City Life (magazine)
Categories | Entertainment magazine |
---|---|
Frequency | Weekly |
Year founded | December 1983 |
Final issue | December 2005 |
Company | Trinity Mirror |
Country | United Kingdom |
Based in | Manchester |
Website | www |
City Life was a Manchester-based news, arts and listings magazine that was published between December 1983 and December 2005. It was a distinctive blend of radical politics and coverage of the increasingly exciting Manchester youth culture scene of the early 1980s, coinciding with the rise of Factory Records and The Haçienda.
The magazine was started by a small group of former Manchester University students, Ed Glinert, Chris Paul and Andy Spinoza, on a shoestring budget in a run-down building in Portland Street in the city centre.
Glinert ran spiky and revelatory news stories about city politics and the great and good. Spinoza edited the arts and features and contributed a wide range of interviews and criticism. Paul was production editor and edited the sports section.
When launched in 1983, the magazine was in a strong tradition of 'alternative' Manchester publications which included (in reverse chronology), City Fun, Manchester Flash, New Manchester Review and Mole Express, all of whose approach was to publish political and cultural content not reflected in the mainstream media of the city.
Despite City Life's shoestring beginnings, it developed rapidly in professionalism and grew in prominence and influence in Manchester and beyond. Its life can be divided into two distinct periods, the first being the period 1983-89 when it was run as a workers' co-operative which grew from the initial founding trio to 16 staff at its peak.
There is a consensus that this 'independent' period was when the title had a rawer and radical edge than under its later ownership. Its political stories caused consternation and complaints - there were numerous spats with councils, quangos and occasionally blank spaces where legal injunctions had caused stories to be pulled just prior to printing.
Similarly, its arts writing can be seen as a vibrant record of a ground-level cultural renaissance taking place with the opening of new facilities as the Hacienda (1982), the Green Room performance venue (1984) and the Cornerhouse visual arts centre (1985); this upsurge was typified by the imaginative re-using of old and vacant city centre buildings for arts and leisure, and can be seen as a key building block of what was later hailed as the physical regeneration of Manchester city centre through widespread commercial investment and property development.
In 1989, it was bought by the Guardian Media Group (GMG), publishers of The Guardian and The Manchester Evening News. GMG changed the style of the magazine, focusing more on listings and interviews, and branching out into publishing guide books and sponsoring events such as the City Life Food and Drink Festival and the City Life Comedian of the Year competition.
City Life formed a loose association in 1984/5 with some other regional listings magazines including Due South Magazine (Southampton), Venue (Bristol), Coaster (Bournemouth), and The List (Glasgow and Edinburgh). Of these only Venue and The List survive, having been continually published since 1982 and 1985 respectively.
In November 2005 it was announced that City Life was to close a solus publication, with the edition published on 7 December being the final one.
City Life now lives on as a 20-page supplement every Friday within the Manchester Evening News and continues to be the most read Whats On guide on the North of England (333k readers. Source: JICREG April 2014). Its website http://www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/whats-on/ regularly generates over a million page views every month from more than 250k unique users (Source: Omniture September 2014)
CityLife's sister title 'CityLife Extra' is a Free solus publication delivered every Thursday to 16k City Centre apartments and a further 6k copies handed out with the Manchester Evening News. Over half of its 64 pages are devoted to "Urban Life", advertising property for sale in the city.
Notable people associated with City Life
Writers:
- Andy Spinoza
- Ed Glinert
- Chris Paul
- Bob Dickinson
- Dick Witts
- Kevin Cummins
- Mark Kermode
- John Robb
- Daniel Brocklehurst
- Louise Rhodes
- Jon Ronson
- Sam Gemmill
- Henry Normal
- Melvin Burgess
- Mike Hill[disambiguation needed]
- Luke Bainbridge
- Chris Sharratt
- Mike Barnett[disambiguation needed]
- Mick Peek
- Central Station Design - Matt and Pat Carroll and Karen Jackson
- Ian Tilton
- Elaine Mitchell
- Nathan Cox Photographer
External links
- Article on City Life's closure at Guardian Unlimited (requires registration)
- City Life (Manchester) Website
- Manchester Evening News Website
- Use dmy dates from June 2015
- All articles with links needing disambiguation
- Articles with links needing disambiguation from February 2013
- Articles with links needing disambiguation from January 2012
- 1983 establishments in the United Kingdom
- 2005 disestablishments in the United Kingdom
- British political magazines
- Defunct magazines of the United Kingdom
- Defunct political magazines
- Cultural magazines
- Listings magazines
- Magazines established in 1983
- Magazines disestablished in 2005
- Media in Manchester