The Business of Magazines | Page 124 | the Fashion Spot

The Business of Magazines

^ Thanks for posting that, how interesting to see La Lopez couldn't find (good for her though) the time to re-shoot her Vogue cover. Funny thing is, later on she had to wait, and campaign hard to get a second shot, Weinstein had to put a good word in for Wintour.

There is also the infamous March 2002 cover shoot, Paltrow was supposed to be shot by Munro, but Wintour hated the cover images, and Gwyneth had to be called back to shoot the cover with Herb Ritts, apparently she had to stand on "a bloody rock, for 7 hours" to get the good shot. All inside shots (only 3 used) were still by Tom though, cant find the original article by WWD now.

I suppose that is why Paltrow was always so loved by Vogue, never above her to do re-shoots, and she did so many. Except she had to go and criticize the Met lol.
 
^Could it be the same thing that happened with Christy's August 2009 issue? The cover was shot by Steven Klein, but the editorial by Alex Majoli. Was Majoli given the chance but his cover shots were tragic? Or was Klein's main editorial rubbish that's why they went with a safer choice. His editorial is relaxed but look very pretty.

This was Majoli's shot
http://www.vogue.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/img-christy-turlington-burns_113558463330.jpg

The composition of the above photo looks cover worthy although I'm not sure with the styling. Could it be his cover shot try?
 
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^ I think its possible, but i didn't hear, or read anything about that shoot/issue, there were no reports.
 
It's weird no? Steven Klein got a US Vogue cover, the editorial was shot by Majoli (not part of the main photographer roster)..
 
I always thought/assumed that Christry wasn't supposed to get the cover for that issue, and that something changed last minute and Steven Klein was hired to shoot a cover. Because Alex Majoli is not a cover photographer.

And I belive the Jennifer Lopez shoot by Meisel was used for Vanity Fair in the end.
 
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A change at UK Cosmo (featuresexec.com):

UK Cosmopolitan has appointed Farrah Storr as editor. She moves from her editor position at Women's Health.

Cosmopolitan editor-in-chief Louise Court has moved from the magazine to become director of editorial strategy and content across Hearst Magazines UK. Court will be responsible for editorial content innovation, launching products and Hearst Empowering Women.

A replacement in the Women's Health editor role has not yet been appointed.
 
Oh wow, this will be an interesting move. Hopefully Storr would be able to shake things up a bit at Cosmo.
 
This is tremendous for Vanity Fair! Compare this with Natalia's September sales last year, no contest.

Caitlyn Jenner Vanity Fair Cover Sales On Track For Best Newsstand Numbers Since 2011

By Christopher Zara @christopherzara [email protected] on July 07 2015 11:16 AM EDT

Call her keepsake Caitlyn. Vanity Fair magazine is set to have its best newsstand sales in four-and-a-half years with help from Caitlyn Jenner, the Olympic icon who debuted her new look and name on the magazine’s cover last month in one of the viral news events of the year.

The issue is still on newsstands until Tuesday, and Vanity Fair has not released sales figures, but a spokeswoman confirmed Monday that the issue is on track to be the best-selling issue since Johnny Depp appeared on the cover in January 2011. That issue sold 495,000 copies.

Vanity Fair, owned by Conde Nast, pulled off a surprise coup last month when it landed an exclusive feature and photo spread with Jenner, whose gender transition had been the subject of intense media scrutiny. The issue featuring Jenner and the headline “Call Me Caitlyn” debuted online June 1 and hit newsstands June 9.

Official circulation figures from the Alliance of Audited Media won’t be available until September.

If Vanity Fair’s estimates pan out, the magazine will bring in more than two-and-a-half times its typical monthly sales of 193,107 and more than triple what it sold in July 2014, when actress Shailene Woodley graced the cover. That issue, according to AAM, sold only 134,769 copies.

Viral Chatter, Fit To Print

While impressive, the projection also speaks to the diminished power of the newsstand and its decreasing relevance as a repository of shared cultural events. Jenner’s June 1 debut and the accompanying photo spread by famed photographer Annie Leibovitz generated an earth-shattering response on social media. According to Twitter, the event generated more than 1.5 million tweets, and Jenner’s newly created Twitter handle surpassed 1 million followers in less than five hours, breaking a record set by President Barack Obama.

All of which raised questions of whether fans would line up to buy hard copies of the magazine when it appeared on newsstands and at other retail outlets days later. Tellingly, in terms of single-copy sales, the issue may not end up placing in the top five best-selling issues of Vanity Fair, thanks in part shifting media habits and an increasingly challenging retail environment.

Retail magazine sales have been slowly evaporating since the mobile revolution, with significant declines seen across almost every category, and publishers large and small have been adjusting their print runs accordingly. According to the Magazine Information Network, or MagNet, the number of magazines sold at retail outlets in the U.S. and Canada fell 14.2 percent in the first quarter of 2015, compared to the same period last year.

MagNet has placed some of the blame on retailers, which are dedicating less prime space to magazines and sometimes exiling their magazine displays to harder-to-find areas within their stores.

