disappointment.gif

RE: “A Note to Our Readers On A Day Without a Woman (Or, Why There Are No Men in This Issue)” [Letters, March 8], Senior Editor Megan Burbank’s introduction to our March 8 issue, which contained stories, art, and photographs exclusively by women and nonbinary contributors.

I moved to Portland in 2004—back when Division Street was still a ghost town and “FoPo” didn’t exist. I’ve had a love-hate relationship with your paper since day one. As an “alternative weekly,” your paper has been a sincere disappointment. I find the vapid hipsterdom posturing of most of the writers you publish vain and boring. (The one exception: “One Day at a Time,” as celebrity fuck-ups are always fascinating to mere mortals like me. Ann Romano is funny as hell!)

This week’s issue is the first in the 12 years I was compelled to read cover-to-cover. I am thankful that nonbinary and women writers are getting ALL the bylines. There has always been too much bro-energy in your rag—a shame in a town renowned for being a “hotbed” of feminist activism. That being said, this week’s issue rocked.

I am thankful that you finally realize that stories by men are boring, and that women and nonbinary writers deserve to have their voices amplified. I challenge you to keep the high-level of journalism going. The City of Roses is listening. Challenge us. We are listening!

Julia Laxer

With honor and distinction, Erik Henriksen served as the executive editor of the Portland Mercury from 2004 to 2020. He can now be found at henriksenactual.com.