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The Business of Magazines

Meet Radhika Jones, Vanity Fair’s Next Editor-in-Chief

In a candid interview at the V.F. headquarters, Jones talks about following in the footsteps of legendary editor Graydon Carter, hints at future areas of growth, and discusses her various inspirations, journalistic and otherwise.

by Joe Pompeo
November 13, 2017 5:49 pm

On Monday afternoon, shortly after The New York Times broke the news of her appointment as the next editor-in-chief of Vanity Fair, Radhika Jones visited the editorial and sales staff of V.F. at its headquarters on the 41st floor of One World Trade Center. Jones was accompanied by Condé Nast C.E.O. Robert A. Sauerberg; Vogue editor-in-chief and Condé Nast artistic director Anna Wintour; and, of course, the man Jones succeeds, Graydon Carter, the legendary editor who has run V.F. since 1992 and announced in September that he would be stepping down at the end of the year. “I truly feel honored to be entrusted with this role,” Jones, who is 44, said to the assembled staff members, beside a wall emblazoned with the mantra “Think Like a Start-Up.”

Jones, a former high-ranking editor at Time and The Paris Review, spent the past year as the editorial director of the books department at The New York Times. She will begin her V.F. tenure on December 11. Shortly after addressing the troops, she sat down to talk with me.

Vanity Fair: You met Graydon for the first time this morning. Did he give you any good advice?

Jones: He said I’m gonna be very busy for at least a year or two, probably longer. It’s fun to meet a legend on a Monday.

Your name first surfaced in press reports a couple of weeks ago. When did your conversations with Condé Nast begin?

It was mid-September.

And at what point did it become clear to you that you wanted this job?

It was appealing to me at first mention. Vanity Fair holds this very unique place in the culture. There’s no title that compares. I’ve worked at a number of different places, and the more I thought about it, the more I thought that I could draw on different parts of my experience in a way that would be meaningful. But I always thought I was a long shot, so maybe that took a bit of the pressure off.

I heard that you submitted an ambitious memo. Can you walk me through the broad contours of your pitch to Condé Nast?

I think I should probably wait and just let it show.

On paper, your background is very literary, academic even. What are your interests in Hollywood and society, some of Vanity Fair’s strongest suits?

I’m fascinated by celebrity culture. When I started at Time in 2008, I was the arts editor, and it felt like this moment where entertainment and celebrity were really starting to change. Reality TV was gaining momentum, and the ways that people watched TV and watched movies and read about them and participated in the voyeurism of celebrity life, all of those things seemed to be changing. It’s the kind of thing you can look back on, years later, and think, wow, something fundamental shifted in the culture. I also happen to have read Tina Brown’s Vanity Fair Diaries this summer, and found it interesting to think about how she positioned high and low culture, because they’re so much more mixed now, and it’s an interesting proposition for a magazine like Vanity Fair to sort that out. It feels right to me to be thinking about these things at this moment. It feels like our culture is calling for it.

All magazine brands are facing intense pressures as they grapple with the shift away from being print-driven platforms. In terms of Vanity Fair’s platforms, where do you see the most exciting opportunity?

I think it has opportunity on every platform, but I think of significant interest to me, coming out of the gate, are the Web site and the events. They’re both areas where Vanity Fair is already strong and it would be incredible to build on that.

Having overseen the Time 100, which is a hugely influential events franchise, what are your ambitions for Vanity Fair’s events business in particular?

There are a lot of possibilities, but it’s important to sit down and talk to everyone who’s involved and figure out what the priorities should be.

What are you favorite parts of Vanity Fair? What are stories or sections or areas of coverage that have most dazzled you?

I’ll say a nerdy one first: the Star Wars portfolios. I love photography in general, and I love spectacular portrait photography and photojournalism, and I think that’s such a great strength of this magazine. Basically, what I’m saying is, everything. But I also love really deeply reported long-form narrative. And profiles. I’m a big believer in the ability to tell stories through people, and so for me, the profile is a way not just to get to know someone who’s important, but to figure out something about the way we live now and what we care about.

You were at the Times just short of a year. What did you learn there?

