A Guide to Magazines That Have Ceased Publication
Our continuing farewell to magazines that quit print under pressure from the recession and digital media. Some brands continue online (the smart ones), but many do not.
AUGUST 2009 |
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Home magazines continue to suffer amid the recession and real estate collapse. Southern Accents became the latest victim on Aug. 6, when Time Inc. said it would close the 32-year-old print edition, published six times a year, after the September/October issue. The website at SouthernAccents.com will continue.
Approximately 20 of the 29 employees at Southern Accents will lose their jobs, the company said. The Time Inc. Lifestyle Digital Group will handle SouthernAccents.com along with other brands, as the group has already been doing.
Ad pages in Southern Accents fell 37.4% in the first half, compared with the first half of 2008, according to the Publishers Information Bureau. Magazines as a whole, by comparison, saw ad pages slide 27.9%. Southern Accents reported paid and verified circulation averaging 405,635 in its most recent report, down nearly 1% from the period a year earlier as newsstand sales dropped 11% and subscriptions fell 5%, but its use of free public place copies surged.
"Southern Accents is an elegant, sophisticated brand that has resonated with its devoted readers for many years," said Sylvia Auton, a Time Inc. VP who oversees its lifestyle group. "However, in this difficult economy, we need to focus our energy, resources and investment on our biggest and most profitable brands, so we had to make this difficult decision."
JUNE 2009 |
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Vibe was no sure thing when it first appeared in 1992. "Convinced that hip-hop music is giving rise to the same kind of pervasive culture that rock-and-roll did a generation ago," The New York Times reported that September, "Time Warner Inc. and the musician Quincy Jones are starting a funky new magazine called Vibe."
That "funky new magazine" took off as hip-hop proved its founders right, particularly in the 1990s. The bottom line, however, was less reliable. Time Inc. sold Vibe in 1996; the buyers sold Vibe again 10 years later. Last February the latest owners, Wicks Group, cut circulation by a quarter, dropped two issues from the schedule and put the staff on a four-day work week -- with commensurate 10% to 15% pay cuts. About four months later, nonetheless, Wicks shut Vibe down entirely, as AOL's Daily Finance blog reported June 30.
The recession explains a good deal of Vibe's fatal troubles, but not all of them. Other factors likely include growing music coverage online and struggles within the music industry itself. Vibe's ad pages from January through June plunged 39.2%, according to the Media Industry Newsletter, a bigger decline than monthlies' average 22.8% drop. Vibe's paid and verified circulation averaged 817,825 over the second half of last year, down 8.6% from the half a year before, as a big expansion in free copies to doctor's offices and hair salons was overcome by big drops in subscriptions and newsstand sales, according to the Audit Bureau of Circulations.
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Add Nickelodeon to the list of family-oriented cable networks like Hallmark Channel and Disney who closed a magazine in 2009. The Viacom kids brand announced it will cease publication of 16-year-old Nickelodeon Magazine, as well as Nick Jr. Magazine and Nickelodeon Comics, at the end of 2009. The magazine group included some 30 employees. "While some staff members will stay on through the end of the year to finish publication of the final issues, the remaining staff regrettably will be let go," the company said in a statement.
2008 was a rough year for the kids title, with total qualified circulation down from 1,101,866 in December 2007 to 748,159, according to BPA Worldwide. Ad pages in Nickelodeon also fell 26.9% in 2008, a year when magazines overall saw ad pages fall 11.7%, according to the Publishers Information Bureau.
Nickelodeon President Cyma Zarghami said in a company memo, "From the onset, Nick Magazine set out to be a publication for all kids and to be inclusive of everything that they were interested in, with an irreverent attitude and humorous voice that was totally unique. It pioneered the children's magazine category, and continued to be a leader as the group grew to include Nick Jr. Magazine and Nickelodeon Comics.
"But as I am sure everyone knows, the magazine publishing industry as a whole is severely challenged, and because of that we have decided to exit the magazine business and will cease publishing them by the end of this year. This was a very difficult decision, given the amazing work that the magazine staff has turned out issue after issue and year after year."
