PDA

View Full Version : LIFE Magazine to live again...


Dan C
07-17-2004, 09:58 AM
The latest version will be a weekly insert in certain newspapers across the country starting this October.

Will it feature eclectic stories about social issues, art, and culture fleshed out with excellent portrait and documentary photography? Or will it be just another fluffy celebrity shrine?
Hope for the best.

http://www.writenews.com/2004/061104_life_returns.htm


Life to Return as Weekend Magazine in Newspapers

Time Inc. has announced the relaunch of Life as a weekend magazine that will be distributed nationally in daily newspapers. At its launch in October 2004, the new weekly Life will be carried by more than fifty newspapers with a total circulation of nearly 12 million. Editorial in Life will focus on human interest stories told with both text and photography. Life will have to compete with existing newspaper supplement inserts like Parade and USA Weekend.

Life, The Weekend Magazine, will be distributed on Fridays in the Tribune Company's newspapers, including the Chicago Tribune, Los Angeles Times and Newsday. It will also appear in Knight Ridder's papers, including the Philadelphia Inquirer, Miami Herald and the San Jose Mercury News. The McClatchy Company will distribute the magazine in its papers: the Sacramento Bee and the Star Tribune of Minneapolis and others. In the New York metropolitan area, Life will be distributed in the New York Daily News.

Life was first published as a weekly in 1936. It ceased publication in 1972, but returned as a monthly in 1978, going briefly to weekly frequency during the first Gulf War before suspending publication in 2000. Life has periodically published a number of special issues as well as series of books under the Life imprint.

Andrew Blau, who as General Manager of Time Magazine also had responsibility for the Life brand, developed this new distribution model for Life, which will be Time Inc.'s fifth weekly (and largest circulation) magazine. He now becomes Life's President.

"Although it will certainly draw on Life's rich heritage, it will be a new magazine updated for its distribution method and the current American mindset. While Monday through Friday may be work, the weekends are for Life and we hope to help people get the most out of the two most important days of the week," said Blau.

Peter Bauer, who has been President of People magazine, will be Life's Publisher. Bauer was named president of People magazine in September 2002. He had previously served as publisher, since October 1998, and as associate publisher for the prior two years.

Bill Shapiro has been named Life's Managing Editor. He has been Managing Editor of Time Inc. Custom Publishing since joining Time Inc. in 2001. Shapiro led the team that created the concept and prototype of All You, a monthly women's magazine that Time Inc. will launch in September. He came to Time Inc. from Jungle Media where he was editorial director.

Grant
07-17-2004, 11:34 AM
It's like the third time they have brought it back to...uh...life. I guess they opted for the newspaper because few people today would buy it off the stands or get a subscription for it. The world's changed too much for that.

Michael
07-17-2004, 10:16 PM
It will be nothing like the past...I'll pass. Just another avenue for the same old news rehashed...

telliott
07-18-2004, 08:59 AM
Magazines have changed alot thanks to the net. My favorite computer magazines of the early '90s no longer exist (Windows Magazine, PC Computing). Others like PC Magazine have slimmed down quite a bit.

Some newer magazines come sealed with CDs and are WAY overpriced (some are $10 or more) and the CDs usually contain stuff you can download.

I still like a good magazine. They are more portable and easier to read than a computer screen.

Tim

JorgeGvb
07-18-2004, 09:02 AM
I still like a good magazine. They are more portable and easier to read than a computer screen.

Tim

They are much easier to take into the bathroom than a computer too! :D

Dan C
07-18-2004, 10:00 AM
It's hard for those of us in the traditional print profession to admit that the only thing saving our butts is the fact that our product is so bathroom friendly. :winkgrin:

I know for a fact that scientists all over the world are working on a foldable and potty-friendly digital device.

Dan C

Michael
07-19-2004, 12:34 AM
It's hard for those of us in the traditional print profession to admit that the only thing saving our butts is the fact that our product is so bathroom friendly. :winkgrin:

I know for a fact that scientists all over the world are working on a foldable and potty-friendly digital device.

Dan C

In this case size does matter!:laugh: