The Cheese Grater

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The Cheese Grater Magazine
FormatOnline, Magazine, Satire, Sketch
SchoolUniversity College London
Founder(s)René Lavanchy
PublisherUCL Students Union
PresidentZhenya Robinson
EditorRobert Delaney and Mads Brown
FoundedSeptember 2004 (2004-09) (as a newspaper)
HeadquartersStudents' Union UCL
CityLondon
CountryUnited Kingdom
Sister newspapersWomen's Wrongs, Greater Expectations
Websitecheesegratermagazine.org
The cover of March 2006's issue

The Cheese Grater is a student satirical and investigative magazine produced at University College London by a society of UCL Union, a students' union. The Cheese Grater publishes a articles covering student politics, news, investigations, satire and cartoons. Its stories are frequently critical of the UCL Union. It was first published in March 2004, and was named London's best student publication in the 2022 Student Publication Association awards.[1]

History

The Cheese Grater was founded by René Lavanchy, a former member of Pi Magazine, the only significant UCL student publication at the time. The society was affiliated on 12 February 2004[citation needed] and the first issue was published on 25 March 2004.[2][original research?]

In October 2008, an article in issue 18 was censored by Communications and Services Officer Charlie Clinton, leading the magazine to instead publish a story condemning his interference.[citation needed]

In 2016, The Cheese Grater launched a sister publication, Grater Expectations; an irregularly published feminist zine focusing on absurdist humour and art. The sister publication now goes under the name "Women's Wrongs" after a revival in 2022. The revival saw Women's Wrongs win the award for best publication at the 2023 UCL Art's Awards, with the publication also being nominated for best newcomer at the SPA national awards.

Notable articles

In February 2005, The Cheese Grater published a special report accusing UCL Union sabbatical officer David Renton of laziness, incompetence and general neglect of his duties.[citation needed]

In March 2006 the magazine revealed – using the evidence of a leaked e-mail – that then student editor of Pi Magazine Simon Dedman had cheated in recent UCL Union elections, securing the election of Nick Barnard as Media and Communications Officer, and that neither person had been significantly disciplined for it.[citation needed]

In February 2011, The Cheese Grater published documents from UCL Academic Board meetings which revealed the potential impact of government higher education cuts at UCL. The findings suggested a £35 million budget shortfall for UCL even if it were to charge the full £9,000 undergraduate tuition fee. Following the publication of this article, the documents revealing this were removed from the UCL website. The article was later picked up by Times Higher Education, who published a piece using the magazine's findings on 24 February 2011.[3]

In March 2012, The Cheese Grater investigated UCL's bid to build a second London campus in Stratford, uncovering local residents' objections to the potential demolition of their homes and inadequacies in Newham Council's consultation process. The story was later picked up by The Guardian and other national news sources.[4]

In 2021 the magazine launched an investigation into sexual harassment, intimidation, and bullying committed by UCL Security in Halls of Residence throughout the 2020–2021 academic year. The five month long investigation saw two of its writers uncover vast alleged abuses committed by UCL Security staff resulting in the publication of victims recollections of the alleged abuses. The article resulted in UCL launching an investigation, of which its findings have still not been published.[5]

In the Winter 2022 issue, Neil Majithia and Elettra Plati penned a brilliant exposé of UCL sports societies and their initiative activities. With commendable and extensive research, Neil and Elettra exposed the initiation rituals of UCL's most prolific sports societies. In doing this, the pair brought the toxic culture of Team UCL to the fore of attention and they subsequently won the Best News Piece award at the 2023 SPA Awards. https://cheesegratermagazine.org/2022/11/18/chun-buckets-everywhere-how-initiation-ceremonies-ruin-the-freshers-experience/

In 2022 the magazine published an article strongly criticising UCL's decision to cut ties with Stonewall, the article was widely received with both praise and criticism after it reached over 60,000 people on social media. The article exposed procedural inconsistencies, and lobbying by an established inter-departmental network of gender critical feminists amongst UCL's academic staff.[6]

UCL Graters

Members of the Cheese Grater Magazine Society founded the UCL Graters sketch comedy group in 2011. As the magazine was founded due to dissatisfaction with UCL's student media, so the UCL Graters were created due to dissatisfaction with UCL's student comedy scene. The group's cast changes yearly, tending to focus on darker and more absurd humour than UCL's Comedy Club and the MDs Comedy Revue. The group is run by the society's Show Coordinator, who directs the group in writing and performing their own material at shows in UCL and around London.

