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Tuesday, February 13, 2001
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Newspaper
series on gay Roanoke leads to cancellations
More than 350 people have canceled their
subscription to The Roanoke [Va.] Times since the paper
published a four-part series, running January 28 to February 4, about gays
and lesbians in the city, Editor and Publisher reports. The
cancellations, a record number for the 100,000-daily-circulation paper,
were also accompanied by angry phone calls, E-mails, and letters to the
editor. “There was a huge shock to Roanoke,” said Times editor Mike
Riley. “No one knew it or fully accepted it that this is a haven for
gays.” The paper had fewer than 50 cancellations in all of 2000. “The
reaction was more than we expected,” said circulation director Debbie
Meade. “We wrote about a topic people would just as soon not discuss.”
Managing editor Rich Martin said the series was prompted in part by a
shooting at a gay bar in the city in September that left one man dead and
six other people wounded. “When the shooting occurred, there was such an
outpouring of sympathy for victims, we realized we wanted to push up the
stories,” Martin said. “It intended to show there are gay people in
Roanoke Valley and their lives are very much like anyone else’s.” The
paper has added a second page to its letters page to accommodate all the
response, most from subscribers angry that the paper discussed
homosexuality on its front page. “We do not need photographs of
homosexuals kissing in our newspaper,” one reader wrote. “I was
mortified.”
Roanoke7
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