It was an amazing year to be at the Times, and it did feel like a transformative year. I learned a lot about talent, and also about engaging with the reader and how important that is. I think we all know this, but what was really emphasized for me, in my year at the Times, was how a great publication can create a community around its content.

I’m sure they were fighting to keep you.

The Times is a hard place to leave. I will say that, for me, it was a wonderfully welcoming place, and I will miss it a lot. In the end, I felt that this opportunity was unique.

What are you like as a media consumer? What do you read? What do you watch? Who do you follow on Instagram?

I follow National Geographic so I can see all the animals, and also travel sites. I love travel magazines and food magazines, and I read New York and The New Yorker and other things with the words “New York” in them. I’m on Twitter, so I read the things that come to me from any number of places. Because I’ve been immersed in books in the past year, my reading has skewed toward books and book trades. I’m obsessed with The Americans, and I can’t wait for the new season of The Crown. I aspire to watch more television. There’s so much right now that you have to really make a commitment. I need to re-commit.

What would be your biggest gets for Vanity Fair? Who do you want to see on the cover?

I’m gonna make a private list and put it in a drawer and in a year, we can take it out and look at it.

As someone who’s relatively unknown compared to some of the other candidates who were being considered for this position, like Janice Min or Andrew Ross Sorkin, what’s one thing you’d want people to know about you?

That I’m an omnivore, culturally speaking, and story-wise too. I’m always ready to be interested in something. That’s my default position.

Source: VanityFair.com
 
For a very long time, Vanity Fair has been a vehicle for the personality of its editor. The magazine has been powered by the oversized energies (and ego) of Tina Brown and Graydon Carter, and I find it hard to imagine otherwise.

If cost-cutting is part of the exercise, I'm interested to know what sort of results they're expecting to see, and how long she'll get to achieve them.
 
If cost-cutting is part of the exercise, I'm interested to know what sort of results they're expecting to see, and how long she'll get to achieve them.

That's what I'm thinking as well! This is a cost-cutting exercise. She sounds decent enough as an editor, but not very evolved. This magazine is far too immense for her. It's not just a celebrity tabloid, there's the political reporting, the large corporations, moneyed family intrigues, the incessant lawsuits. How will she manage all that?
 
Happy for her. Though she has a tough job to fill in. The political reporting is what I enjoyed about VF. And hope she doesnt shy away from it
 
Just out of interest, has anyone actually checked if white models sell better than black models? Surely there is some data out there.

That's a really good question. Dont't get me wrong but I believe they've checked which model sells better and which one is not. It's a buisness and magazine need to be profitable. That's why they put Kate, Gisele or even Natalia instead of Naomi. She can complain as much as she wants but that's the way it is.

Another thing is that everyone is calling Alexandra racist because she didn't use models of coulour. How many black models were used in French, Italian or even US Vogue? The black issue of VI has changed the way people were looking at models of coulour but in fact there was not so many of them having covers and big campaigns. You have to see the money first. If people are not ready to see black, asian models on the cover, they wont buy magazine. We can like it or not but that's the way it is.
 
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That's a really good question. Dont't get me wrong but I believe they've checked which model sells better and which one is not. It's a buisness and magazine need to be profitable. That's why they put Kate, Gisele or even Natalia instead of Naomi. She can complain as much as she wants but that's the way it is.

Another thing is that everyone is calling Alexandra racist because she didn't use models of coulour. How many black models were used in French, Italian or even US Vogue? The black issue of VI has changed the way people were looking at models of coulour but in fact there was not so many of them having covers and big campaigns. You have to see the money first. If people are not ready to see black, asian models on the cover, they wont buy magazine. We can like it or not but that's the way it is.


Just because others do it doesn't make it okay. The more we defend this behavior, the more it'll happen. The black issue of VI was a risk, and it paid off cuz the issue sold out instantly. Alexandra had the power to take these risks but she didn't. And it would have been a lot less of a risk if she pushed for black models after the black issue of VI. She had about 300 issue, and the fact that she wasn't willing to take any risks for the sake of sales is not acceptable. Vogue should be always be moving forward and pushing boundaries.

And how do you explain the fact that she hired 54 white people? She says "[she] included the people [she] thought interesting." So it seems she only found white people interesting.
 
