Punk Planet Year Thirteen, issues 74-80.| dansinker.com
Punk Planet Year Twelve, issues 68-73.| dansinker.com
Punk Planet Year Eleven, issues 62-67.| dansinker.com
Everything is so shitty right now. Let's talk about the unexpected connection between Punk Planet and the Gilmore Girls.| Dan Sinker's Blog
Seeing Chicago stand up against ICE this week reminded me of why I love this city so much, and gave me a focal point for a reflection on the 50th issue of Punk Planet, which was dedicated to the city.| Dan Sinker's Blog
Punk Planet Year Eight, issues 44-49.| dansinker.com
I went to write an essay looking back at the the seventh year of Punk Planet, but one of the issues we published that year felt too relevant to RIGHT NOW to keep the essay's focus on the past.| Dan Sinker's Blog
In Punk Planet's sixth year, we brought on a new design team and the look of the magazine really got incredible. I've assembled a gallery of some of the best spreads from that year.| Dan Sinker's Blog
In the latest installment of my series reflecting on Punk Planet's legacy, I focus on the magazine's fifth year, when it shifted significantly toward political issues, particularly anti-war coverage, culminating in the "Murder of Iraq" cover story.| Dan Sinker's Blog
Punk Planet issues 19-24.| dansinker.com
The third in my monthly essay series about the 13 year run of Punk Planet. This time around, Year Three and the first cover story we ever ran, about the Democratic and Republican National Conventions in 1996, wholly relevant once again.| Dan Sinker's Blog
If the first year of Punk Planet was about figuring out the function of the magazine—finding writers, learning how to build a page in Quark X-Press, how to communicate with printers, how to find distribution and ship magazines, how to sell ads, and the billion other things that needed to happen—then the second year was about form.| dansinker.com
Punk Planet issues 1-6 (except issue 3 which I don't have a copy of and seems to not exist anywhere).| dansinker.com
When I was younger I tried to build artist/musician/weirdo Laurie Anderson's tape-bow violin from a single sentence description. While I never got it to work quite right, it taught me everything I know about asking "why."| Dan Sinker's Blog
I was talking with someone yesterday about a project I've been sketching out about the sad songs we listen to and the stories we have about them, and she asked me what my saddest song was. Without hesitation I responded: "Farewell Transmission by Songs:Ohia."| dansinker.com