Difference between revisions of "Mike Gunderloy"

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'''Mike Gunderloy''' founded [[Factsheet 5]] in 1982. Today on his personal website, he calls it "the stupidest time-saving idea I ever had," somewhat in jest. Under Gunderloy's control, it grew from a two-page photocopied sheet to a good-sized zine packed full of reviews each issue. At first it reviewed everything under the sun, but soon became focused on zines and the small press. With this transformation and developement, Facsheet 5 became the first major [[zine review]] [[zine]].
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'''Mike Gunderloy''' founded [[Factsheet 5]] in 1982. Today on his personal website, he calls it "the stupidest time-saving idea I ever had," somewhat in jest. Under Gunderloy's control, it grew from a two-page photocopied sheet to a good-sized zine packed full of reviews each issue. At first it reviewed everything under the sun, but soon became focused on zines and the small press. With this transformation and development, Facsheet 5 became the first major [[zine review]] [[zine]].
  
 
[[Cari Goldberg Janice]] joined F5 in the late '80s and became co-editor, Gunderloy and Goldberg Janice co-authored "The World of Zine" for Penguin Books in 1991. The books compiled some of their favorite zines from the pages of F5. Soon after the book was published and the zine scene was exploding, Gunderloy had a nervous breakdown just as the spotlight was on him. He quit Factsheet 5, stopped talking about the small press, and became a computer programmer. After Gunderloy quit, Hudson Luce produced one issue, then R. Seth Friedman continued the magazine (with contributing editor Chris Becker) until it ceased publication in the late 1998.
 
[[Cari Goldberg Janice]] joined F5 in the late '80s and became co-editor, Gunderloy and Goldberg Janice co-authored "The World of Zine" for Penguin Books in 1991. The books compiled some of their favorite zines from the pages of F5. Soon after the book was published and the zine scene was exploding, Gunderloy had a nervous breakdown just as the spotlight was on him. He quit Factsheet 5, stopped talking about the small press, and became a computer programmer. After Gunderloy quit, Hudson Luce produced one issue, then R. Seth Friedman continued the magazine (with contributing editor Chris Becker) until it ceased publication in the late 1998.

Revision as of 20:06, 8 August 2006

Mike Gunderloy founded Factsheet 5 in 1982. Today on his personal website, he calls it "the stupidest time-saving idea I ever had," somewhat in jest. Under Gunderloy's control, it grew from a two-page photocopied sheet to a good-sized zine packed full of reviews each issue. At first it reviewed everything under the sun, but soon became focused on zines and the small press. With this transformation and development, Facsheet 5 became the first major zine review zine.

Cari Goldberg Janice joined F5 in the late '80s and became co-editor, Gunderloy and Goldberg Janice co-authored "The World of Zine" for Penguin Books in 1991. The books compiled some of their favorite zines from the pages of F5. Soon after the book was published and the zine scene was exploding, Gunderloy had a nervous breakdown just as the spotlight was on him. He quit Factsheet 5, stopped talking about the small press, and became a computer programmer. After Gunderloy quit, Hudson Luce produced one issue, then R. Seth Friedman continued the magazine (with contributing editor Chris Becker) until it ceased publication in the late 1998.

Other Publications

"Why Publish?" - a 54 page zine about self-publishing, published in 1989
Various computer manuals


External Links