Farewell to Fab magazine
NEWS / Pink Triangle Press restructures to create a web-first company
Andrea Houston / National / Wednesday, March 13, 2013
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The first thing Phil Villeneuve did when he arrived in Ottawa from Honey Harbour, Ontario, as a still-closeted 18-year-old, was drive to a gay bar and grab a copy of Fab magazine. 
 
He remembers flipping through the pages under the light in the rearview mirror in his car and gazing at the sexy pictures of hot boys and outrageous drag queens partying in Toronto nightclubs.
 
“I was alone in the dark just browsing through it,” he says. “It was so dirty to me then, for someone who wasn’t out. I went home and hid it under my bed. And I kept hiding them under my bed.
 
Fab gave me the courage to go to a porn store and buy a real porn magazine, so I started putting that under my bed.”
 
For Villeneuve, it was his first window into a new and exciting world, and it helped him come out. When he eventually moved to Toronto, he says, he applied to be a Fab intern under former editor Mitchel Raphael.
 
It wasn't long before Villeneuve was added to the masthead as the music columnist. Then, last year, he took the reins as editor. “It has been a glorious journey,” he says.
"Xtra's little sloppy and drunk party-girl sister" will live on in other channels at Pink Triangle Press.
 
Sadly, on March 12, Fab publisher Pink Triangle Press (PTP) announced the magazine is folding, just one year shy of its 20th birthday.
 
Villeneuve will stay on at Xtra – and he will continue to contribute content similar to Fab’s fun and sexy style.
 
Publisher Brandon Matheson says the painful decision was purely financial and is part of a larger restructuring plan for PTP.
 
Unfortunately, 10 talented people were lost in the process. Sixty-four full-time staff will remain at PTP. The press has also announced the pending sale of HARDtv and recently sold its shares in OUTtv.
 
“We are not immune from the changing and challenging media landscape,” Matheson says. “Advertising revenue has been dropping in recent years for all media, including us.
 
“It’s important to stress for readers that some of the content that they’re used to seeing in Fab is not necessarily going to disappear. It’s going to show up in other channels.”
 
Later this year, PTP will launch a new website called Daily Xtra (dailyxtra.com), which will replace xtra.ca, and expand its breadth of content.
Fab editor Phil Villeneuve will remain at Xtra and continue to contribute content similar to Fab's fun and sexy style.
(Andrea Houston)
 
“The press has been around for more than 40 years. One of the reasons we have existed so long and we are as successful as we are, even in hard times, is that over our history we have had to make some really difficult decisions to pave the way for a more solid foundation in the future,” Matheson says.
 
He remembers another time the press had to make a difficult decision: the closing of The Body Politic, in 1987, to let Xtra emerge. “This is really the same thing. We’re at that time again.”
 
Since Villeneuve took over as editor one year ago, the glossy magazine has undergone a stunning redesign and has grown to better reflect the playful and cheeky side of Toronto’s gay scene.
 
Love poured in from readers on social media following the sad announcement on March 12. Villeneuve had tears in his eyes. “I just want to hug everyone. People on Facebook and Twitter have been saying how much they’ll miss it and how important Fab was to them, and like me, it was their entry to all things gay. For so many guys, when they leave home, the first place they go is the Village and get a copy of Fab.”
 
Fab has three issues remaining, and Villeneuve says the final edition will be an homage to what he calls “Xtra’s little sloppy and drunk party-girl sister who just wants to talk about underwear and shoes.
 
“It’s such a different voice from Xtra, and we need that voice,” he says. “Fab is about the silly, fun things that we all really need sometimes.”
 
Fab was first launched in 1994 to compete with Xtra, says PTP executive director Ken Popert. PTP purchased it in 2008.
 
“Over the years there were dozens of magazines launched to compete with Xtra, but Fab was the only one that marched to its own drum and danced to its own tune,” Popert says. “It didn’t define itself as ‘not Xtra.’ That was a mistake the others had made.
 
“I think it’s had a good run under our management, and we were true to our intention to let it have its own voice, and certainly, the last year it has turned into a remarkable publication. That’s why it hurts like hell to give that up. We have been trying not to do this for about a year.”
 
PTP is certainly not alone. Other Toronto dailies have recently enforced pay walls while announcing sweeping layoffs and plans to outsource key editorial departments.
 
“There are an awful lot of forces conspiring against print right now,” Popert says.
 
At the same time, Matheson says, Xtra and Fab are no longer the only Toronto publications where readers will see advertisements featuring gay and lesbian couples.
 
