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American music magazine From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Wonka Vision was an American music magazine.
Editor-in-Chief | Justin Luczejko |
---|---|
Managing Editor | Jason Schreurs |
Senior Editors | Jason Garder Bill Gordon Julia Kaganskiy Lansie Sylvia Ellen Thompson |
Music Editors | Katie Ellsweig Jeff Meyers |
Art Directors | Bruno Guerreiro Chris Holub Jon Loudon Rachel Wescott |
Staff writers |
Jocelyn Aucoin Matt Conner Kevin Diers Jason Garder Emma Hernandez Jeff Ott Milkman JerseyJef |
Photographer |
Joelle Andres Dustin Festenmacher Colin Frangicetto Beowulf Sheehan Gene Smirnov Kelly Turso Jon Weiner Nick Wilson Illustrators
Colin Frangicetto Joseph Game Julie Laquer Rachel Wescott |
Categories | Music |
Circulation | bimonthly |
Publisher | Justin Luczejko |
Founder | Justin Luczejko |
First issue | 1998 |
Final issue | 2010 |
Country | United States |
Based in | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
Language | English |
Website | wonkavisionmagazine |
OCLC | 61680028 |
While Justin Luczejko was attending high school, he started Wonka Vision with two friends, Elysa Stein and Andrew Wertz in 1998; a twenty-page zine that they copied at an OfficeMax store.[1][2] Philadelphia City Paper describes Wonka Vision as an "ambitious music and pop culture zine started as a creative outlet for a kid stranded in suburbia."[3] The name comes from the 1971 film, Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory. In 2001 Wonka Vision also became a record label. Adrian Finiak contributed to several issues highlighting Glamour Kills clothing company and Neon Blonde (featuring members of The Blood Brothers). [1] Wonka Vision ceased publication in 2010.
Wonka Vision contains interviews, reviews, poetry, indie-punk and zine reviews, and "pointed leftist rants and bits of kitschy minutiae." The cover is printed in full color.[3] Guitarist Colin Frangicetto did photography for the magazine. In a 2008 interview with South Philly Review, Luczejko explains that Wonka Vision "do[es] art, politics, anything that's sort of underground, on that edge [...] it's not just rock, we do hip-hop-always have-I grew up listening to rap, indie rock, hardcore, we've done what we love."[2] The bimonthly magazine featured interviews, album reviews, and pop culture articles.[2][1]
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