What would happen to your paper if the editor and
publisher left for three weeks? For Duluth,
Minnesota’s tiny AAN member, Ripsaw News, it’s just
a side effect of the rocker lifestyle.
Their founder, editor and publisher, 33-year-old
Brad Nelson,
moonlights as the drummer for the blues/rock/
punk-ish band The Black-Eyed Snakes. From late
September to mid-October, Nelson left his staff
alone so he could tour the East Coast with his band.
It’s not a traditional editor/staff relationship, but
Ripsaw’s history is anything but traditional.
Nelson, who launched the paper in January of 1999
with his former business partner, graphic designer
Cord Carbert, is an unlikely candidate for a
newspaperman: he moved to Duluth from northern
Michigan to cross-country ski professionally in 1993.
After three unsuccessful tryouts for the Olympics, he
quit skiing altogether and launched Ripsaw.
The idea for the paper was born in civic frustration:
Duluth’s city fathers planned to tear down some of
downtown’s historic landmarks to make room for a
Silicon Valley-like office space. Nelson saw the
destruction as a “travesty,” he says. Incensed that the
city’s daily paper, Knight-Ridder’s Duluth News
Tribune, and its non-AAN alt weekly, Reader Weekly,
weren’t covering that story -- and many others --
Nelson decided to launch his own paper. (The city
government prevailed; the building was ultimately
erected.)
“I said to a couple of people, ‘Oh, I should start my
own paper,’” says Nelson, who also felt that the
Reader Weekly wasn’t supporting the local arts and
culture scene as an alt weekly should. “More half-
kidding, but every time I did that someone would
say, ‘Yeah, you should!’”
With no background in journalism, Nelson didn’t
really know how to start a new paper. Nevertheless,
he found an investor and launched as a monthly in
January 1999. The acerbic Ripsaw -- named after a
Duluth paper published in the roaring 20’s by a man
whose goal was “to rip them [politicians] open and
see whether they are sound or rotten” -- quickly
made its mark as pro-Duluth but anti-establishment.
“It was like this power that we had, that all of a
sudden -- instead of ranting in our kitchens or from
our bar stools -- we could actually do something
about it,” Nelson says.
Nelson credits the paper with helping revitalize the
city’s small indie scene and raising its political
awareness. “[Ripsaw] has really helped changed the
political landscape of Duluth,” he says. “It’s
galvanized a community that was here, but didn’t
have a voice, and didn’t have any common
connection or way to communicate.”
Ripsaw began with a two-person staff and a lot of
volunteers, but has since gone weekly and hired a
handful of staffers. Nelson still relies heavily on
freelancers, and, for the time being, his mother
serves as the paper’s bookkeeper. “There’s a
downside because you can’t just hire the best,” he
says. “But there’s a certain level of passion when
people are doing things for intrinsic reasons.”
The passion was evident to members of AAN’s
Admissions Committee, which in 2001 called Ripsaw,
“Witty, eloquent, and full of spark!” The committee
also noted that the paper was “(n)ot without its
faults, but clearly (in terms of bang for limited buck)
this year’s single best applicant. Great sense of news
and, as important, place. The staff is clearly madly in
love with northern Minnesota, and willing to kick and
pummel it to make it better.”
Based on that recommendation, Ripsaw was admitted
to AAN that year on its first try.
Nelson joined the Black-Eyed Snakes as the drummer
in 2000, after playing in a few local bands. The band
is a side project of Alan Sparhawk, guitarist /singer
for Duluth hometown indie heroes Low, who recently
toured with Radiohead. The Snakes’ just-completed
tour marks the third time they’ve traveled the East
Coast; they’ve hit both Europe and the West Coast
once.
Touring doesn’t interfere with the day-to-day
operations of Ripsaw, Nelson says: he calls in every
day and checks his email as much as possible. Since
there’s another editor and ad salesperson in the
office, he can rely on his staff to get the paper out.
They’re supportive of his touring, he says. “There’s
no question that when I leave, it puts a lot of strain
on the other people who work here. But everyone’s
like, ‘Go!’”
In fact, on this most recent tour, it seems the staff
had the routine down pretty well. “My bandmates
commented on it,” he says. “They said, ‘Man,
remember the first tour we went on? Brad was on the
phone the whole time!’ Now days go by when I don’t
even get a call from the office.”
Leaving his staff for weeks at a time to tour might
not be the best thing for the paper, but Nelson’s
willing to take the risk. “I know the best thing to do
would be to stay here and always keep my nose to
the grindstone, “ he says. ”But I’ve made a decision
that I really feel passionate about playing music, and
it’s something in my life that makes it a lot richer for
me.”
Whitney Joiner is a freelance reporter based in
New York City. Her work has appeared in Salon, Teen
People, Time Out New York and Inside.com.