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H.Q.s was a cut-and-paste-style zine that featured manifestos and dialogue about identifying as queer within the realms of the punk community. [6] Other zines that instigated this movement are Chainsaw (punk zine), Outpunk, and Homocore. The queercore zines influenced the Riot Grrrl zines of the late 1980s and 1990s, as well.
Damage covered the punk scene in Northern and Southern California, as well as international developments. [2] OP magazine called it "one of the best new wave publications". [ 3 ] Reporting on the local scene in the San Francisco Examiner , Bill Mandel said that Damage was "the punk Bible" [for the Bay Area, presumably]. [ 4 ]
Punk visual art is artwork associated with the punk subculture and the no wave movement. It is prevalent in punk rock album covers, flyers for punk concerts and punk zines, but has also been prolific in other mediums, such as the visual arts, the performing arts, literature and cinema. [1]
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Chainsaw fanzine no.2, September/October 1977 Chainsaw fanzine no.10, August 1980. Chainsaw, a punk zine edited by "Charlie Chainsaw" was published in suburban Croydon in 1977 and ran to fourteen issues before ceasing publication in 1984. A hand-lettered 'n' became a stylised trademark in articles after the 'n' key broke on the editor's typewriter.
Tony Arena (born circa 1965), also known by his pen name Anonymous Boy, is an openly queer artist, writer, and filmmaker. He is known for his comics, his involvement in the queercore movement, and other contributions to queer punk zines, [1] his column in Maximum Rocknroll magazine, his public-access television program The Wild Record Collection, and animation such as his film Green Pubes.
J.D.s zines as a part of the wider queercore movement was an offspring of the musical punk rock scene and reflected anti-corporate ideologies, visuals, and textual choices. [16] Fanzines such as the Homocore series took influence from the punk and GLBTQ subcultures and credited the wider queercore movement with inspiring them to begin publishing.
An interview series hosted by Isaac Mizrahi, a workplace improv comedy created by Ron Howard and a true-crime deep dive into a notorious murder case from L.A.’s early 1980s punk rock scene with ...