Citrine, in Chelsea; not yet officially opened, the walk-up spot, which looks a bit like a Hell's Kitchen gay bar, has already held parties for Edgar Bronfman Jr.'s daughter and Heatherette seamstress Richie Rich. </p>
<p>Mr. Roshan's was a glossy magazine, so there were loads of stylists and photographers around, too, and Shannen Doherty, the magazine's last cover star, who added a weird gallowsy punch line to the invite list.</p>
<p>&quot;When I started <em>Radar</em>, I kept thinking about Jann Wenner, Hugh Heffner and Gloria Steinem and a time when you could actually say, 'I want to start a magazine!' And do it,&quot; he said. &quot;That's what always compelled me. I felt like we could be like that.&quot;</p>
<p>Instead, this. Free drinks at Citrine, unemployed.</p>
<p>Free for a time from the immediate postmortems, Mr. Roshan was able to take a more general picture of the Manhattan media universe.</p>
<p>&quot;People are much less willing to gamble on ideas,&quot; he said. &quot;Those magazines worked because those were visions that people struggled for. All of that has been rounded down by bureaucrats that come up with things like <em>Men's Vogue</em>.&quot;</p>
<p>And after all, the bureaucrats aren't doing much better. Earlier that day, <a href="/2008/media/confirmed-i-mens-vogue-i-folds-i-vogue-i-will-publish-only-twice-year"><em>Men's Vogue</em> was scaled back from a monthly to a twice-a-year affair</a>. Only so many watches you can sell against fey photo spreads of men in outfits.</p>
<p>The chill even radiated from the gainfully employed.</p>
<p>&quot;I've actually been looking into worst-case-scenario ideas, like being a waiter at Oscar at the Waldorf because I know they're really old there,&quot; said Michael Musto, veteran columnist of <em>The Village Voice</em>. &quot;But I've been told those are union positions, so you can't just break into that! I guess I'll be stuck working in an elevator. I don't have any skills.&quot; But you know what they say about working in an elevator …
<p>Gabriel Snyder, the new managing editor of Gawker (and a former writer of the Off the Record column at this newspaper), may have taken the last available media job in Manhattan. He was telling us a story about how these sort of crashes have happened before. Remember the dot-com crash? It happened to inside.com. And when they were laid off they were talking about the new jobs they were getting--and David Carr and Kurt Andersen were there!</p>
<p>&quot;Everyone was talking about what their passion was,&quot; he said. &quot;'I want to get a job at a fashion company!' Or 'I want to go to cooking school!' A lot of them did get jobs. But a lot of them …&quot;</p>
<p>That's part of the morbid appeal of a party like this—not just to a still-working observer but to everyone, like Graduation Day. Where will we all be five years from now?</p>
<p>Neel Shah, a <em>Radar</em> reporter until a week ago, is one guy we happen to know has not been short on job offers lately. But not even he was sounding very optimistic.</p>
<p>&quot;A friend of mine is an editorial assistant at a magazine,&quot; he said. &quot;He's going to go into grad school in visual arts or photography.&quot;</p>
<p>Is there no hope left in our line of work?</p>
<p>&quot;You probably can go into the PR world,&quot; he said.</p>
<p>Of course the other big news out of Oct. 30 was that at <em>Portfolio</em>, the Condé Nast business glossy, <a href="/2008/media/empty-nast-syndrome-i-portfolio-i-cuts-20-percent-its-staff-reduces-publishing-10x-year">20 percent of the budget was being cut, and much of the Web staff would be laid off</a>. We found Jeff Bercovici, writer of the Mixed Media blog on portfolio.com, who has missed much of the on-the-ground action this week due to a bout of jury duty. He hasn't been fired, but it was unclear whether he was safe.</p>
<p>&quot;If I were breaking in now, I would learn how to shoot and edit video,&quot; he said. He's one of those people with a charming story about falling into his journalism career by accident. A classic tale. That's how all the old greats did it. But it's rare now. There's journalism school. And the inexplicable desirability of this line of work among Ivy Leaguers, which, if you think about it, is a fairly recent development.</p>
<p>&quot;You can't fall on your ass backwards and get into journalism anymore,&quot; he said. The question of the night, though, was whether you can fall on your ass backwards and get out.</p>
