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2. Which magazines do you read?. And why?. 3. Why are magazines important?. Or are they?. 4. What makes magazines unique among the mass media?. . 5. Importance and uniqueness. America's earliest national mass mediumIn-depth, thoughtful reporting and opinion writingSpace and time
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1. intro to mass communication magazines February 6-8, 2007
2. 2 Which magazines do you read? And why?
3. 3 Why are magazines important? Or are they?
4. 4 What makes magazines unique among the mass media?
5. 5 Importance and uniqueness Americas earliest national mass medium
In-depth, thoughtful reporting and opinion writing
Space and time on both producers and consumers parts to explore broad, deep, complex issues
And issues reaching beyond local/regional boundaries
6. 6 Importance and uniqueness (ctd.) Subject matter taboo (or too intellectual) for TV
Subject matter simply not dealt with in mainstream media
Reflector and shaper of national culture, identity, image
And, not coincidentally, standards of beauty, consumption, wealth
7. 7 Importance and uniqueness (ctd.) Heritage of investigative, issues-oriented, political/social concern
Forum for voices not heard elsewhere (TV, newspapers)
Speak directly to/for specific consumer/ citizen groups
Production quality
All of which contribute to magazines longevity
8. 8 But magazines have always struggled for survival (let alone success) As a category
As individual titlesWhy?
9. 9 Among the challenges faced by magazines Retail cost
Production costs
Illiteracy (in 1800s)
Threat from each successive medium
Radio
TV
Internet
10. 10 Magazine specialization (As well see with radio), since 1950s, magazines have specialized in order to survive television
TV Guide a perfect example
Not a simple process
Texas Monthly
Arizona Highways
Both started out as niche publications
Both developed national audiences
11. 11 Magazine = storehouse Defoes Review (1704)
For elites
Political commentary
Looked like a newspaper
Gentlemans Magazine (1731)
Samuel Johnson
Alexander Pope
But early colonial storehouses only for elites!
12. 12 Other colonial magazines No middle class, raised cost issues
No widespread literacy yet in colonies
Colonial mags modeled on existing British titles
Ben Franklin, in Philadelphia
General Magazine
Ruthlessly suppressed competition
Used privileged position as Postmaster
By 1776, about 100 magazines in colonies
13. 13 1800s: the national magazine Better, cheaper technology
Fed growing US literacy and education levels
Better distribution and transportation
Most targeted women
Sara Josepha Hale: Ladies Magazine (1828)
Godeys Ladys Book (1830)
But also Saturday Evening Post (1821): men and women
The Nation, 1865
Oldest continuously-published magazine
14. 14 The importance of national childrens magazines Youths Companion (1826-1929)
What was its crucial 1892 contribution to American civic culture?(Hints: Francis Bellamy. Christopher Columbus. Schoolchildren.)
15. 15 What fueled mags growth in mid-to-late 1800s? Railroads
Increasing literacy rates
Mass production (printing technologies)
All lead to lowering of cover price
1870s: most popular mags sell for 10 or 15 cents
16. 16 What really made mags USs first national mass medium? The government!
Postal Act of 1879
Publishers allowed to mail mags at 2nd-class postage rates
17. intro to mass communication magazines (ctd.)February 8, 2007
18. National medium?National advertising By late 1800s, advertising revenues soar.
This builds (and builds upon) national marketplace for consumer goods.
19. National medium?National(istic) awareness/identity The magazine as an instrument of emerging, American nationalism
20. 20 Muckrakers (as T. R. dubs them in 1906) Early form of investigative reporting
Newspapers at first, then magazines
Not without personal risk to reporter
Ida Tarbell takes on Standard Oil
Lincoln Steffens takes on city hall
Upton Sinclair exposes meat packing biz
21. 21 Other objects of muckrakers attention Corruption in business, government, local police forces
Americas poor
Immigrants living conditions
Race relations
22. 22 Muckrakers results: 1900s-1910s Congress passes
Pure Food & Drug Act
Railroad Bill
Clayton Anti-Trust Act
Child labor laws
17th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
Any guesses as to which mag led its charge?
23. 23 An anti-muckraking magazine Saturday Evening Post
Popular fiction
Text and visuals romanticizing American virtues
Famous for (among other things) Norman Rockwells cover illustrations
24. 24 Through the first half of 20th century Magazines are general in their appeal
By 1945, 32 million families subscribe to one or more mags
Up from 200,000 families in 1900
25. 25 The biggies of General Interest Readers Digest
Life
TV Guide
National Geographic
More recently: AARP the Magazine (f/k/a Modern Maturity)
Time
Founder Henry Luce: journalistic objectivity is a myth; better to be fair than objective
26. 26 The power of photojournalism Major factor in popularity of general interest mags in 1st half of 20th century
Life, Look, Time
And now People, Us, Entertainment Weekly
Photographic images powerfully capture and communicate world events
And often affect public opinion and even policy
Examples?
But whats the downside of photojournalism?
Especially now?