Jennifer Aniston, by comparison, had it easy. A decade ago, the “Friends” actress helped Vanity Fair set a newsstand record with 738,929 copies, as AdAge reported, but Aniston wasn’t competing with Candy Crush. Comparing today’s retail magazine sales with pre-iPhone numbers is like comparing today’s broadcast ratings with what they were before cable or the Internet.

Measured by digital impact, however, Jenner’s VF debut is unmatched. According to Vanity Fair, in the first 24 hours following her debut, more than 46 million people viewed Jenner’s cover story-related content on digital outlets like VF.com, YouTube, Facebook and Twitter. The issue garnered record traffic for the magazine’s website, with 9 million unique visitors in the first 24 hours. And the cover post got 7.7 million unique visitors on day one alone.

Fortunately for publishers, retail sales make only a small portion of most magazines’ total circulation. As of last year, Vanity Fair had a total circulation exceeding 1.2 million.

Source: International Business Times.com
 
Something interesting happened with the August 2015 US Glamour..it was hand-delivered to my house in the night (like a newspaper!). It had an insert from Glamour saying that they did this in an effort to expedite the issue to subscribers. Wow! Wonder if this will encourage other mags to do the same...fabulous idea! It came out quicker than the newsstand this time!
 
Anyone know why US Vogue is no longer on offer at Zinio.com ? Tried to buy the last issue, and i cant find it, but they used to have it for sure! Strange!
 
^ Oh, thanks a million for that. I couldn't find it at all earlier today (wondered if maybe they stopped selling it), thanks again. :heart: Interesting the past issues are not on anymore though!
 
^ Oh, thanks a million for that. I couldn't find it at all earlier today (wondered if maybe they stopped selling it), thanks again. :heart: Interesting the past issues are not on anymore though!

I just clicked on Magfan's link (because I made a mental note to bookmark - need to reorder Dec 13), and I saw it's still available until the Sept 13 issue.
 
^ Thanks, somehow i am having trouble to access it. And even when i search for it, it shows me all other Vogues except for US.
 
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Who is bankrolling all these projects of her?

July 16, 2015
Carine Roitfeld Adding Men’s Magazine
By Miles Socha

MAN IN THE MIDDLE: Carine Roitfeld already had Kurt Cobain and construction-worker shoots in the can for the launch of her new men’s magazine by the time the Paris shows for spring 2016 rolled around. Lo and behold the Saint Laurent and Givenchy shows — dedicated to California grunge and American work wear, respectively — confirmed her fashion instincts for the opposite sex aren’t so bad.

The editor confessed that male fashion doesn’t come to her as easily as women’s, and so she let her favorite style icons, past and present, guide the debut issue, slated for release Sept. 10 and polybagged with the seventh issue of CR Fashion Book.

These include River Phoenix, Robert Mapplethorpe, Jaden Smith and Christopher Walken. Roitfeld has a particular soft spot for the latter actor, whom she imagines in suits and camel coats. “I’m the biggest fan for 30 years,” she said, noting she cast model Lucky Blue to impersonate Walken, spying an uncanny resemblance.

She was also very impressed with “hoodie boy” Smith, the 16-year-old son of actor Will Smith, who already has his own clothing line and an investment in a sock factory, in addition to being a singer.

Also featured in the issue is budding model and musician Gabriel Day-Lewis, son of actor Daniel Day-Lewis. “They were very inspiring and had a lot to say,” she marveled of the youngsters. Roitfeld also tapped Kanye West to identify the next wave of talent in music.

Roitfeld is hardly new to men’s fashion, having styled G-strings in Gucci men’s campaigns and had purview over Vogue Homme International when she was editor in chief of French Vogue from 2001 to 2011. Yet she considers it tricky, and prefers to err on the side of classics, insisting that “fashion is the right jeans and the right T-shirt” and that “the man is more important than the clothes.”

Roitfeld is working with her same CR Fashion Book team on the men’s project, and relishes the chance to take in men’s shows by designers such as Raf Simons through to Alessandro Sartori for Berluti.

Subsequent issues of CR Men’s Book, to be published annually by Stephan Gan’s Fashion Media Group LLC, will be sold with CR Fashion Book at a cover price of $20 and a print run of 65,000.

Roitfeld figures the time is ripe to introduce the brother title, given heightened interest in men’s fashion, and what she sees as a less crowded field.

As of press time, the debut men’s supplement spanned 112 pages with 40 pages of confirmed advertising from such brands as Louis Vuitton, Saint Laurent, Givenchy, Gucci, Giorgio Armani, Prada and Tom Ford. The main issue of CR Fashion Book contains 128 pages of advertising, and sales are ongoing.

Source: WWD
 
Whoa that is surprising, so i guess the rumors that CR is on a brink of folding, weren't true.
 
She should focus her undivided attention on the main CR Fashion Book and improve on it first because heaven knows it badly needs some serious shaping up. I'm happy that she's expanding but imo, the bookazine is still in its premature stage and demands her 100% attention at the moment. We've been seeing lackluster editorials from her and what more now that her attention is divided between CR Fashion Book, CR Men's and Bazaar.
 

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