“Everything has changed,” he says. “We have also seen societal change, which is part of our own success. You can pick up a paper like Metro or Now and see some gay-targeted advertising, when 10 to 15 years ago, you didn’t see that.”
 
Matheson says PTP will continue to change to ensure long-term sustainability. “We are in the process of turning a very big ship around, going from a purely print mentality to a web-first company.”
    


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Reader Comments

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Nice Press Release
'an awful lot of forces conspiring against [us]' Not the least of which is your ineptitude Kenny. 10 people lost their jobs because the PTP leadership is too arrogant to see they've been in over their heads for years now. Xtra will be nothing more than a Squirt sidebar in five years with these clowns at the helm.
HAHAHAHA, Toronto Ontario
03/13/13 12:18 PM EST
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good
The more. gay men the more women for me
bozo mcduck, med hat alberta
03/13/13 1:30 PM EST
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Not a bad thing
Showing the playful and cheeky side of Toronto’s gay scene is passe and boring. The shallow nature of this magazine was annoying at best. PTP may want to appeal to gay men and women who actually think. Xtra presents some interesting issues and has started to move away from the Fab boys in speedos. A nice relief. Bye Bye Fab. Remembering an article a few years ago, "How to dump your Pride Boyfriend" geeesh.
Sam, Toronto Ontario
03/13/13 3:46 PM EST
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The end of pettiness
I agree with Sam's comments. Fab to my husband and I was always something we rolled our eyes thumbing through before tossing it out. We kept hoping there would be some well written items, which only lately there were with Michael Lyons articles which were well written and thoughtful amongst the drivel and party pics. Ryan Hyndes tweets businesses owe Fab? For what? None of the gay shops I go to have ever been mentioned. I guess because they are not filled with the vacuous types that fill the pages of Fab. Xtra has always been a more legit paper and worth the read. Fab was always looking for interns (I imagine unpaid) so that always is a death knell for a business.
Martin, Toronto ON
03/13/13 4:20 PM EST
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Farewell
I will seriously miss Michael Lyon's witty, well written, voracious approach to blogging about the arts and queer cultural scene in Toronto. I hope that boy gets picked up by something big!
Stephen, Toronto Ontario
03/13/13 4:59 PM EST
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business interests
hi martin: consider the context of my tweet. among the businesses that fab has been kind to are the henhouse, buddies in bad times theatre, and glad day books. Max Macdonald's style column also was a regular supporter of new ventures. If you haven't yet, perhaps you should check some of them out! It's possible to have loved and hated fab magazine over the years....I certainly did both, but I will miss it. Along with many others, I'm grateful for the exposure it gave over the years, and was happy for the support.
Ryan G. Hinds, toronto ontario
03/13/13 5:21 PM EST
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the end of magazines
I will miss FAB's sexy cover boys and glossy pictorials, especially the Pride and Halloween issues. What's so annoying about playful and cheeky? Xtra has a tendency to take itself too seriously, often promoting a political agenda that many disagree with and pitting gay men against the rest of the LBT community. Anyway, I still read Xtra, I hope every now and then they'll be able to push fun the way FAB did.
Ryan, Toronto ON
03/13/13 5:25 PM EST
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What I'll Miss Most with Fab Magazine Gone
Two words: Paul Bellini Paul has one of the best columns in any Toronto newspaper or magazine. He is both a strong writer and a good guy. And strangely attractive in a white towel...
Josh Bentley-Swan, Montreal Quebec
03/13/13 5:55 PM EST
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The Gay Vatican
The three years it took PTP to launch Daily Xtra (if it actually shows up this summer) signals sure doom for this sad, sputtering organization's final gamble. In two years the ten employees who lost their jobs will be happy for the head start.
PTP Titanic, Vatican Rome
03/14/13 10:33 AM EST
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64 full time staff
Sixty-four full-time staff will remain at PTP.----- 64! Full time. Doing what in the name of queer -- fanning, fawning over, and sniffing the farts of the Board potentates? Are you a unionized public service department of the government? 64 full time employees. That is worse than ACT! Insanity.
incredulous, Toronto ON
03/14/13 11:37 AM EST
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Gay people need to sgtart reading papers again
I really wish PTP well, and it's gonna be sad for us real readers that actually like to read printed material not to have this great magaizne anymore. Mabey it will get people offline just a little bit enough to realize there's nothing the same as reading an actual newspaper or magazine.
Derek V, Oakville Ontario
03/19/13 9:46 PM EST
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