APRIL 2009 |
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The magazine's debut issue, over 600 days in gestation, exemplified the new tone Portfolio strove to adopt, weaving business coverage (and ads) with fashion and lifestyle content (and ads). A two-page spread on a diamond company CEO pictured her posing in a strapless emerald silk chiffon gown, complete with fashion credits. Cover stories included "The New Masters of the Universe" by Tom Wolfe and "A Tiger Woods I.P.O?" by Michael Lewis.
But its tone, not to mention its massive overhead, lost some of its appeal as the global economy convulsed and shrank in 2008 and 2009. Advertisers cut all but their most important magazines. Portfolio's ad pages from January through the April issue fell 61% from the period a year earlier, which included one more issue, according to the Media Industry Newsletter. Most magazines suffered but not nearly that much: Ad pages for monthlies fell 22% from January through April.
"Even if the economy starts to recover, it's likely the advertising is going to lag it," said David Carey, the group president and publishing director, on the day the magazine closed. "The gap between where we needed the business to be in 2010 and 2011 proved to be too large."
The shutdown eliminated more than 85 jobs (although Portfolio at one point employed as many as 140), including those of editor in chief Joanne Lipman and publisher William Li.
MARCH 2009 |
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Blender, the music magazine founded by Felix Dennis, acquired plenty of fans along its way, including 768,000 paid subscribers toward the end of its run. But ad revenue fell far short. Ad pages at Blender sank 31% last year and plummeted another 57% from January through April of 2009, according to the Publishers Information Bureau and the Media Industry Newsletter. Monthlies as a whole, by comparison, sank 12% last year and another 22% through April.
For all its readers, circulation wasn't headed the right way either. Alpha had pushed its paid circulation guarantee to 1 million copies an issue from 800,000. But copies distributed to public places like waiting rooms grew the fastest, from 13,000 copies in the second half of 2007 to 100,000 a year later, according to company reports with the Audit Bureau of Circulations. Paid subscriptions fell 8% while newsstand sales declined 18%. The web site, Blender.com, will continue.
The title's shutdown, announced by the company with "great sadness," cost the magazine business another 30 jobs.
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Best Life had lived on the bubble since its expansion from a newsstand-only quarterly in 2004, each year a referendum on whether it would see another, but Rodale's entry into men's lifestyle finally met its end in March 2009. The May issue will be its last. The web site will go dark as well.
Best Life reported average paid circulation of 526,276 over the second half of last year, up 6.1% from the second half a year earlier. And the young title's ad pages were still growing, expanding 6.6% in 2008, the Publishers Information Bureau said. But the pressure on its advertisers, who are responding to recession by concentrating ad spending in a few top magazines, evidently proved too much. Ad pages fell 36.3% in the first quarter alone, according to the Media Industry Newsletter.
Rodale said it expects to find new positions for about a quarter of Best Life's 40-plus employees, including VP-publisher Michael Wolfe and editor in chief Stephen Perrine.
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American Express Publishing decided to take Travel & Leisure Golf out of print after 11 years, making the March/April issue the last.
Ad pages at Travel & Leisure Golf had sunk 13.9% in 2008, according to the Publishers Information Bureau. It reported average paid circulation of 194,047 over the second half of 2008, 32% lower than the 286,053 paid circulation it reported for the second half of 2007, according to the Audit Bureau of Circulations and BPA Worldwide. Including free copies distributed to public places like doctor's offices, the title reported average overall circulation of 637,048 over the second half of last year, according to BPA.
The print edition will be survived by an affinity membership club called Travel & Leisure Golf Players Club and possibly other elements. The company said it is considering its options with the website and events program.
FEBRUARY 2009 |
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Hallmark Cards got its magazine going just as major publishers were beginning to thin their portfolios in earnest, prompting concern from media buyers who considered the women's magazine category pretty well covered already. But Hallmark bet that its brand and retail distribution system would give it an advantage.
And the title, indeed, grew from a paid circulation guarantee of 400,000 to a guarantee of 800,000. It was still growing in 2008, posting an 11% gain in ad pages during a downturn that hurt the vast majority of titles. But it was not enough -- particularly not, the company said, given the "trends facing the magazine publishing industry as a whole."