It seems Vogue Paris are not having a good 2017 in terms of sales. Valentina Sampaio's cover earlier this year is not only their worst selling March cover in years, but it's also the worst selling issue since 2012. It turned around 99K in French and global sales. The rest of the months all average around 100K, which is a slight decrease from last year. Luckily Anna Ewers gave them their best selling issue for this year, which incidentally outsold the Instagirls September cover last year.

I'm keen to see how the fake fur cover sold, because June/July was a measly 146K.....
 
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I was crazy about that Valentina cover... but I wonder if the word 'transgenre' across the front in big letters made any difference?

Anna Ewers is like a current-day Claudia Schiffer, so perhaps the appeal of certain things never changes.
 
It seems Vogue Paris are not having a good 2017 in terms of sales. Valentina Sampaio's cover earlier this year is not only their worst selling March cover in years, but it's also the worst selling issue since 2012. It turned around 99K in French and global sales. The rest of the months all average around 100K, which is a slight decrease from last year. Luckily Anna Ewers gave them their best selling issue for this year, which incidentally outsold the Instagirls September cover last year.

I'm keen to see how the fake fur cover sold, because June/July was a measly 146K.....

I'm not that surprised to be honest. While VP for the last 17 years has always been about style and fashion, lately, it was less about style. This is the magazine people used to look up to in order to find inspirations on how to dress and that had a real "fashion to reality" value.

The 70's and 80's are great but it was too much this year.

And about Valentina. I wonder if this wasn't much about Valentina not being a regular face for the magazine than her being transgender. On top of that, she is not really identifiable outside of the magazine. Anna Ewers or Edie Campbell are in Isabel Marant, Sandro and other brands like that campaigns. They are the faces of Chanel and Saint Laurent...Brands that are very into the magazine's aesthetic.

While i command Emmanuelle for Making the magazine more diverse in those past 2 years than it has been in the past, she needs to do more and really push some models harder.

The fact that Gigi, Bella and Kendall have totally disappeared is a proof that people don't care about them here. And i must say that i like that because VP is still one of the few Vogue to not be so attached to celebrity culture.

In fact, it's the magazine where the disconnect between social media reactions and actual sales is really significant.
 
Happy to hear that Anna is still selling so well at VP! And thank you for your thoughts on my question, cul8tr and Benn98:flower:

I recently noticed Vogue Paris has unblocked me on instagram. I guess they unblocked everyone who made negative comments about the Kendall "Legend" cover once the media hype died away. I still have not forgiven them though...:angel: The bastards.
 
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‘Panic’ as Radhika Jones, Vanity Fair’s New Editor, Takes the Helm

There is ‘panic’ at Vanity Fair as new editor Radhika Jones prepares to take over from Graydon Carter. With falling budgets, how will she keep the magazine in its glossy prime?

By Lloyd Grove
11.16.17 11:00 AM ET

The late Steve Florio—the larger-than-life, charmingly hyperbolic president and chief executive of Condé Nast who died in 2007—liked to tell colleagues about going to lunch one day with Vanity Fair editor Graydon Carter very early in what turned out to be Carter’s celebrated 25-year tenure.

It was an anecdote that, more than two decades later, might offer a glimmer of hope and optimism to Vanity Fair’s next editor, Time magazine and New York Times alum Radhika Jones, as she prepares succeed the legendary Carter on Dec. 11.

In Florio’s account, as soon as the two men took their seats in the dining room of the Royalton Hotel, a favorite Condé Nast watering hole, the Canadian-born Carter blurted out: “Is this the lunch where you fire me?”

Carter may or may not have said that out loud, according to an informed source. But if he didn’t say it, he was certainly thinking it.

His upward trajectory since that moment could serve as an encouraging object lesson.

Yet this week Jones finds herself stepping into what might be called an exceedingly fraught situation, redolent of the panic and paranoia that nearly always accompany major changes at Condé Nast.

“I have a lot of friends who work at Vanity Fair. They’re all freaking out,” said a well-connected editor who, like several others quoted in this story, requested anonymity in order to speak frankly. “I think all the staff are in panic. They know that they’ve been on the gravy train for a long time. Clearly she’s going to have to go through the contributors and weed them out.”

