Debuting a brand new journal in an age the place print media is collapsing, particularly amongst Latinos, appears just a little like stretching out on a garden chair on the deck of the Titanic because it’s taking place.
So think about my shock once I noticed one newly sprung to life final month whereas grabbing breakfast at a Mexican restaurant in Pacoima.
However let’s begin originally.
The previous was a shiny free month-to-month that centered on dishy leisure tales; the bare-bones latter was the Latino model of the PennySaver. The publications had been rivals the best way George Clooney and Brad Pitt are, every blissful to remain of their lanes and seem alongside one another seemingly all over the place. Working-class Latinos grabbed them in tandem from racks at laundromats, grocery shops and strip malls.
The 2 began within the Nineteen Eighties, mastered the wave of Spanish-language print media in the USA throughout the Nineties, weathered the digital media shift within the 2000s and had been nonetheless going sturdy as lately as final yr. However El Aviso hasn’t revealed since November; in January, its father or mother firm declared Chapter 7 chapter.
When El Aviso sputtered out, El Clasificado’s husband-and-wife homeowners, Martha de la Torre and Joe Badame, sensed a chance.
Enter VíveLA, a free, shiny Spanish-language month-to-month that actually interprets as “Live L.A.” in Spanish but additionally affords an alternate that means: “Live It.” It’s the journal I first eyeballed on the Mexican restaurant. I grinned on the audacity of De la Torre and Badame.
“We’re going to stay with print as long as the demand is there,” the chipper De la Torre advised me as we walked across the workplace. At its top, El Clasificado’s circulation was 500,000, making it the biggest free Spanish-language weekly in the USA; it now stands at 265,000. Its father or mother firm, which publishes different titles and helps Latino small-business homeowners create web sites and social media campaigns, introduced in $17 million in income final yr, about 25% lower than their finest yr in 2016.
“Within the ‘90s, there was a lot of foot traffic everywhere that picked up El Clasificado,” said Badame, who’s extra subdued than his spouse however simply as constructive in countenance. Behind him was VíveLa managing editor Pablo Scarpellini. “We just don’t have it anymore.”
“But we still have some,” De la Torre added.
El Clasificado’s workplace in Norwalk. The father or mother firm of the longtime Spanish-language month-to-month launched a brand new life-style journal, VíveLA, this yr.
(Christina Home / Los Angeles Occasions)
We settled right into a convention room so the three might speak about their imaginative and prescient for VíveLA and reply the obvious query:
Why?
“This was not in our plans,” admitted De la Torre, 68. “I always wanted to do one more thing, but we said it was too late in our lives. But then when [El Aviso] went bankrupt —“
“Why not?” the 66-year-old Badame interjected. He then smiled. “I love keeping busy.”
“It’s not romantic or crazy,” De la Torre replied. “It makes sense.”
“We’re not a high-end publication, but whatever we do, we wanted to do it with respect to our readers,” stated the well mannered however passionate Scarpellini, 50.
“We’re not doing this to become mega millionaires,” Badame stated. “And I want to say out loud: That we’re the only type of this magazine left in the city sounds amazing, but it’s sad.”
Jose Luis Benavides, a Cal State Northridge journalism professor who focuses on Spanish-language media, stated the launch of VíveLA “is a sign of hope” for Latino-themed journalism within the Southland.
“These guys know where they need to be,” he stated. “There’s an incredible need. It’s not a bad idea, and it has a possibility of success.”
Benavides added that if any media group might pull off a brand new Spanish-language journal in L.A., it was El Clasificado given its model.
It’s a modest effort at simply 44 pages. However in an period the place most print publications are already forecasting the yr the place they’ll go browsing solely, VíveLA’s delivery is nothing lower than a miracle.
Inside El Clasificado’s workplace in Norwalk.
(Christina Home / Los Angeles Occasions)
“I don’t just want farándula [showbiz] articles,” De la Torre stated. “Not just generic articles. Let’s tell deeper stories about L.A. Who’s telling the stories of Latino high school athletes from Garfield High [East Los Angeles]? No one.”
VíveLA is beginning beginning small, with a circulation of 40,000 distributed via the San Fernando Valley and Southeast L.A. County and the hope to broaden into Santa Ana. However it’s already a monetary success for its founders — they’ve offered sufficient advertisements to make the journal worthwhile for 2025.
“I think it has legs for the next two years,” stated Badame. “After that, we’ll see.”
Scarpellini desires to do neighborhood occasions to introduce VíveLA to readers. Already, staffers have performed meet-and-greets on the Paramount Swap Meet.
“We don’t know how long we’ll last,” Scarpellini added, “but as long as we’re around, we’ll do it with integrity.”
De la Torre checked out each of them, then me.
“If it doesn’t make sense, it’ll break my heart,” she replied with a contact of disappointment. Then got here the sensibility.
“And we’ll cut it.”