"Despite favorable consumer acceptance of the publication, we can not justify continued investment in the magazine at a time when we must focus our efforts and resources only on those projects that will lead to long-term profitable revenue growth for the company," President-CEO Donald J. Hall Jr. said in a statement.
The magazine, which published six issues a year, employed 28 people; its shutdown also eliminates 10 related jobs in the parent company's creative division. Its website will also shut down.
FEBRUARY 2009 |
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Conde Nast decided to shut down Domino magazine and its website
only two weeks after naming one of its senior
executives to shepherd the title through the
recession. The magazine, which was introduced in
April 2005, hadn't run out of launch runway. But the
weather was getting worse. "The economy is bad," an
insider explained. "It's not getting better. We're
on the wrong side of the balance sheet."
Ad Age named Domino a
launch of the year in 2006. Its ad pages fell
only 4.5% in 2008, a decent performance in a year
when monthlies on the whole dropped 9.4%. But home
magazines have been bloodied by the implosion in the
housing market.
"Although readership and advertising response was
encouraging in the early years," Conde Nast
President-CEO Charles Townsend said upon closing the
title, "we have concluded that this economic market
will not support our business expectations."
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As recently as the millennium, Teen magazine was publishing 12 issues a year and maintaining paid circulation above 2 million. By 2008, it was publishing quarterly and selling just 200,000 copies. Meanwhile Hearst Magazines decided to concentrate on Seventeen alone, so it shut down CosmoGirl in 2008 -- and announced Teen's demise in 2009. The brand will continue in print only as a prom annual. Earlier shutdowns among teen or young-women's titles include Hachette's Elle Girl, Time Inc.'s Teen People and Conde Nast's Jane.
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Disney axed Wondertime magazine, the 3-year-old parenting title, after its March issue because of tough economic conditions, the company said. The website will go dark too, although some Wondertime blogs and community areas will head to other Disney sites such as FamilyFun.com. Unlike most of the magazines getting yanked from print these days, Wondertime was still growing. Its ad pages expanded 20% in 2008, a worse year for ad-page sales than even the disastrous 2001, according to the Publishers Information Bureau. But its ad pages were still small in number -- and 2009 threatened to severely slow their growth rate. Wondertime reported average paid and verified circulation just below 400,000 copies in the first half of 2008, the most recent six-month period available.
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Plenty appeared at just the right moment to capitalize on new interest in green living, but just the wrong time to introduce a new magazine. Instead of publishing "green issues" on glossy virgin stock every spring, its pages used 85% to 100% recycled paper every issue. It won shelf space from Hudson News to Whole Foods. Plenty's media kit for 2009, prepared before the end arrived, promised paid circulation of 200,000 six times a year. The economic meltdown, though, meant Plenty would need new financing to continue -- and made new funds impossible to secure. The carbon-neutral website is getting axed along with the print edition.
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Ziff Davis bought this magazine in 1996, when its paid circulation hadn't yet topped 400,000 but the promise of the growth in video games made its future look attractive. And it was, for a time. Average paid circulation topped 600,000 in 2005 and stayed there since. But online game coverage undermined the print version. After its final print issue, EGM will continue as an area on the 1UP Network, which Ziff Davis sold to Hearst's UGO Entertainment in early January.
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Country Home's paid and verified circulation had held steady at nearly 1.3 million copies, an impressive level that once attracted advertisers, but the meltdown in the housing markets simply savaged its ad-page sales. Ad pages in 2008 fell a full 25% from 2007, according to the Media Industry Newsletter. So Meredith shut it down, laying off its 40 employees as part of a larger round of cuts totaling 250. The website will go dark when the print edition shuts down after its March issue.
DECEMBER 2008 |
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Even shiny city magazines tailored and targeted for local elites can't escape the effects of recession. Or, as Ocean Drive Media Group founder Jerry Powers said: "We have decided to focus resources and energy on the strategic investments that are best suited to continue our growth objectives for the future success of our business." The December issue of Atlanta Peach, which had fewer than 10 employees, will be its last.
