
Once Upon a Time in Eastern Europe
Podcast von Steven Robert Carlson
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This is a terrific interview and I wish that I could write a worthy introduction. Maybe later. For now, please enjoy

Kate Carlisle asked me to turn the mic around and let her interview me. I happily agreed. When I first met Kate, she was a production designer working side by side with Editor, Tom Popper and Copy Editor, Desmond MacGrath. She came on shortly before I left the newspaper, but we traveled in the same circles. In more recent years, Kate has captured my attention on social media with her vegan humor, animal memes, and what appeared to be a budding romance with a former Budapest Week colleague, Jannes Hartkamp, a rumor which I can confirm to be true. I invited Kate to introduce this episode: "City Mag Budapest Week started in the early 1990s, as the so-called Eastern bloc was crumbling. A clutch of edgy, sharp and revolutionary media enthusiasts started a weekly, that any non-Magyar could access — both for the language and salient reporting. It was just damn well written. "Steve Carlson was one of the founders along with a group of irreverent and brilliant shaker uppers. He is compiling archives, interviewing colleagues of old and has stepped up to make sure history is not lost. Kate Carlisle, another Budapest Weeker from the past, interviews him about fading cafes, print runs, missing pages and how it was to be part of history in the making." Thank you, Kate Carlisle!

Chris Condon joined the Budapest Week just over a year after we launched. He started as a reporter, worked his way up to News Editor, and eventually served as Editor-in-Chief. Chris belongs to a generation of journalists, Hungarians and foreigners, who cut their teeth reporting for the Budapest Week. He also worked for the paper long after I left, which means he was able to share a few stories I hadn't heard. For example, moving offices and discovering a gun concealed in a wall cavity since 1944. Chris went on to write for Business Week and the Financial Times. A few years back, he moved back to the United States to work for Bloomberg, covering the Federal Reserve. However, Chris took a little bit of Hungary with him to the US: his wife Dora, and two daughters, Siobhan and Shannon.

What to say about Bob Cohen? Our friendship predates the newspaper. The other foreigners I met knocking about Eastern Europe in the late '80s were an odd bunch: itinerant language teachers, folk musicians, folklore researchers, linguists, and other misfits. That's a pretty good description of Bob. As soon as we started the paper, I wanted to bring Bob onboard. The only reason we hesitated was because of his unreasonable demands to be paid. But it worked out in the end because Bob Cohen was our funniest writer.

I met Rick Bruner through his father, Richard W Bruner. Dick was the first editor of the Budapest Week, as well as my mentor and friend. Rick Bruner, Tibor Szendrei and I are the three surviving founders of our newspaper. That's a sobering thought. Dick was the gray eminence of our little startup team. He convinced us it could be done. He introduced us to his wide circle of friends, and many of them became our contributors, supporters and friends. Rick and I had a contentious relationship, but as he reminds me on this episode, that was part of our magic. In the first six months of the paper, we struggled every week to fill a 16-page newspaper without an office, staff or even a reliable income. Rick and I soldiered on together through sleepless nights and impossible deadlines. We argued over headlines and commas and inspired each other to further effort. It never would have happened without Rick and Dick. Dick and Rick.