<p>Ben Widdicombe, former gossip columnist for the <em>Daily News</em>, and currently an editor at large at <em>Star</em>, is spending less time writing and lots of time on TV. What a medium!</p>
<p>&quot;New York is one of the tough cities,&quot; he said. &quot;The strong survive, and the weak move to Pittsburgh.&quot;</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Lineup for October 29, 2008</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2008/10/lineup-for-october-29-2008/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 29 Oct 2008 11:43:56 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2008/10/lineup-for-october-29-2008/</link>
			<dc:creator>Matt Haber</dc:creator>
				
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.observer.com/2008/10/lineup-for-october-29-2008/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/nytv_11_0.jpg?w=200&h=300" />Felix Gillette <a href="/2008/media/original-cable-guy-phil-griffin-tastes-network-revenge">talks</a> to MSNBC president Phil Griffin, who says, &quot;A lot of people like to make fun of cable... They think it’s something for people who don’t get news. No. It’s for people who really <em>understand</em> news, want depth and want it from people they connect to.&quot;</p>
<p>John Koblin <a href="/2008/media/special-investment-fund-increase-business-coverage-i-times-i">gets the details</a> of Bill Keller's budget talks with <em>New York Times</em> staffers, including news about a special &quot;investment fund&quot; to help pay for Web site growth. Mr. Keller tells <em>The Observer</em>, &quot;The money has gone to hire a small number of editors, reporters and producers. Most of the vertical expansions are already launched, and some of their work has appeared in the printed page as well.&quot; Plus: <a href="/2008/media/notes-black-friday-maer-s-pot-gold-david-blum-s-demise-foretold">Notes on Black Friday: Maer's Pot of Gold, David Blum's Demise Foretold</a></p>
<p>Leon Neyfakh <a href="/2008/media/everything-s-pietschy-lean-and-mean-little-brown">checks in</a> with Markus Dohle newish C.E.O. Bertelsmann. &quot;Mr. Dohle’s presence has indeed been keenly felt,&quot; writes Mr. Neyfakh. &quot;Just yesterday, it was announced that Random House’s Doubleday division is eliminating 16 employees, including several prominent editors.&quot;</p>
<p>Plus: <a href="/2008/o2/paltrow-com">Gwyneth Paltrow, Web Mogul</a>...<a href="/2008/o2/new-f-o-b-s">Obama's Media Friends</a>... <a href="/2008/o2/bicycle-boy-pedals-pot-while-cops-shrug">Bicycling Dealer</a>.</p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/nytv_11_0.jpg?w=200&h=300" />Felix Gillette <a href="/2008/media/original-cable-guy-phil-griffin-tastes-network-revenge">talks</a> to MSNBC president Phil Griffin, who says, &quot;A lot of people like to make fun of cable... They think it’s something for people who don’t get news. No. It’s for people who really <em>understand</em> news, want depth and want it from people they connect to.&quot;</p>
<p>John Koblin <a href="/2008/media/special-investment-fund-increase-business-coverage-i-times-i">gets the details</a> of Bill Keller's budget talks with <em>New York Times</em> staffers, including news about a special &quot;investment fund&quot; to help pay for Web site growth. Mr. Keller tells <em>The Observer</em>, &quot;The money has gone to hire a small number of editors, reporters and producers. Most of the vertical expansions are already launched, and some of their work has appeared in the printed page as well.&quot; Plus: <a href="/2008/media/notes-black-friday-maer-s-pot-gold-david-blum-s-demise-foretold">Notes on Black Friday: Maer's Pot of Gold, David Blum's Demise Foretold</a></p>
<p>Leon Neyfakh <a href="/2008/media/everything-s-pietschy-lean-and-mean-little-brown">checks in</a> with Markus Dohle newish C.E.O. Bertelsmann. &quot;Mr. Dohle’s presence has indeed been keenly felt,&quot; writes Mr. Neyfakh. &quot;Just yesterday, it was announced that Random House’s Doubleday division is eliminating 16 employees, including several prominent editors.&quot;</p>
<p>Plus: <a href="/2008/o2/paltrow-com">Gwyneth Paltrow, Web Mogul</a>...<a href="/2008/o2/new-f-o-b-s">Obama's Media Friends</a>... <a href="/2008/o2/bicycle-boy-pedals-pot-while-cops-shrug">Bicycling Dealer</a>.</p>
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