Silas Loom
Hated by both sides
we are desperately missing a London listings paper like Time Out
It’s never going to happen, though. There just isn’t a revenue model. If there was, Time Out would still exist in a viable form.
we are desperately missing a London listings paper like Time Out
City Limits was better.It’s never going to happen, though. There just isn’t a revenue model. If there was, Time Out would still exist in a viable form.
I do miss that - didn't mind paying for it - bought it on a Tuesday , could plan out stuff to do for the week , now you just have to hear about stuff somehow . And the TimeOut website is shite.we are desperately missing a London listings paper like Time Out
yeah...I dont hear about anything ever tbh... My own social media is a non-posting twitter account full of palestine atrocities....Songkick is effective but I go to about 1 live gig a year.I do miss that - didn't mind paying for it - bought it on a Tuesday , could plan out stuff to do for the week , now you just have to hear about stuff somehow . And the TimeOut website is shite.
I want a listings site which does all that TimeOut used to do - so Cinema listings, gigs, museums, galleries, restaurants,bars, clubs, other stuff I can't remember - I may not use all of those things a lot or at all, but I liked the way TimeOut used to do it.There is this listings site for London - All London's Live Music | Halibuts - but layout is poor.
The problem is that it is too easy to do listings on the internet, so lots of people do and then it becomes fragmented and split off into niches which goes against the whole benefit of a central listing like Time Out.Yeah listing magazines were great. In Manchester there was City Life. One place where you could find out about the vast majority of what was going on, from music to art to politics. Somehow the internet has completely failed to replace this in a useful way, when it feels like something that should be dead straightforward.
I don't quite get this. It's easy to do all sorts of things on the internet, but that hasn't stopped big platforms emerging that specialise in particular functions (often becoming pretty much total monopolies).The problem is that it is too easy to do listings on the internet, so lots of people do and then it becomes fragmented and split off into niches which goes against the whole benefit of a central listing like Time Out.
Separately, it also feels like there is just less culture going on in London full stop compared to a earlier in the millennium and what there is costs a fortune, so you kind of need to know you'll like it already. The idea of giving something a go on a whim just doesn't work when you've spent £30 on a ticket and £7 a pint.
It was always ironic that a rag distributed via the tube… was always slagging off the tube and its workers. Constant negativity.
Last ever print issue and thats how you decide to sign off? Good riddance!
It's a propaganda sheet and readers know it. Correction, Knew it hahaIt was always ironic that a rag distributed via the tube… was always slagging off the tube and its workers. Constant negativity.
Unsurprising to me that its final gasp was final dig at the tube.
Looks like there'll be a Glasgow one tooManchester Mill (brilliant online newsletter) is about to launch its London version I think. There are some hopeful signs of life in journalism amongst the dross.
You're very generousI think I give it less than a year...
Weekly London Standard launches with AI Keir Starmer front page
The first edition of the weekly London Standard features an AI-generated picture of Prime Minister Keir Starmer on its front page.pressgazette.co.uk
And thats not all that is 'artificially generated'... just... why?!!
Brian Sewell's estate 'delighted' with one-off AI resurrection of Standard column
The Standard says its first weekly edition will have an AI-written review in the style of its old art critic Brian Sewell, who died in 2015.pressgazette.co.uk
I was referring to why you'd resurrect Sewell in an artificial form... it hasnt 'worked on me' because I won't be picking up a copy!Why? Attention. Worked on you.