A second editor, however, cautioned that a wholesale bloodletting of legacy writers and editors would be profoundly unwise.

“Learn how the previous generation did it before you make your changes—in other words, learn how to write a sonnet before you write free verse,” this person said. “It’s a big ship and those older people know where all the duct tape is. They have the institutional memory, whereas the 23-year-olds are not going to be ready for that just yet.”

The vaunted Condé Nast gravy train has plainly run out of steam. Nine years after the magazine business imploded with the deep recession of 2008 and 2009, Condé Nast is grappling with the same unpleasant realities confronting every other publisher.

Even Carter—who scored a temporary victory last year against a corporate cost-saving scheme that would have required Vanity Fair to lose its dedicated creative director and fact-checking department in a consolidation move with other Condé Nast titles—has been putting out the magazine on around 60 percent of its pre-recession budget, says a knowledgeable source. Once-lavish contracts that rewarded contributing editors with monthly stipends have all but vanished, and most contributors are instead paid on a piecework basis.

The current issue is graced by a meta satirical exchange of letters between Carter and a fictional contributing editor, Edwin Coaster, who is offering to write a chronicle of his serious illness and demise.

“The days of a writer’s getting a six-figure deal to do a column-by-column diary of his pending death are long gone,” the fictional Carter writes back in his rejection letter. “In the old days, I paid Molly Ivins $20,000 for fifteen hundred words on her struggle to open a mayonnaise jar, and we sent a livery driver in a Rolls-Royce Silver Cloud III all the way to Texas just to pick up the jar and bring it back to New York so our fact-checker could confirm that it was unopenable.”

According to the New York Times, 2017 is expected to generate $100 million less in revenue for Condé Nast than last year’s proceeds; 80 employees across the company’s 20 magazine titles are slated to lose their jobs; GQ, Glamour and Architectural Digest are being forced to reduce the frequency of their print editions; and Teen Vogue is ceasing print publication entirely to become a web-only enterprise.

Jones, meanwhile, is being hired at a significantly lower salary than her predecessor; her rumored starting salary of $500,000-$600,000 a year pales by comparison to Carter’s reported $2 million deal.

“It’s a bit of a glass cliff,” said a prominent editor. “Women always get hauled in to do the jobs that feel undoable.”

The Harvard-educated Jones is, by all accounts, a brainy academic who cut her journalism teeth at such rarefied and erudite publications as Paris Review, Artforum and Moscow Times, and received her comparative literature doctorate from Columbia University; at Time magazine, she started out nine years ago as an arts editor.

Her most recent job—editorial director of the New York Times’ book coverage—is hardly a traditional calling card for leading a glossy monthly devoted to pop culture, celebrity, and sumptuous photo spreads of Hollywood stars—a fizzy concoction leavened by deeply-reported articles on politics, foreign affairs, culture and history.

The current issue features “J-ROD!” on the cover (“JENNIFER LOPEZ and ALEX RODRIGUEZ on Love, Beauty and Redemption,” a puff piece written by contributing editor Bethany McLean). Also teased on the cover are a Joe Biden interview and an excerpt from his new book (with portraiture by Annie Leibovitz), an investigative piece by Michael Lewis on “Trump’s Cruel War on Rural America,” a retrospective on the life of Margaret Trudeau, the former Canadian first lady and mother of the current prime minister, and a story titled “Meet London’s Kardashians.” (Do we have to?)

Jones’s most relevant credential to run Vanity Fair, arguably, was overseeing the annual Time 100 Gala for several years before she joined the newspaper of record a year ago; yet her decidedly un-glitzy profile to date could well be an advantage in terms of managing the expectations of the world at large.

She comes to her new job with no specific mandate to trim expenses, and, officially anyway, has free rein to make Vanity Fair her own. But according to half a dozen magazine denizens who spoke to The Daily Beast on condition of not being named, Jones’s new duties will inevitably require her to slash the masthead, cut freelance fees and editorial budgets, oversee shrinking print advertising revenue, and boost the magazine’s live event business and digital presence.