The Graters reached the semi-finals of the Leicester Square Theatre Sketch-Off in 2016,[7] and were described as "exemplary" by the Wee Review for their 2017 Fringe show.[8]

The Graters have performed at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival every year since their founding at various venues, including the Underbelly and Just the Tonic. The Fringe was cancelled in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, but the Graters returned to Edinburgh in 2021. The Graters continued their fringe visits in 2022 and 2023.

List of shows

  • Julian Ignores His Friends And Talks To A Pretty Girl (2012), a sketch show.[9]
  • Crab Salad (2013), a sketch show.[10]
  • Our Jackie (2014), a comedy play.[11]
  • 2015: A Sketch Odyssey (2015), a sketch show starring Ruby Clyde, Luke Reilly and Hûw Steer, produced by Will Orton.[12]
  • UCL Graters: Immature Cheddar (2016), a sketch show starring Luke Reilly, Hûw Steer, Sarah King and Sam Pryce, produced by Will Orton and Freddie Lynch.[13]
  • UCL Graters: Smashing (2017), a sketch show starring Hûw Steer, Heather Dempsey and Felicity Wareing, produced by Will Orton and Alex Diamond.[14]
  • UCL Graters: Panopticon (2018), a thematic sketch show starring Joe Andreyev, Sam Dodgshon, Isobel MacLeod, Luke Shepherd and Felicity Wareing, produced by Alice Fraser-Edwards.[15]
  • Clothesline (2019), a play-sketch hybrid about an unwashed pile of laundry. Starring Gassan Abdulrazek, Jake Bishop, Darcy Bounsall, Agnes Carrington-Windo, Sam Dodgshon and Jennie Howitt. Produced by Agnes Carrington-Windo, Sam Dodgshon and Alice Fraser Edwards.[16]
  • Post Humour (2021), a play-sketch hybrid set in a surreal British Post Office.[17] Starring Jennie Howitt, Rob Davidson, Anisa Khorassani, Sabrina Asrafova, Harris Morris, and Sam Dodgshon. Directed by Jennie Howitt and produced by Bori Papp.[18] Winner of the Derek Spirit of the Fringe award.[19]
  • Council Tax Evasion (2023), a collection of sketches involving characters living in a council flat. Starring Lauren Avis, Sabrina Asrafova, Matt Blin, Ben Scanlan, Alex Dunn, Anezka Khan, Will Telling and Euan Toh.

Awards

Awards and nominations received by The Cheese Graters
Award Year[a] Category Nominee(s) / work Result Ref.
Students' Union UCL Arts Awards 2006 Best Student Publication The Cheese Grater Won [citation needed]
2007 Best Student Publication The Cheese Grater Won [citation needed]
2008 Best Student Publication The Cheese Grater Won [citation needed]
2009 Best Student Publication The Cheese Grater Won [citation needed]
2010 Best Student Publication The Cheese Grater Nominated [citation needed]
2011 Best Student Publication The Cheese Grater Won [citation needed]
2012 Best Student Publication The Cheese Grater Nominated [citation needed]
2012 Best Garage Theatre Show "Julian Ignores His Friends And Talks To A Pretty Girl" Won [citation needed]
2014 Best Student Publication The Cheese Grater Won [citation needed]
2014 Diversity & Inclusion The Cheese Grater Won [citation needed]
2016 Most Improved Society The Cheese Grater Won [citation needed]
2023 Best Student Publication Women's Wrongs Won [20]
2023 Best Media Piece "Chun Buckets Everywhere: How initiation ceremonies ruin the freshers experience" Won [20]
Derek Award 2021 Spirit of the Fringe "Post Humour" Won [21]
Guardian Student Media Award 2006 Best Small Budget Publication The Cheese Grater Won [22]
2007 Best Magazine The Cheese Grater Nominated [citation needed]
Student Publication Association 2022 Best Publication – London region The Cheese Grater Won [23]
2023 Best Creative Piece Mathilde Turner (for "Naked yoga: a belligerent ode to the pussy") Nominated [24]
2023 Best News Story Neil Majithia and Elettra Plati (for "Chun Buckets Everywhere: How initiation ceremonies ruin the freshers experience") Won [25]
2023 Billy Dowling-Reid Award for Outstanding Commitment Nandini Agarwal Nominated [24]

