Where The Girls Are: Making Zines
Heidi Olmack presents four of the finest ladies in the world of zines. To hell with all diet tips they suggest snowboarding, masturbation, or car mechanics instead. Published May 1, 1997.
Zines Go Mainstream
Get this: Book publishers are finally catching on to zines. Yes,it's true, zine creators from Lisa "Suckdog" Carver to Al "Girl Reporter" Hoff are being honored with book contracts, copy editors, and zine
purists cover your ears money. Get the reviews, interviews, and
predictions right here. Published April 24, 1997.
How To Build Your Own E-Zine
Sure, building an e-zine would be cool, but there's a little know-how required. Learn about the nuts and bolts, so that you can build the zine of your dreams. It's faster and easier than you think. Published April 17, 1997.
Web Rants Done Right and Gone Wrong!
Ranting and raving are a newly acclaimed form of, well, media. Randy Williams lets us know who's NOT cutting the mustard and which writers are the rant maestros of the 'Net. Published April 1421, 1997.
What Puts the Zine in E-Zine?
Zine purists are in a quandary: What is an E-Zine, exactly? A personal homepage? An online version of a zine? Or what? Josh Glenn, our authority on zinedom, gives his two cents. Published April 9, 1997.
BUST Breaks Loose
If trashy "Women's magazines" never really did much for you, maybe BUST will. Marni Davis interviews the women behind the magazine... and examines the revolution they've started. Published December 13, 1996.
Interview: Barbara Findlen
The Executive Editor of Ms. magazine speaks with Tripod about why you should use the "F" word, and why Good Girls and Bad Girls both end up going nowhere. Published November 15, 1996.
Temp Slave! Tells It Like It Is
Temp Slave! is a zine that pulls no punches in discussing what it's like to be a temp in an increasingly miserable working culture. Jenny Boe reviews it. Published October 25, 1996.
Ariel Gore is a Hip Mama
Hip Mama is a zine for the kind of families that most of us belong to: anything but "normal" or "traditional." Published August 9, 1996.