She’ll be doing all that and more while playing the unenviable and no doubt unwilling role of grist to the media rumor mill.

The March 2018 issue will be the first to bear her imprint.

“The learning curve will be very steep for her, because she hasn’t done the job before—and actually it’s a very difficult job,” said a Condé Nast Kremlinologist. “Arguably it’s harder to enter a magazine and make it relevant now because you’re up against much more competition online.”

Jones will be at pains to figure out a way to make Vanity Fair more pertinent and news-breaking than it has been in recent years, but with fewer financial resources, said several editors who described the magazine as surprisingly slow off the mark on the Donald Trump phenomenon and the Harvey Weinstein sexual misconduct scandal—and sexual misconduct in the film industry generally—especially because Hollywood has historically been Vanity Fair’s wheelhouse. (In next year’s Hollywood issue timed to the Oscars, Carter will make a cameo appearance—Alfred Hitchcock-like—amid the three-panel cover display featuring the hottest actors and actresses.)

And while several editors praised the immediacy of “The Hive,” the magazine’s web-only editorial product which launched in June 2016, they noted that like much of Condé Nast, the magazine has been late to the game in its digital presentation and exploitation of video.

Still, Vanity Fair's digital director Michael Hogan noted that, according to the web analytics service Omniture, the number of unique visitors to VF.com–averaging 17 million per month from August through October of this year–has increased by 428 percent since October 2013.

“You’ve got to inject some new life into it,” said the Kremlinologist. “They’ve got to bring in new people, clear out old people, and she’s going to have to learn how to be an editor in chief.”

And if the gossip-driven Condé Nast corporate culture remains true to form, Jones is “going to be up against a lot of hostile editors and writers who are going to talk to you, [New York Post media columnist] Keith Kelly, and whoever else is out there online—which will be designed to undermine her.”

“If you fail everybody will know it,” a different editor told The Daily Beast. “It’s not like you’re failing at some obscure web site in Seattle. This is like the Yankees.”

In press interviews with her former employer, the Times, and her future one, Vanity Fair, Jones has been cautious and elusive about her plans and point of view, much like a Supreme Court nominee testifying before the Senate Judiciary Committee.

“I need to get oriented first—there’s a lot to take in,” she told the Times. “I’m just really interested in discovery.” She added vaguely, “It’s hard for me to exactly figure out when I became obsessed with magazines.”

In an oddly impolitic (but refreshingly honest) admission, Jones acknowledged that when she was growing up (still in her teens when Carter took the helm) she only read Vanity Fair “on and off.”

Jones was chosen over a slew of better known and more experienced candidates who reportedly included the Hollywood Reporter’s Janice Min, New York’s Adam Moss, GQ’s Jim Nelson, Smithsonian’s Michael Caruso, People’s Jess Cagle, and even Times “Dealbook” columnist and CNBC personality Andrew Ross Sorkin. (It’s revealing that Carter, a college dropout, had never heard of Jones until a couple of weeks ago as she emerged as a finalist for his job, according to sources; and until she was announced as his successor Monday at Condé Nast headquarters in One World Trade Center, Carter had never met her.)

Jones was the favorite candidate of New Yorker editor David Remnick, who—along with Condé Nast artistic director (and Vogue editor and publisher) Anna Wintour—was tasked by Condé Nast chief executive Bob Sauerberg to interview likely prospects, solicit their action-plan memos, and present Sauerberg with a culled list of the most promising candidates.

Wintour’s preference, according to sources, had been Janice Min, a celebrity editor in the tradition of Brown, Carter (and, for that matter, Wintour), who built a reputation for aggressive celebrity journalism when she ran Jann Wenner’s Us Weekly more than a decade ago and years later when she remade the Hollywood Reporter from a sleepy trade publication into a news-making web site and a must-read glossy weekly.

Wintour’s fave, Min—who has been earning seven-figure salaries since her Us Weekly days—would have come at significantly higher price than Jones. But she is a known quantity in Hollywood, has longstanding relationships with high-end advertisers, and arguably would have hit the ground running and would been better positioned to create buzz and attract ad revenue.

