September 2015 | |
| Editor-in-chief | Fiona McCann |
|---|---|
| Categories | City magazine |
| Frequency | Bi-monthly |
| Circulation | 41,890 (2024) |
| Publisher | Janet Morgan |
| First issue | November 2003 |
| Company | SagaCity Media |
| Country | United States |
| Based in | Portland, Oregon |
| Language | English |
| Website | www |
| ISSN | 1546-2765 |
Portland Monthly (also referred to asPortland Monthly Magazine) is a monthly news and general interest magazine which covers food, politics, business, design, events and culture inPortland, Oregon. The magazine was co-founded in 2003 by siblings Nicole and Scott Vogel. Nicole had previously worked forCendant Corporation andTime Warner, and Scott had been ajournalist atThe New York Times. Though the magazine had some trouble with funding in its first year, it grew to a stable circulation of 56,000 and by 2006 was the seventh-largest city magazine in theUnited States. The circulation as of 2024 is 41,890.
ThePortland Monthly has received generally positive reception in other new publications, including a mixed review of the magazine's first issue inThe Columbian, and subsequent positive reviews inThe Oregonian andThe Seattle Times. Rachel Dresbeck wrote favorably of the magazine in her 2007 bookInsiders' Guide to Portland, Oregon.
The magazine was co-founded in 2003 by Nicole Vogel and her brotherjournalist Scott Vogel,[1] and began as a glossy magazine with a focus on the lifestyle of Portland.[2] Nicole Vogel had previously been a vice president atCendant Corporation, and had worked atTime Warner for five years and was a vice president atCNN.[1][3] Scott Vogel had previously worked as a journalist forThe New York Times.[4] Theniche market focus of the magazine was for "25- to 65-year-olds with household incomes of at least $100,000".[4] Nicole Vogel usedTexas Monthly as one of her models for the magazine, which she had read growing up inTexas.[1] Planning and research for the magazine included conducting 200 interviews with residents of Portland, in addition to raisingUS$40,000 fromangel investors.[5]
Nicole Vogel had previously sought outseed capital from investors at the Oregon Entrepreneurs Forum in February 2003,[6] and in total raised less than $1 million from investors.[7] One of the first investors inPortland Monthly was the "Women’s Investors Network", a Portland-based group of women-investors which is part of the Oregon Entrepreneurs' Foundation.[8] A formal gathering was held on September 27, 2003, at thePortland Armory to celebrate the launch of the magazine,[9] and the magazine debuted September 29, 2003.[10] The first issue was 104 pages, and due to initial funding issues the magazine appeared bimonthly for the first year.[7] 40,000 copies were produced for the first issue.[7] The first issue was dedicated to the theme: "Why We Love This Town".[7] The magazine was profitable in its first year and brought in $1 million inrevenue.[5]
Scott Vogel served as the magazine's firsteditor-in-chief,[7][11] and leftPortland Monthly in late 2004 to joinThe Washington Post.[5] Russ Rymer served as the magazine's editor after Scott Vogel left,[1] but he left in February 2005 to become editor ofMother Jones.[12] After Rymer the magazine went to "employment contracts" for editors.[1] Journalist Louise Lague became the next editor-in-chief of the magazine on April 11, 2005.[13] In 2005 the magazine maintained a staff of 22 in addition to hiring freelancers.[5] In August 2005 thePortland Magazine purchased a local magazine related toweddings, thePortland Bride and Groom, which was founded in 2001.[14]Portland Monthly's style editor Jill Spitznass became the editor of thePortland Bride and Groom.[14] Ted Katauskas, who had formerly worked as managing editor ofPortland Magazine, was promoted to the magazine's editor-in-chief in August 2005.[14] Katauskas was the fifth employee of the company.[14]
Circulation of thePortland Monthly in 2005 numbered 56,000,[1] and in 2006 paid circulation was 56,000 with an additional 18,000 to 22,000 sold onnewsstands.[3] In February 2006 the magazine was the seventh-largest city magazine in the United States.[3] The magazine has reported on the effects ofmethamphetamine abuse inOregon, andEnron's usage of the electric utility in Portland.[1] The magazine maintains a website at www.portlandmonthlymag.com,[15] and includes the first few paragraphs of selected articles on the site.[16] Ted Katauskas was editor of the magazine in 2008.[17][18] Kelly Montoya became the publisher of the magazine in 2012.[19] The magazine's editor in 2018 was Kelly Clarke.[20] As of 2024, the publication's circulation was 41,890.[21]
Writing forThe Columbian, Angela Allen commented that the first issue of the magazine "shows attitude and literary writing, tosses off lots of names, does a terrific fall culture calendar and digs into a couple of issues, including the Trail Blazers", but was also critical, noting: "Its design is crowded and the type is too small to read for most of us without wearing a pair of 'reader' specs."[4] Tom Boyer ofThe Seattle Times described the magazine as "a smart mix of reader-friendly features and award-winning journalism".[1] Writing inThe Oregonian, Steve Duin commented that he appreciated the lists published in the magazine: "Because I'm addicted to lists – and the bigger the better – the best part of my month is the morning that copy ofPortland Monthly lands like a wounded halibut on my desk."[22]
The magazine won three awards in the City and Regional Magazine Association's 20th Annual National City and Regional Magazine Awards in 2005, receiving recognition in Civic Journalism, Excellence in Writing and General Excellence.[13] The magazine was one of three companies nominated by the Oregon Entrepreneurs Forum as a finalist for Working Capital Stage Company of the Year.[23] In her 2007 bookInsiders' Guide to Portland, Oregon, author Rachel Dresbeck wrote that the magazine "maintains an excellent calendar" of events going on in the city.[24] In July 2007, Nicole Vogel was a finalist among nominees for an individual entrepreneurship award from the Oregon Entrepreneurs Network.[25]