Elvis may still be alive but Weekly World News is dead

Official! It's the silly season, and Larry Williams is prompted to lament the demise of one of the silliest...

Official! It's the silly season, and Larry Williamsis prompted to lament the demise of one of the silliest . . .

The Weekly World News will cease publication this month. It will be missed, being the only newspaper in America that covers Sasquatch, space aliens, ghosts, Elvis sightings and Bat Boy, among other vitally important things.

You might remember the WWN for breaking the story about space aliens in the US Senate. Chris Dodd was one of them, the paper said. Holy cow! What if he gets elected president? Well, it won't be that big a deal, because space aliens have been advising our presidents for years.

In its 28 years of publication, the Weekly World News has got many scoops, leaving the rest of the mainstream media so far back in the dust that they didn't even try to catch up.

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Who can forget the revelation that the CIA was keeping Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden prisoners in the same cell, and that they'd fallen in love? You didn't see that anywhere else.

Not to mention: "Hell is on the planet Venus, says Bible expert!" That seems like something everyone would want to know.

True, the WWN didn't get much respect in the journalism world. But the "Men in Black" knew better. In the 1997 movie, when Agent K is showing rookie Agent J the ropes, one of the first tips is that the Weekly World News is a must-read for any alien hunter.

In the 1990s, I was a reporter on an investigative projects desk staffed by people with a deep and abiding appreciation for the WWN. So we bought a subscription, thus ensuring we'd have some laughs every week, no matter what else was going on.

We took to taping the best WWN covers on the walls, and one of my favourites was "Farmer Says: ELVIS IS HAUNTING MY COWS!" Next to it was a story about Elvis being seen alive somewhere, making me wonder: don't these guys ever check their clippings? Both stories can't be true.

I could imagine the reporter writing the cows story going to his editor. "Boss, I got some bad news. We've carried about 50 stories recently saying Elvis is alive. So he can't very well be haunting cows then, can he?"

The boss's response: "Maybe he JUST died. Didja ever think of that?"

One of our favourite WWN moments, though, was the day it published in the back pages, next to the psychic ads, a tiny story saying that in the next month, time would start to go backward.

I don't remember what the cover story was, but how could time going backward not lead the paper?

Upon hearing the news about the News this week, one of my colleagues on that desk said, "It's a sad day for pretend journalism".

"Pretend journalism?" Well, yes. Everyone knew that, right?

We thought it was self-evident, but lately the WWN had started publishing a notice on page two admitting that it made up most of the stories.

It was in tiny print, though, so I doubt it was read by anyone who could benefit from it.

Another innovation has been the publication of corrections.

One recent gaffe was in a story about the discovery of the actual Valley of the Jolly Green Giant, where it turned out more than one giant resided. The correction said the paper got the giants' height slightly wrong.

Like every newspaper, the WWN has been covering the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. As usual, it has had some exclusives, such as "VAMPIRES ATTACK US TROOPS: Army of undead taking over mountains of Afghanistan!" and "SATAN CAPTURED BY GIs IN IRAQ!"

Where will we get stories like these after the WWN is gone?

Well, according to publisher American Media Inc's announcement, the website www.weeklyworldnews.com will continue to operate after the final print issue on August 27th - but who knows for how long?

The WWN's circulation might have been down, but at least people paid for it.

Nobody pays for the website, and American Media has been losing money by the barrel. - (The Hartford Courant)