The Onion, popular website, finally closing its doors

It’s true. The Onion is closing down. The venerated website and newspaper founded in 1988 as an advertising sheet, is calling it quits.

Artist's conception of a typical cover of The Onion's internet edition. Shown lower left is the video frame. In recent years, the comedy newspaper has been over-dependent on video to compensate for less-than-sataisfactory writing, according to some media theorists. Image © 2011 by Planet Waves.

“That’s a fact,” said editor Joe Randazzo, who will be taking a job as humor editor of the Christian Science Monitor, his grandfather’s favorite newspaper. “We felt that we were past our glory days. You know, we didn’t want to be recording the same album over and over again, like the Beach Boys.”

Randazzo said he thought of himself more as The Beatles, “Who knew when to get out of the game. They did great things, built a legacy, and let it speak for itself.”

He said that if the Beatles were together today, “Nobody would even care. It’s because they broke up that we love them. So, see ya.”

The paper published its last print edition this week, and will remain on the Internet for one additional week before disappearing into the mists, the company said in a prepared statement. Copies of the last hard-copy edition are likely to become collector’s items and some are already going on e-Bay for $20. One collector said that so few people saved previous editions that they’re likely to become valuable as well. “It’s a novelty thing” said Jessica Hamilton, brand manager for Marvel Comics.

The paper has a checkered past, leading some to criticize its journalistic ethics: it’s driven by the profit motive. Even its official website admits that The Onion was created merely as a way to make money and, except for the coupons for 10-cent wings and $3 pitchers, it sucked from the beginning.

Dan Savage, one of the earliest contributors, reminisces. “Yep it pretty much was a waste of good newsprint except for me,” he said this week. Savage started his “Savage Love” column at the newspaper. “The joke was that a gay guy would be giving advice to straight people,” he said. “I always thought it was funny that straight people writing sex advice columns had so much to say to gay people. I’ve been to grad school. I understand irony.”

Past luminaries from the staff admit that coming up with content was a stretch. Over the years it became more challenging to find writers who knew what capital letters are. The hiring process finally had to include the “comma test,” which challenged applicants to identify punctuation marks correctly.

“Once we got beyond a few dumb jokes to fill up the spaces between Pizza Hut and Blimpie ads, we really had nothing else to say,” said Scott Dikkers, the longest serving editor-in-chief in the newspaper’s history, which is not saying much because only four people have ever held that position, he basically hogged it, and the managing editor does all the work anyway.

“But at least I learned how to type. And I actually did take that photo of Monica Lewinsky arriving at Dulles, which made me want to become a film director.”

Dikkers went on to direct the 2003 blockbuster Bad Meat, following up after a seven-year hiatus with the critically acclaimed cult classic Ape Trouble.

David Javerbaum, a former contributor of The Onion who went onto become executive producer of The Daily Show, said it’s good riddance that the publication is finally closing its doors. “There are enough college newspapers,” he said.

The one feature in The Onion that was consistently prescient was its horoscope. According to one past editor, it was written by interns as a proving ground. Founded in January 1988, The Onion was an Aquarius. In the horoscope for that sign, intern Nora Bellingham wrote in the last edition, “Old promises come due this week when you’re reminded of your pledge to get a real job just as soon as the Portuguese prime minister retires.”

11 thoughts on “The Onion, popular website, finally closing its doors”

  1. sorry, Eric. The Onion has got to be one of the most over rated “trendy” mainstreamiest “counter-culture” rag ever – ever – ever. I personally cannot stand it. It pretends to be smart. Every single article is so self-consciously saying “see? see how smart we are!” or “see how snide we are? look how quippy.”

    I also find most of what they “make fun of” to be dead ends. They don’t point to any insight, they don’t bring a new perspective, they — to use a horrible expression — “beat a dead horse.”

    I know some writers from the onion and they fit that description. Horribly self conscious, over rated and in so many ways, just culturally and historically stupid.

    I am not sorry to see it go. The NY Times, though, appears to be closing out the “Lives” column — now that upsets me.

    here is my blog
    http://pleasetellmeyouarejoking.com/

  2. The one day a year you just don’t know WHAT to believe.

    er…..

    anyway, not sure if this will post because there is some real cute drop down menu action at the link, but even knowing this has got to be an April Fools thang, I kind of wish it were real.

    http://news.slashdot.org/story/11/04/01/168234/Huffington-Post-Fights-Back-Against-NY-Times-Paywall?from=rss

    As you may recall, we’ve recently the New York Times’ stumbling efforts to implement a paywall on their website. Now in an effort to combat the growing trend of hiding content behind annoying attempts at monetization, the Huffington Post has taken a strong stand against the paywall by setting up a paywall of their own that blocks out NY Times . “On HuffingtonPost.com you can view the first 6 letters of each word at no charge (including slideshows of adorable kittens). After 6 letters, we will ask you to become a digital . You may choose to subscribe to see the rest of each word individually, or choose a package to access all words of more than 6 letters.” expect this to be a particularly devastating response, given how much of the HuffPo’s content is appropriated and re-used by the NY Times.

  3. oh fe!

    just scroll down to the photo of flowers i posted, breathe deeply, and you’ll be ok.

    though i hear it works even better if you do it while standing on your head with incense burning, reciting the mantra, “there’s no place like home…”

  4. Thank god for that, i was beggining to think everyone was too depressed to do an April Fool, been looking in the UK media for an hour!

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