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Country Home's paid and verified circulation had held steady at nearly 1.3 million copies, an impressive level that once attracted advertisers, but the meltdown in the housing markets simply savaged its ad-page sales. Ad pages in 2008 fell a full 25% from 2007, according to the Media Industry Newsletter. So Meredith shut it down, laying off its 40 employees as part of a larger round of cuts totaling 250. The website will go dark when the print edition shuts down after its March issue.
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National Geographic pulled the plug on the quarterly print edition of The Green Guide just nine months after introducing it with a paid circulation guarantee of 100,000. The Green Guide began as a newsletter in 1994, expanded into online in 2002 and was acquired by National Geographic in March 2007. The quarterly print edition introduced in March 2008 was designed to be environmentally sustainable, using paper made with wood from well-managed forests as well as recycled sources. But the title wasn't a sustainable print business, at least as long as a recession crippled the economy. "National Geographic is suspending the quarterly print version of The Green Guide with the winter 2008 issue," the company said in a memo. "The Green Guide is a tremendous franchise and we will continue to focus our energies on our robust website of green-living tips at thegreenguide.com." National Geographic magazine itself eliminated jobs for 18 editorial employees in November.
NOVEMBER 2008 |
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Ziff Davis anticipated the eventual need to go all-digital, so it had already cut frequency to monthly from biweekly and chopped its guaranteed paid circulation to 600,000 from 700,000. But a sharp plunge in ad pages, which fell 35.8% in the first half of 2008 after sinking 32.4% in 2007, probably hastened its exit from print -- after 27 years.
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Despite the growing U.S. Hispanic population, Time Inc.'s weekly sports title Sports Illustrated put its spinoff SI Latino "on hiatus" after three years. It had been distributing 500,000 copies per issue.
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This was not the year for shelter magazines, particularly any published by companies looking to slash hundreds of jobs. Cottage Living was introduced as an unpretentious home magazine in 2004, and eventually promised more than 1 million paying readers but relied on public-place copies to reach the mark. Ad pages didn't fall sharply in 2008 -- just 5% -- but had never gotten big either, totaling just 514 in 2008. Time Inc. pulled the plug on the magazine's website, too.
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Readers loved this smart sports quarterly the Times started distributing inside the paper two years ago, but it cost way more to publish than it attracted in ad revenue. And that didn't seem to be changing, despite the success of the Times Magazine on Sundays and its fashion spinoff, T. The New York Times Co., not incidentally, is in no position to coddle money-losing propositions.
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The end of this shelter-focused spinoff of O, The Oprah Magazine, dealt just the latest blow to Hearst Magazines' success rate for new magazines. Hearst buried the news about shutting down O at Home in a press release about its editor's move to Country Living, apparently either expecting or hoping no one would read the news. The quarterly's paid circulation had topped 700,000 at its time of death.
OCTOBER 2008 |
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A classic example of a magazine more attractive to advertisers than readers, Men's Vogue probably overestimated even wealthy men's interest in fashion coverage. (By November, Conde would even close DNR, its trade publication about the men's fashion business.) Men's Vogue also was introduced directly into competition with GQ and Details, two established Conde Nast magazines already treating men to fashion photos and credits. Men's Vogue survives as a twice-a-year supplement to Vogue.
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An idea whose time came and went before the internet got so big. Maer Roshan's Radar suffered from the rise of online snark, blogs in general, celebrity saturation and, in the end, skittish financial backers. Radar was launched three times, but the last iteration was courtesy of the group of investors led by Yusef Jackson. That group bolted in October as the financial markets collapsed, selling the still-promising website to American Media, which planned to make it a competitor to TMZ.
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Barack Obama's victory may have made America safe again for "elites," but this title devoted to the world of Harvard graduates may have been too much -- or maybe that's wishful thinking. In any case, despite cover gets such as then-New York governor Eliot Spitzer, Manhattan Media said the economic downturn made life too hard to continue publishing 02138. (For those who didn't go to Harvard: The title is its ZIP code.)