27. 27 1950s onward: decline of general interest magazines Advertising money shifts to TV
No mag can match TVs reach
Paper costs rise in early 70s
Life
Look
Saturday Evening Post
all fail
But many womens magazines survive
28. 28 Magazines success strategy post-1950 Specialization!
Appealing to small, clearly defined niche markets
Unified internally by
Geography
Interests/hobbies
Income level
Occupation
Lifestyle
What else?
29. 29 Another mag survival strategy:convergence When one medium takes on the function of other(s)
And may support/work with others
Most obvious forms of convergence in the magazine world today:
online versions of magazines
webzines
30. 30 Examples of other types of media convergence in the mag world Magazines themselves!
PC World
Stereo Review
Rolling Stone
Magazine versions of TV shows (Oprah, Rosie, Martha)
TV Guide: since owned by News Corp. (Murdoch), supports Fox programming
The TV Guide channel
HGTV
31. 31 Classifications of (print) magazines Business/Trade/Profession
Industrial/Company/Sponsored
Consumer
Literary Reviews/Academic Journals
Newsletters
32. 32 Consumer magazine sub-categories Alternative: Mother Jones, The Utne Reader
Business/money: Money, Black Enterprise
Celebrity and entertainment: People, Entertainment Weekly
Childrens: Highlights, Ranger Rick
Computer: Internet, PC World
Ethnic: Hispanic, Ebony
Family: Fatherhood, Parenting
33. 33 Consumer sub-categories (ctd.) Fashion: Bazaar, Elle
General interest: Readers Digest, Life
Geographical: Texas Monthly, Bay Area Living
Gray: Modern Maturity
Literary: Atlantic Monthly, Harpers
Mens: GQ, Field & Stream, Playboy
34. 34 (ctd.) News: Time, U.S. News & World Report, Newsweek
Political opinion: The Nation, National Review
Sports: Sport, Sports Illustrated
Sunday newspaper: Parade, USA Weekend
Womens: Working woman, Good Housekeeping, Ms.
Youth: Seventeen, Tiger Beat
35. 35 Another way of looking at this Interpellation
(Louis Althusser, 1918-1990: French Marxist philosopher)
36. 36 The act of interpellation, or hailing, you Makes availableor thrusts upon youa subject position for you take up
Thus, creates you as a subject
37. 37 The questions, then: How do magazines interpellate their readers?
This goes beyond the question of how magazines (merely) address their readers
Do magazines reflect or shape/create the identity of their readers?
And, by extension, their culture?
38. 38 Online magazines Often divided into two subcategories
Purely online (online only): Slate, Salon
Online versions of print mags: Time, Entertainment Weekly, The Nation
Not huge hits at first
Only now are some coming into their own financially
Purely online mags have yet to be profitable!
39. 39 Magazine research services Standard Rate and Data (SDRS)
Collects info about mags
Sells info to ad agencies
Audit Bureau of Circulations (since 1914!)
Measures mags circulations
Keeps mags honest!
Why would this be necessary?
40. 40 What determines advertising rates? Actual circulation: number of copies of a magazine that are sold
Not controlled circulation
Free copies given away
Not pass-along readership
Copies read that were bought by others (friends, roommates, doctors, libraries)
41. 41 Circulation issue: subs vs. single-copy sales (pros/cons?)
42. 42 Chains
43. 43 Chains
44. Fewer than 90 U.S. magazines have circulations of 1,000,000+ The other nearly 22,000 U.S. magazines struggle to find a niche
45. 45 Magazine structure Editorial: content; writing quality; publication focus and mission
Production: machines and paperlayout and design----------------(Chinese wall)----------------
Advertising and sales: manage the income stream from ads.
Circulation and distribution (either paid or controlled)
46. 46 Magazine editions: another survival strategy! Regional
Split-run
DemographicWhy?
47. 47 Advertising issues Why is advertising important to magazine publishers?
What is complementary copy
And why is it controversial?
Whats the unique status of advertising in the magazine world (compared to, say, the TV or radio world)?
48. 48 Advertising issues (ctd.) Why would some magazines NOT accept advertising?
Either selectively or entirely?
What are advertorials?
And why do some people object to them?
49. 49 Magazines and democracy? How do/might magazines contribute to a stronger democracy?
Magazines arent the important national medium they once were
Moreover, magazines interpellate their readers as consumers more frequently than as citizens
How might magazines strengthen democracy?
50. 50 Mags and democracy (ctd.) Individualization/specialization
More groups targeted and represented
Ownership issues
Not as concentrated as newspapers or TV outlets
More voices represented
More open/appropriate venue for in-depth analysis & criticism than other media
51. 51 Magazines and democracy How do magazines interpellate their readers as consumers? As citizens?
Which do they do more often?
How do/might magazines contribute to a stronger democracy?
Magazines arent the important national medium they once were
How might magazines strengthen democracy?
52. 52 Mags and democracy (ctd.) Individualization/specialization
More groups targeted and represented
Ownership issues
Not as concentrated as newspapers or TV outlets
More voices represented
More open/appropriate venue for in-depth analysis & criticism than other media