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A. V. Club

The A.V. Club
Avclub logo.png
Type Popular culture, entertainment, news, reviews, politics, progressive
Format Internet
Owner(s) The Onion, Inc.
Editor-in-chief Laura M. Browning, Sean O’Neal
Founded 1993
Language English
Headquarters Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
Sister newspapers The Onion
Website avclub.com

The A.V. Club is an entertainment website featuring reviews, interviews, and other regular offerings that examine films, music, television, books, games, and other elements of pop culture media. Although it had a minimal presence on The Onion's website in its early years, The A.V. Club was created in 1993 as a supplement to The Onion. A 2005 website redesign placed The A.V. Club in a more prominent position, allowing its online identity to grow. Unlike its parent publication, The A.V. Club is not satirical.

The publication's name is a reference to school audiovisual clubs "composed of a bunch of geeks who actually knew how to run the film strip and film projectors".

In 1993, five years after the founding of The Onion at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, student Stephen Thompson launched an entertainment section, later renamed The A.V. Club, as part of the newspaper's 1995 re-launch.

Both The Onion and The A.V. Club made their internet debut in 1996.The A.V. Club acquired its own internet domain name in December 1999.The Onion linked to onionavclub.com before the 2005 launch of a domain separate from The Onion, called avclub.com. The website was also redesigned to incorporate blogs and reader comments. In 2006, concurrent with another redesign, the website shifted its model again to begin adding content on a daily, rather than weekly, basis.

In December 2004, Stephen Thompson left his position as founding editor of The A.V. Club.

According to Sean Mills, then-president of The Onion, the A.V. Club website received more than 1 million unique visitors for the first time in October 2007. In late 2009, the website was reported to have received over 1.4 million unique visitors and 75,000 comments per month.

At its peak, the print version of The A.V. Club was available in 17 different cities. Localized sections of the website were also maintained, with reviews and news relevant to specific cities. The print version and localized websites were gradually discontinued, and in December 2013, print publication ceased in the final three markets.

On December 13, 2012, long-time writer and editor Keith Phipps, who oversaw the website after Stephen Thompson left, stepped down from his role as editor of The A.V. Club. He said, "Onion, Inc. and I have come to a mutual parting of the ways."


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