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When Hearst created CosmoGirl in 1999, magazines for teen girls were the hottest thing around. Since then Conde bought YM to shut it down, Hachette killed ElleGirl and Time Inc. axed Teen People; teens shrugged and resumed clicking around the web. Ad pages at CosmoGirl sank 14.7% this year after a 10.5% stumble last year. So Hearst decided to concentrate on Seventeen, which it bought along the way.
AUGUST 2008 |
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"The current economic environment is difficult, and the mid-market home sector has been particularly hard-hit," said Jack Kliger, then the CEO of Hachette Filipacchi Media U.S., as he shut down Home. Circulation was holding steady, but ad-page sales had cratered 28% just through September issue; the economy only got worse after that. If Mr. Kliger hadn't closed Home in August, his successor would have killed it sometime in the following couple of months.
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If you think soft-core porn has a lucrative place in print, you may not have seen what's available online. Playgirl had other strikes against it, though, such as a vanishingly small base of advertisers. It was established in 1973 as a sort of counterpoint to Playboy, but the novelty disappeared long ago, while Playboy's own influence has shrunk enough to render a foil pointless. Its most recent owner, Blue Horizon Media, was either disinclined or unable to invest in its revival the way its editors wanted. A Playgirl website lives on.
JULY 2008 |
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Hearst introduced Quick & Simple in 2005 as a budget women's service title to compete with Time Inc.'s All You and Hachette's For Me, surprising media buyers who thought the category was already saturated. Maybe they were right. Hachette spiked For Me in 2006; Hearst gave up on Quick & Simple two years later. Quick & Simple's ad pages and newsstand sales were growing but still small. The recently revamped QuickandSimple.com continues to operate.
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You can understand why Conde got discouraged about Golf for Women during a year that was already challenging. Its ad pages slid 7.6% in the first half of 2008 and 5.9% in 2007, according to the Publishers Information Bureau. Its average paid and verified circulation increased 6.8% in the most recent report, but it managed that only with a 37.8% increase in copies distributed in doctors' waiting rooms and other public places. Newsstand sales, on the other hand, fell 12%.
JUNE 2008 |
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Launched three years ago, Future Snowboarding Magazine never matched expectations. Its subscriptions numbered just 32,000, and overall distribution ran about 93,000 at the end. Storm Mountain Publishing, publisher of Snowboard magazine, bought the assets of Future Snowboarding a month after its shutdown and merged the website into Snowboard-mag.com.
APRIL 2008 |
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Maintaining the relevance of computer magazines' print editions was looking a bit Sisyphean even by the spring of 2008, when it was clear a slowing economy was going to exacerbate all the challenges posed by digital media -- which were significant on their own. "Both the eyeballs of PC gamers and the essential advertising dollars needed to sustain a PC gaming magazine are moving online at an alarming pace," said Ziff Davis VP Simon Cox. The whole edit staff stayed on, however, to keep churning out the online version. Ziff Davis had introduced Games for Windows as a partnership with Microsoft in 2006.
MARCH 2008 |
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Even luxury magazines have proved vulnerable to lack of demand and the rising costs of print publishing. Spa Finder first appeared in 1994 and morphed into Luxury Spa Finder in 2004. But ultimately Luxury Spa Finder Interactive was much cheaper to run.
MARCH 2007 |
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Time Inc. announced the closure of Life magazine as a weekly print publication. The publisher, however, will continue to develop Life online and operate the brand's other businesses.
The April 20 issue will be the magazine's last. The reason for closure stems from the decline in the newspaper business and the outlook for advertising growth in the newspaper supplement category.
According to Time Inc., the response was not strong enough to warrant further investment in Life as a weekly newspaper supplement.
The magazine was first published as a weekly in 1936. It ceased publication in 1972, and returned as a monthly from 1978 to 2000. It re-launched as a weekly newspaper supplement in October of 2004.
Life carried more than 800 ad pages totaling almost $270 million revenue according to PIB. The title was carried in 103 newspapers across the country with a total circulation of 13 million.
Life will continue with its plan to launch an online portal to showcase its entire collection of 10 million images. The Web site will be free to viewers and is expected to launch later this year.
With its brand extension, Life will also continue to publish hard and soft cover photography books.




