Mondo 2000
{{Short description|Culture Magazine}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=March 2025}}
{{Infobox magazine
| title = Mondo 2000
| image_file = File:MONDO_2000_Issue_14_Spring,_Summer_1995_cover.jpg
| image_caption = Issue 14 cover
| publisher = Fun City MegaMedia
| editor = R. U. Sirius
| editor2 = Jude Milhon
| editor3 = Alison Bailey Kennedy
| firstdate = 1984
| finaldate = 1998
| finalnumber = 17
| country = United States
| based = Berkeley, California
| language = English
}}
Mondo 2000 was a glossy cyberculture magazine published in California during the 1980s and 1990s. It covered cyberpunk topics such as virtual reality and smart drugs. It was a more anarchic and subversive prototype for the later-founded Wired magazine.
{{cite web
|url=http://www.suck.com/daily/95/11/07/mondo1995.html
|title=Mondo 1995: Up and Down With the Next Millennium's First Magazine
|last=Boulware
|first=Jack
|date=November 7, 1995
|website=Suck
|publisher=SF Weekly
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181120190309/http://www.suck.com/daily/95/11/07/mondo1995.html
|archive-date=November 20, 2018
|url-status=dead
}}
History
Mondo 2000 originated as High Frontiers in 1984, edited by R. U. Sirius (pseudonym for Ken Goffman) with co-editor and publisher Morgan Russell. R. U. Sirius was succeeded as Editor-in-Chief by Alison Bailey Kennedy, a.k.a. "Queen Mu" and "Alison Wonderland".Kennedy is also known for her theories concerning the use of bufotenin by the ancient Olmec of Mesoamerica. See {{cite journal |author=Kennedy, A.B. |title=Ecce Bufo: The Toad in Nature and in Olmec Iconography |journal=Current Anthropology |volume=23 |issue=3 |pages=273–90 |year=1982 |doi=10.1086/202831|s2cid=143698915 }}.
Sirius was joined by hacker Jude Milhon (a.k.a. St. Jude) as editor and the magazine was renamed Reality Hackers in 1988 to better reflect its drugs and computers theme. It changed title again to Mondo 2000 in 1989. Art director and photographer Bart Nagel, a pioneer in Photoshop collage, created the publication's elegantly surrealist aesthetic. R. U. Sirius left at the beginning of 1993, at about the same time as the launch of Wired. The magazine continued until 1998, with the last issue being #17.
Mondo 2000 was relaunched as the blog Mondo2000.com in August 2017.
Featured writers
Along with the print version of Boing Boing — with which Mondo 2000 shared several writers, including Mark Frauenfelder, Richard Kadrey, Gareth Branwyn, and Jon Lebkowsky — Mondo 2000 helped develop what was to become the cyberpunk subculture. Writers included William Gibson, Nan C. Druid (pseudonym for Maerian Morris), Paco Nathan, Rudy Rucker, Bruce Sterling, Tiffany Lee Brown, Andrew Hultkrans, Mark Dery, Douglas Rushkoff, Mark Pesce, and Robert Anton Wilson.
Writers contributing since the 2017 relaunch include John Higgs, John Shirley, Giulio Prisco, Hyun Yi Kang, Woody Evans, Michael Pinchera, Rudy Rucker, Prop Anon, R.U. Sirius, and interviews with Douglas Rushkoff and Grant Morrison.{{cite web|title=Archive|url=http://www.mondo2000.com/archive/}}
Publications
- Mondo 2000: A User's Guide to the New Edge Rudy Rucker, R.U. Sirius, Queen Mu ({{ISBN|0-06-096928-8}})
See also
References
{{reflist}}
External links
- [http://www.mondo2000.com 2017 Relaunch]
- [https://archive.org/details/mondohistory Mondo 2000 History Project] at Archive.org
- [http://www.mondo2000.net Mondo2000.net]
- [http://www.acceler8or.com/ Acceler8or] RU Sirius blog ca. 2011-2012
- [http://www.acceler8or.com/tags/mondo-2000/ Acceler8or Mondo 2000 archive]
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20080924075541/http://www.suck.com/daily/95/11/07/mondo1995.html Mondo 1995: Up and Down With the Next Millennium's First Magazine], by Jack Boulware. (1995) SF Weekly / Suck article.
- "[https://web.archive.org/web/20080904213143/http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,312487,00.html Mondo 2000: A User's Guide to the New Edge]", by Tim Appelo. (1992) Entertainment Weekly magazine review.
{{Authority control}}
Category:Cultural magazines published in the United States
Category:Defunct magazines published in the United States
Category:Independent magazines
Category:Magazines established in 1984
Category:Magazines disestablished in 1998
Category:Magazines published in the San Francisco Bay Area