
With a vigilant eye on the rising threat of contemporary circus, Sideshow is a multiform website with activities that encompass an online, print and digital magazine; a map of circus festivals, training spaces and artists; an events calendar and news service; a library of noteworthy circus publications tying to a carefully curated online market; and a nascent research section which bundles some of the site's most useful data for download.
Some of Sideshow's key commitments are to long-form writing, open data, journalism, research and curation, and the site takes an iterative approach to discovering the best ways it can serve artists and audiences and the wider sector. With the current version of the website (v. 5), the magazine is experimenting particularly with actions to close the gap between readers and long-form writing — how do you persuade a reader to invest themselves in a substantial body of text without asking less of them and less of the writing itself? In the long-run Sideshow would like to answer this question and to solve or address some of the problems outlined in this essay.
Sideshow first came online in May 2009; its editor is John Ellingsworth – john@sideshow-circusmagazine.com
Site Credits
The icons used for the top menu and in certain other places on the site are nearly all from P.J. Onori's open source Iconic set. The acrobat / void saint that you see on the leftmost button and floating down through the black canvas at the top of this page is by the artist Betsy Dadd.
Sideshow's map has been put together using Drupal, OpenLayers, OL+, OL++ and the spiffy tiles at MapBox. Day to day the map is run by a great, writhing brain captured in an electrolysis tank. You can reach the brain's main communication node via map@sideshow-circusmagazine.com
Pre-emptive Answers to Speculative Questions

