Paste Magazine was a victim of its time, facing a bad economy and competing pressures between physical and digital media. But what changes were its founders willing to make to keep it alive as a website? And in the process, did they betray their loyal audience? Additional Resources:
- Paste Magazine Is Dead
- Paste Magazine Freelancers Are Getting Screwed
- My (Re)generation: Paste's Nick Purdy on the Fall and Rise of a Music Magazine
- Paste Magazine Is Returning to Print
- Paste Magazine Returns To Print, Expands Online Coverage
- Dudeletter Interviews: Nick Purdy of Wild Heaven and Paste Magazine
- Paste Magazine Thrives Through Belt-Tightening
- Paste Magazine says goodbye to print
- More On Paste Magazine's Print-Side Demise: "We'd Been Running On Fumes For A Really Long Time, And We Ran Out Of Fumes."
- Paste Magazine President ‘Thinking Beyond Print’ With Site Relaunch
- Paste Succumbs to Debt, Suspends Print Magazine
- Paste music magazine to stop print publication
- New Paste TV Show Debuts Tonight!
- A conversation with Josh Jackson, on the eve of Paste’s return to print
- Rockers sue over sales of memorabilia: Led Zeppelin, the Doors and other musicians say Wolfgang's Vault has no right to profit from the vintage items.
- Company Overview of Wolfgang's Vault LLC
- Will Paste pay its writers?