Structure

The constitution of the Magazine states the society must have three executive officers, the President, Treasurer, and Welfare Officer. The editorial structure of the publication consists of two Co-Editors-In-Chief, two Co-Investigations Editors, an Online Editor, and a Humour Editor. The magazine committee has also incorporated a Socials and Community Outreach Officer, Sketch Director, Sketch Producer, and Graphics Editor as it has expanded. The position of Zine Editor was created following the launch of the magazines sister publication.

All positions are elected through the Students Union of UCL. The elected positions form the committee.

Notes

  1. ^ The listed year refers to the date of the ceremony.

References

  1. ^ "The Cheese Grater, London Regional Winner". Student Publication Association. Retrieved 18 March 2022.[self-published]
  2. ^ "The Cheese Grater Issue 1" (PDF). UCLU Cheese Grater Magazine Society. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 April 2012. Retrieved 13 September 2007.
  3. ^ "No limits: time to ignore Hefce?". Times Higher Education. 24 February 2011. Retrieved 10 June 2022.
  4. ^ Hill, Dave (13 June 2012). "London 2012 legacy: the battle begins on a Newham estate". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 10 June 2022.
  5. ^ "Violated, Harassed, Ignored: Abuse in Halls by UCL Security Guards". 25 February 2022. Retrieved 10 June 2022.
  6. ^ "The Story Behind UCL's Rejection of Stonewall". 23 February 2022. Retrieved 10 June 2022.
  7. ^ "Sketch Off 2016 - Semi Final 1". Facebook.com. 13 March 2016. Retrieved 28 December 2019.[self-published]
  8. ^ "UCL Graters: Smashing | Review | The Wee Review | Scotland's arts and culture magazine". The Wee Review. Retrieved 28 December 2019.
  9. ^ "Graters – Julian Ignores His Friend And Talks To A Pretty Girl (Graters)". ThreeWeeks Edinburgh. 18 August 2012. Retrieved 10 June 2022.
  10. ^ "UCL at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival | UCL News - UCL - London's Global University". UCL. 2 August 2013. Retrieved 10 June 2022.
  11. ^ "at the 2014 Edinburgh Festival Fringe | UCL News - UCL - London's Global University". UCL. 29 July 2014. Retrieved 28 December 2019.
  12. ^ "UCL Graters - 2015: A Sketch Odyssey listing on Broadway Baby". broadwaybaby.com.
  13. ^ "UCL Graters: Immature Cheddar listing on Broadway Baby". broadwaybaby.com.
  14. ^ "UCL Graters: Smashing: 4 star review by Ben Munster". broadwaybaby.com.
  15. ^ "UCL Graters: Panopticon". www.underbellyedinburgh.co.uk. Archived from the original on 11 July 2018. Retrieved 13 January 2022.
  16. ^ "Clothesline | Comedy | Edinburgh Festival Fringe". Tickets.edfringe.com. Archived from the original on 23 August 2019. Retrieved 28 December 2019.
  17. ^ "Post Humour". Tickets.edfringe.com. Archived from the original on 10 September 2021. Retrieved 10 September 2021.
  18. ^ "Post Humour". www.comedy.co.uk. British Comedy Guide. 2021. Archived from the original on 7 May 2023. Retrieved 7 May 2023.
  19. ^ "Derek Awards Edinburgh Fringe". Facebook. Retrieved 10 June 2022.[self-published]
  20. ^ a b https://studentsunionucl.org/awards
  21. ^ "Derek Awards Edinburgh Fringe". Facebook. Retrieved 10 June 2022.[self-published]
  22. ^ Keating, Matt (13 November 2006). "Young, gifted and hacks". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 10 June 2022.
  23. ^ "The Cheese Grater, London Regional Winner". Student Publication Association. Retrieved 10 June 2022 – via Twitter.[self-published]
  24. ^ a b Scott, Geri. "SPANC23: National awards shortlists announced". Student Publication Association. Retrieved 29 October 2023.
  25. ^ Allegretti, Aubrey. "SPANC23: National awards winners announced". Student Publication Association. Retrieved 29 October 2023.

External links