Most Popular
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CU Hires Three Pulitzer Winners
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Sazza
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Shakeup in Denver Radio
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Arapahoe County DA Charges Death-Penalty Fees to the State
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A Cold Case Frozen in Time (10)
Until this cold case heats up, Sharon Skiba is lost in limbo.
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Big Trouble (8)
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To the Max (5)
A publicity-hungry student shows how easy it is to become a media darling -- with a little help from CU.
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The Magnet Mafia Sticks to Street Art (5)
Matt Feeney and Harrison Nealey have a new way for artists to stick it to the city.
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A Cold Case Frozen in Time
Until this cold case heats up, Sharon Skiba is lost in limbo.
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CU Hires Three Pulitzer Winners
Some of newspapering's best and brightest are trading journalism for academia — including three Pulitzer winners hired at CU.
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Shakeup in Denver Radio
Denver radio's getting a shakeup, with more alterations on the horizon. But do any of the switches qualify as improvements?
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Arapahoe County DA Charges Death-Penalty Fees to the State
How does DA Carol Chambers beat the high cost of a death-penalty prosecution? By billing the prison system.
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The Magnet Mafia Sticks to Street Art
Matt Feeney and Harrison Nealey have a new way for artists to stick it to the city.
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Talking Art at MCA
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Alan Parsons as Living History and Other Assorted Goodies
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Friday Rap-Up: Basementalism, Hip-Hop 4 Obama, 50 Cent, Fat Joe, Juvenile
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Look of the Day -- The Unfortunate Side Effects of Daylight Savings Time
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Look of the Day - Irish Gangster
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Crowded Cowboy Caucuses
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Delegating Denver #34 of 56: New Jersey
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What we are writing about
- affordable housing
- Amy Ryan
- Colorado Rockies
- Color as Field
- Corridor 44
- David McSwane
- Democratic National...
- Denver Post
- Dinger
- Gates Rubber Company
- Glenn Morris
- Guitar Hero
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- Ian Kleinman
- John Hickenlooper
- Justin Jahn
- Knocked Up
- Mezcal
- molecular gastronomy
- No Country for Old Men
- Philip Seymour Hoffman
- Rocky Mountain News
- Samantha Morton
- Sea Wolf
- Stapleton
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- There Will Be Blood
- Tom Waits
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- Wii
Recent Articles By Jared Jacang Maher
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The Magnet Mafia Sticks to Street Art
Matt Feeney and Harrison Nealey have a new way for artists to stick it to the city.
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Denver Envisions the Art Scene in 2028
We asked these local creatives to predict what the arts scene in Denver will, or at least should, look like in 2028.
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The View From Here
Denver creatives sound off on what they'd like to see happen in Denver's arts scene in the next year.
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Anarchists Stalk Democratic Convention
On a walking tour of Denver, Unconventional Action makes plans for the Democratic National Convention.
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An Urban Explorer Gone
For some, the lure of the old Gates factory is undeniable. And it was deadly for one.
National Features
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Houston Press
"It Was Like an Armageddon Movie"
For days after Hurricane Rita, a Texas prison was hell on earth.
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SF Weekly
The Candidate
Our columnist knows Ralph Nader's running mate all too well.
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The Pitch
How Not To Be a Rap Star
First of all, lay off the Ecstasy.
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Village Voice
Project Runaway
What becomes a gossip columnist most?
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Going Inside
Everyone’s fascinated by Gates – reporters included.
By Jared Jacang Maher
Published: December 20, 2007
I was trying to squeeze my body through a hole at the bottom of the fence when the truck drove up. But my jacket got hooked on a wire, so all I could do was lie there and stare back like an idiot when the driver looked at me, then pulled away and parked near one of the abandoned factory buildings at the Gates plant. I figured he was a security worker, so once I finally freed myself, I went over to tell him what I was doing there before he called the cops.
"I'm a reporter," I said. "I'm doing a story about the Gates plant. I just want to walk around." The first and second parts were true: I was working on Westword's feature on Broadway ("Give Our Regards to Broadway," February 17, 2005) and had chosen Gates as the spot on the street that I would profile. But no one wants to read about the outside of a decaying building, so my plan was to get inside.
You can't blame the guy for not buying my explanation. I was dressed like your average scumbag (professional scumbag, thank you) and wasn't even carrying a pen and notebook. But I soon deduced that he was just some kind of subcontractor and far too lazy to waste energy chasing me away from the off-limits facility.
"Okay," he said. "Well, I didn't see you if you didn't see me."
I took this to mean that if I got busted or hurt, I shouldn't say that I'd talked to him, because then he would get in trouble, too. It was a perfect arrangement.
Like so many others, I'd long been fascinated with the old Gates Rubber factory. It seemed like a great, hulking anchor to Denver's working-class, industrial past that was being cut loose by city boosters in order to establish this town as a playground for the espresso-chugging creative class. For people like me, in other words. So it was out of both guilt and an irrepressible juvenile curiosity that I wanted to truly experience Gates.
I found an open window and crawled inside.
I was on the first floor of what I would later learn was Unit 11, where the company had conducted experiments with chemicals and did other lab tests. I saw old beakers and eyewash fountains. Everything was covered with a heavy black dust, including a sign that read "Cleanliness Benefits Everyone and Hurts No One." I toured the second floor, a former electrical shop. I crossed a bridge between two buildings and entered the sprawling Unit 10, where the majority of the manufacturing was done. I could see why so many photographers love this space. The windows were dusty and kind of yellowed, and when the sun came through it created a purgatory glow, like time was suspended.
I later talked to a photographer who'd spent an entire summer sneaking inside the building for shoots. He called the feeling created by the interior's stillness and silence "a jolt of gone." For him, it went all the way down to issues of mortality.
For me, it was realizing I had a big hole in my jacket where I'd ripped it on the fence. I stood there a while, watching the light-rail trains zoom by on the tracks below. Then a sudden noise scared the shit out of me. A pigeon flew out from behind a piece of old machinery and made its escape. I decided it was time to get the hell out, too.









