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''Found Magazine'', created by Davy Rothbart and Jason Bitner and based in Ann Arbor, Michigan and New York City, collects and catalogs found notes, photos, and other ephemera, publishing them in an irregularly-issued magazine, in books, and on its website. Items found and published have ranged from love letters to homework assignments, and they are contributed by people who find them in a variety of public places, all over the world. ==History== The idea of ''Found Magazine'' started when co-creator Davy Rothbart found a note mistakenly left on his windshield in Logan Square, Chicago. Rothbart shared this peek into someone else's private life with his friends. He and Jason Bitner, a friend Rothbart met at an NPR pick-up basketball game in Chicago, began soliciting other found items from their circle of friends. Originally presented as photocopied fliers of some of the best finds, the pair realized the volume of found material they collected warranted a full magazine. Laying the material out in a zine format, Rothbart and Bitner took their creation to a local Kinko's, intending to make 50 copies to share with their friends who provided the magazine's content. An unexpected patron, actually an off-duty Kinko's employee, left Rothbart and Bitner with 700 free copies. With such a surprising abundance, they decided to give the excess to local stores to share with everybody. With the support of Quimby's Bookstore and other Chicago independent book sellers, the magazine sold quickly. Realizing their project appealed to more than just their friends, Rothbart and Bitner renamed their collection of photocopied finds ''Found Magazine #1'' and started gathering material for future editions. ''Found'' has grown from a Chicago-based photocopied zine to a nationally-distributed annual magazine. Still retaining the essentially zine format and look, ''Found'' is up to 9 issues. A 250-page ''Found'' book was released in May 2004. A sister magazine, ''Dirty Found'', started publication in 2004. ''Dirty Found'' was started to provide a home for the smuttier, more explicit, and generally sexually-themed finds that Rothbart and Bitner wanted to segregate from the more conservative ''Found''. Since 2008, ''Dirty Found'' is out of print and will not be reprinted. The success of ''Found'' allowed both Rothbart and Bitner to leave their day jobs and work full-time on the magazine and other personal projects. Rothbart moved to Ann Arbor, Michigan, where ''Found'' is now headquartered, while Bitner went to New York City where he managed their East Coast office for a short period of time before leaving the project. ''Found'' has also expanded beyond its original print format. Rothbart has gone on nationwide tours each year since 2002, reading favorite finds, featuring found or found-inspired music, and asking audiences to bring their own finds to share, while Bitner created and produced the ''Found'' website. In December 2005 Alarm Clock Theatre Company, based in Boston, Massachusetts, created a play based entirely on pieces published in ''Found'', turning the text from several pieces into songs, scenes and short films. The show won the Elliot Norton Award for Best Fringe Production. In 2007 a series of developmental workshops began between Lang Entertainment Group (Victoria Lang, Producer) and Story Pirates (Jamie Salka, Producer; Lee Overtree, Director; Eli Bolin, Composer), in conjunction with the Found Magazine's Rothbart, bringing the “finds” to life via sketches and songs. Performances of FOUND took place at Ars Nova in NYC throughout 2010. Producer Eva Price attends the last performance and joins the producing team and also bring on Tony-nominee Hunter Bell to help tie the sketch material together with a Broadway-worthy book. In September 2014, FOUND: A NEW MUSICAL, written by Lee Overtree and Hunter Bell, found a home at The Atlantic Theater Company and became a NY Times Critics' Pick. The musical received four stars from ''Time Out New York'' and ''New York Daily News''. Currently, Rothbart lives in Los Angeles, California. ''Found Magazine'' is published by Quack!Media and managed daily by Sarah Locke. ''Found Magazine'' issues #1, #2, #3, and #4 are no longer available for sale individually. ''FOUND MAGAZINE: THE EARLY YEARS'' was released in the fall of 2014 and consists of the best of those four earliest issues. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Found Magazine」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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