Ironically, according to sources, it was Carter who raised objections months ago when Wintour and Sauerberg were considering acquiring the Hollywood Reporter for Condé Nast; he warned them that the revamped trade sheet—whose movie star and media coverage is similar to VF’s—was likely to be a money-loser for the company, and that such a plan would be “a terrible idea.” In the end, it didn’t happen.

In the early 1990s, on the day that Florio and Carter lunched together, Condé Nast was flush with cash, and Vanity Fair’s budget shortfalls were generously subsidized by the massive profits of Glamour, the privately-held company’s golden egg-laying goose.

The late Condé Nast chairman S.I. Newhouse ran the family-owned business with an eye toward opulence, was famously supportive of his editors, deeply loved his magazines, and spared no expense to achieve his vision; he had personally recruited Carter and was invested in his success.

Yet even Carter—who came to the iconic, Hollywood-centric glossy after toiling at Time, founding Spy magazine and running the New York Observer—initially had a tough go of it trying to establish VF’s refreshed mission and new identity with luxury advertisers and kibitzers in the media, while corralling a staff of sometimes difficult writers and recalcitrant editors to instill a sense of urgency and innovation.

The optics were especially difficult, of course, after the illustrious eight-year run of Tina Brown (later the founding editor of The Daily Beast), who took over VF when it was a highbrow, pompously literary culture mag—led, ironically, by a former New York Times editor who’d had similar bookish duties to Jones’s—and turned it into an urgent must-read; Brown had gone on to remake the New Yorker, VF’s corporate sibling, from the sometimes staid and precious journal of the William Shawn era into an occasionally indecorous, media-savvy weekly buzzing along with the news cycle.

Brown—who has just published a book-length account of her VF years, The Vanity Fair Diaries—had this advice for Radhika Jones as she assumes her new responsibilities.

“Oh, completely rip it up, and start again if you want,” Brown told Time magazine. “I’m a huge believer in reinvention. And we put out amazing DNA that lasted for, good lord from ’84 to where we are now. It’s time for it to be rethought. I don’t think you want to stay in template left by your predecessor.”

In an email to The Daily Beast, Brown added that Jones’s VF should “find new voices of women who are changing the culture” and “needs to be much more global” with “more emotional content and big narratives out of VF's traditional comfort zone.”

It’s unlikely anymore, however, that any such comfort zone exists.
source | Thedailybeast
 
Vanity Fair’s new editor poised to wield the axe
Radhika Jones to cut budget by 30% as Condé Nast grapples with industry slowdown

New World yesterday

At one of the magazine industry’s most revered titles, a baton has been passed following the departure of Graydon Carter from Vanity Fair after 25 years as editor. He is succeeded by Radhika Jones of the New York Times, who has landed one of publishing’s plum jobs — but who will face immediate challenges.

Condé Nast, which owns the title, has been grappling with an industry-wide slowdown in advertising and circulation revenue and held off cutting costs at Vanity Fair while Mr Carter was editor. That will change under Ms Jones, who officially starts next month: she will be told she has to trim the editorial budget by 30 per cent, according to two people briefed on internal discussions.

Other changes resisted by Mr Carter are also looming, such as the merger of Vanity Fair’s art and picture departments into Condé Nast’s centralised “creative group”. The publisher’s other titles are already part of this unit, which handles production issues for its portfolio of magazines: only the New Yorker and Vanity Fair have, to date, been excluded.

Condé Nast will find some of its savings for Vanity Fair in Ms Jones’s remuneration package: she will earn about $500,000 a year, substantially less than Mr Carter, who was paid about $2m a year plus a generous perks package that included use of a private plane, according to one person briefed on the arrangements.

Condé Nast declined to comment, but a person close to the company disputed Ms Jones’s salary figures.

The company originally considered a battery of big-name editors to succeed Mr Carter but had to shift its approach in line with budget constraints. Jim Nelson, the editor of GQ’s US edition, was a contender for Mr Carter’s job, as was Dylan Jones, the editor of GQ’s UK edition, and Geordie Greig, editor of The Mail on Sunday.

“Their financial expectations for this search process shifted — and virtually eliminated any ‘known’ name as a line item,” said one person briefed on the hiring process.

