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TIME: Almanac 1990
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1990 Time Magazine Compact Almanac, The (1991)(Time).iso
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time
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1990-09-19
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FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 31
What shall we do tonight? TIME offers some answers to that
increasingly confusing question in the Critics' Voices section at
the front of the magazine. A forum for entertainment tips and
mini-reviews of everything from books to brandy, the section
provides a one-page guide to what is worth -- or not worth --
hearing, seeing and doing around the U.S. from week to week. Our
critics raved about the program Night Music as "the best damn music
show on television." But they warned watchers to skip the movie
Wired in one terse comment: "The saddest thing about John Belushi's
death might be this requiem."
Critics' Voices gives writers "a chance to say something they
don't have space to say elsewhere in the magazine," notes senior
editor Thomas Sancton. Most theater items, for example, are in
addition to reviews that appear in the Theater section. The page
also lets us expand conventional notions of "culture" by including
such pastimes as circuses and sporting events. Says Sancton: "We
don't want to be limited to traditional categories."
Assembling this critical gallimaufry is the task of
reporter-researcher Andrea Sachs. An attorney turned journalist
who joined TIME in 1984, Sachs says her legal training "helps me
to negotiate the little problems that come up." The hardest:
squeezing opinions to fit into the highly compressed space. Not
surprisingly, Sachs has found critics to be "the most opinionated
and creative people you'd ever want to meet. They care so much
about their stories that they are ready to go to war over the
change of a comma."
Yet Sachs is far more than a collector of critical viewpoints.
She sifts through stacks of mail and scans dozens of newspapers for
offbeat events to write up in the section. A hot-air balloon
pageant in New Mexico caught her eye, as did a ten-day sausage
festival in Texas. Says Sachs: "People have tremendous enthusiasm
for their events and are genuinely delighted to have them
included."
Critics' Voices will continue to expand its horizons. Coming
soon will be reviews of home-entertainment videos and, perhaps,
computer software. "Ideally, this is the kind of page that readers
will tear out and tack up on their bulletin boards," Sachs says.
"We want it to be indispensable."