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Magazines in the Age of Specialization Chapter 4.

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Presentation on theme: "Magazines in the Age of Specialization Chapter 4."— Presentation transcript:

1 Magazines in the Age of Specialization Chapter 4

2 “Cosmopolitan’s ability to reinvent itself repeatedly over the last 125 years testifies to the remarkable power of magazines as a mass medium to both adapt to and shape American society and culture.” http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ixhdnn3AkjQ

3 The Social and Cultural Role of Magazines Provided venues to discuss social issues – Public education – Abolition – Women’s suffrage – The Civil War More than 19,000 magazines published in U.S. Reflect and create what’s going on in American life

4 Examples of Magazine covers

5 Early History of Magazines European origins – Review, London, 1704 – First political magazine Gentleman’s Magazine, London, 1731 – First to use the term “magazine” – Published reprints of articles from newspapers, books, political pamphlets

6 Colonial Magazines Magazines developed slowly – Lack of widespread literacy – Advanced printing technology – Middle class First magazines launched, 1741 – American Magazine (Andrew Bradford) – General Magazine and Historical Chronicle (Ben Franklin)

7 United States, 1800s Specialized magazines – Religious – Literary periodicals – Law and medical professions General-interest magazines created – The Saturday Evening Post (1821) Women’s magazines appear – Ladies’ Magazine (1828) – Godey’s Lady’s Book

8 Women’s Magazines

9 Matthew Brady’s Photography http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=koLnFvPaya0&list=PL62FF316650AAFD06

10 Magazines go national Changes in society aid magazine industry – Increases in literacy and public education – Improvements in printing, postal technology – Advent of illustrations in magazines Magazines of note – Graham’s Magazine (1840–58) – Knickerbocker (1833–64) – The Nation (1865–present) – Youth’s Companion (1826–1929)

11 Modern American Magazines Distribution costs fall – Postal Act of 1879 lowered postage rates By late 1800s, advertising soared – Captured customers’ attention – Built national marketplace Magazine circulation flourished

12 Muckrakers Teddy Roosevelt coins term in 1906 Early form of investigative reporting Leads to much-needed reforms: – Pure Food and Drug Act (1906) – Meat Inspection Act (1906) – Increased government oversight of business – Progressive income tax – Direct election of U.S. senators

13 General-Interest Magazines Popular from 1920s to 1950s Investigative journalism and broad topics Photojournalism provides boost – A visual advantage over radio

14 Successful General-Interest Magazines Saturday Evening Post – First magazine to reach 2 million in circulation Reader’s Digest – Most popular magazine in the world during 1980s Time – Interpretive journalism using reporter-researcher teams – Circulation of 2.6 million in late 2000s Life – Oversized pictorial weekly – Pass-along readership of more than 17 million

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16 Decline of General-Interest Magazines Advertising money shifts to TV Production costs increase Postal rates increase New types of magazines are born – TV Guide, 1953 Fills need for program listing – People, 1974 – Capitalizes on celebrity craze of TV culture

17 Types of Magazines Current trend toward highly specialized magazines – Appeal to narrower audiences – Guarantee advertisers can reach niche markets Groups defined by: – Profession, lifestyle, gender, age, ethnic group – Hobbies and special interests

18 Examples of Categories Men and women – Playboy, Ladies’ Home Journal, Woman’s Day Entertainment, leisure, sports – Sports Illustrated, Rolling Stone, National Geographic Age-specific – Highlights for Children, Ranger Rick, AARP The Magazine

19 Online Magazines Internet allows magazines to extend or maintain reach when print becomes insufficient, too expensive. – Popular Mechanics offers interactive tie-ins online. – Some print magazines become online-only. – Conversely, some cable networks publish print magazines to extend synergy. Some magazines are online-only from the start. – Webzines – Salon, Slate

20 Economics: Money In Advertisers – Majority of consumer magazine revenue – 50:50 ratio between ads and editorial content – Strategies to retain advertisers (regional, split-run, demographic editions) Newsstand and subscription sales – Renewals, evergreen subscriptions (automatic renewal), controlled circulations

21 Economics: Money Out Content development – Editorial staff, freelancers Production – Machines, paper, layout and design Sales and marketing – Manage the income stream from ads Distribution – Subscriptions, postage

22 Chains dominate business Allow more funding Cuts costs with central production Some major examples: – Condé Nast – Time Inc. – Hearst Corporation – Meredith Corporation – Rodale Press

23 Meredith MagazineTitles

24 Hearst MagazineTitles

25 Rodale Press

26 Magazines in a Democratic Society Specialization means magazines no longer foster a national identity Impact of dependence on advertising – Some publications view readers as consumers first – Controversial content often purged to satisfy advertisers, corporations Magazines still inspire and contribute to democratic debate – More magazines available than TV channels – Magazines can unite dispersed groups – Magazines have less deadline pressure than TV, newspapers


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