For Mr Nelson, the cold reality of the new climate sweeping the company set in last week when he had to lay off several GQ staff members.

At Vanity Fair, other savings will have to be found: the magazine has a roster of highly paid contributors and a person briefed on Condé Nast’s plans said a cull was looming: “Expect a bloodbath.”

The magazine that for decades has embodied glamour and prestige, melding Hollywood coverage with fashion, investigations and society pieces, is cutting its cloth for the reality of digital publishing.

PwC, the professional services firm, forecasts print advertising revenue for consumer magazines will fall to $6.7bn in the US by 2021, less than half the $13.6bn that magazines generated in 2012. Print circulation sales are projected to drop 23 per cent to $6.1bn over the same period.

The UK will see a 49 per cent drop in print ad revenue to $474m and a 37 per cent fall in circulation to $1.3bn.

Magna Global, a media buying agency, expects magazines’ global advertising revenues to fall 13 per cent this year, while Enders Analysis, a media research group, has warned that the consumer magazine market is reaching “an existential threshold”.

Condé Nast has slashed budgets and staff at other titles; it has cut the print run of Glamour’s UK edition to twice a year and ended Teen Vogue’s print version entirely.

Across the industry, few titles have been spared the downturn. This has led some publishers, such as Jann Wenner, to think what would have once been unthinkable. The founder of Rolling Stone, the rock-and-roll magazine that embodied the free wheeling, no-holds-barred journalism of writers such as Hunter S Thompson, is selling the title after 50 years. He told the New York Times recently that “publishing is a completely different industry than what it was”.

Time Inc, the nearly 100-year-old publisher of Time magazine, People and Sports Illustrated, is also on the block again, having drawn interest from rival publisher Meredith, backed by the financial firepower of the conservative billionaire Koch brothers.

It would be Meredith’s third run at Time, which has been trying to execute a “strategic transformation” from print publisher to digital business following years of shrinking revenues. The company is making sweeping cost cuts, eliminating 300 jobs, cutting back the circulation and frequency of some of its best-known magazines, and attempting to sell its UK magazines division.

At Condé Nast, executives are thinking whether to move Vanity Fair closer to the New Yorker’s subscription model, which has been a bright spot for the company, and take the magazine in more of a literary direction.

As the editorial director of the books department at the New York Times, Ms Jones ticks those boxes. Anna Wintour, the former Vogue editor who is now editorial director of all Condé Nast’s titles, described her in a statement as a “fearless and brilliant editor” whose “intelligence and curiosity” would “define the future” of Vanity Fair.

With Mr Carter now gone, Ms Jones has big shoes to fill and, with a budget under pressure, tough choices to make.
source | ft.com
 
I never liked VF, never. And I think they use that magazine to put more celebs because the line up of Vogue cover stars is filled (and also looks like a Men's Vogue when the subject it's a guy). It's more like an extension of American Vogue than an individual mag.
 
I’m not sure if this is the right place to ask but: Does anyone know why Sofia Vergara never really gets any major covers except Vanity Fair? I sure would love to see her on the cover of Vogue..
 
I’m not sure if this is the right place to ask but: Does anyone know why Sofia Vergara never really gets any major covers except Vanity Fair? I sure would love to see her on the cover of Vogue..

Well she got Bazaar, Instyle and Cosmo too.
 
I can't imagine Vergara on any other big Vogue than US Vogue, and isnt US Vogue covers reserved for movie stars/musicians promoting big movies/albums etc? Being on Modern Family regularly is probably not enough. Although if there is another reason, I'd love to know it :)
 
As the editorial director of the books department at the New York Times, Ms Jones ticks those boxes. Anna Wintour, the former Vogue editor who is now editorial director of all Condé Nast’s titles, described her in a statement as a “fearless and brilliant editor” whose “intelligence and curiosity” would “define the future” of Vanity Fair.

Did I miss something??
 
I think her image is too cheesy and ditzy for hf. Tight fitted mini dresses highlighting her cleavage, permanently blown out hair, platform heels - basically like Mariah Carey (who fashion don't care for either.) I will add that Tina Fey also wasn't a fashion star, but all her covers looked different and she comes across as very witty and scholarly.
 

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