Ten years later, I still recall huddling in the office lunchroom, gingerly slicing open the first box of Avenue Edmonton magazines. I repeatedly strolled through reception earlier that day, looking for any sign of the magazines’ arrival. With a second-floor walk-up office, I eventually heard the courier clunking the boxes up the stairs on the trolley, but that didn’t stop me from pacing in anticipation. It’s not like I didn’t know what the magazine would be like, I had romanced its pages for months. I was taken.
Since stepping aside as founding editor, I have religiously read every issue of Avenue. For years, you will have found me fawning over pages, Americano in hand, at Credo on 104th street downtown early on a weekday morning or Sunterra Market in Lendrum on the weekend. During my tenure, I would rarely read the magazine cover-to-cover after it was printed. We were swept up in the intense pace of back-to-back issues, launching. I would only review final proofs to make sure changes would be applied to the following issue. I cherish the stolen moments, marveling in all the magazine has become.
I covet every issue of the magazine – you’ll find a stack on my home office bookshelf that spans from the first one we launched in 2006 to the latest one from this past summer.
Nothing pleases me more than hearing people in our city mention the magazine and its impact. Whether they are avid readers, or were once profiled within its pages, inevitably their shoulders push back, their chests expand and they proudly speak of their experiences.
We spent the first few years of Avenue, particularly the first few issues, describing the magazine, its potential role within the city and what impact it could have on our transitioning city. It wasn’t till several months after the magazine was launched and people started seeing it around town that the description of “glossy magazine that could capture Edmonton’s evolution” did not preface my every conversation. Then it started. “You’re with that magazine, aren’t you?” followed by “you know who you should write about …”