Jump to content

NthWORD

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
nthWORD Magazine
nthWORD Magazine Winter 2009
Editor-in-ChiefRyan O'Connor
CategoriesOnline magazine
FrequencyQuarterly
Circulation30,000 (email)
PublisherRobert Frigault
First issueMarch 2009
CompanynthWORD L.L.C.
CountryUSA
Based inBurlington, Vermont
LanguageEnglish
Websitehttp://www.nthword.com/

nthWORD was an American quarterly online magazine for creative people.[1] The magazine published works of fiction, creative non-fiction, poetry and art by established and emerging writers and artists, and mock ads.[2]

In addition, nthWORD conducted interviews with commercial and independent artists and professionals working in a variety of creative disciplines and maintained nthWORD Shorts, a blog with a focus on creativity. nthWORD Shorts included daily and weekly posts on art, culture and entertainment—including filmmaking, literature, design, publishing, photography, and social media, artist interviews and reviews on theatre, books, film and technology.

Notable contributors included award-winning poet Lyn Lifshin, director Antoine Fuqua, humorist Harmon Leon, best-selling author David Henry Sterry, multidisciplinary artist Michael Holman, advertising executive Mat Zucker of Ogilvy & Mather, filmmaker Liz Canner and RT anchor Abby Martin.

Staff

  • Publisher/Co-founder: Robert Frigault
  • Editor-in-Chief/Co-founder: Ryan O'Connor
  • Associate Editor: Jennifer König
  • Associate Editor: Eliza Kane
  • Assistant Editor: Nick Johnson

Interviews

Film

Theatre

  • Actors Matthew Glassman and Carlos Uriona of Double Edge Theatre (Issue 5, February 2010)
  • Virlana Tkacz, Founding Director of Yara Arts Group by Olena Jennings (Issue 6, April 2010)

Writing and publishing

Music

Reviews

Advertising

  • The World’s Greatest Salesperson Contest by Ogilvy & Mather (nthWORD Shorts, March 29, 2010)

Books

Film

Photography

Theatre

  • The Salvation of Anarchy: Review of The Disappearance by Double Edge Theatre (nthWORD Shorts, April 1, 2010)

Festivals

Music

References

  1. ^ "Poets & Writers list of literary magazines". Poets & Writers. October 19, 2009. Archived from the original on May 26, 2011. Retrieved May 3, 2010.
  2. ^ "Zooppa looks at nthWORD the online magazine for creative people, by creative people". Zooppa. January 18, 2010. Archived from the original on July 18, 2011. Retrieved May 3, 2010.