The Business of Magazines

L'Officiel Japan will return in September
wwdjapan.com (translated by Google Translate, Apple Translate and DeepL translate)

The Japanese version of the French fashion magazine “L’Officiel” is back and will be widely distributed in cafes, web media, etc.

PUBLISHED: 23/05/2024
Author: WWD STAFF

The Japanese edition of the French fashion magazine L'OFFICIEL, is back, with its first issue coming out in September. The publisher is L'Officiel Japan, a subsidiary of AMTD IDEA, a Hong Kong-based digital solutions group. (Note: AMTD are the owners of L'Officiel and directly own and operate the magazine in 9 countries)

L'Officiel is a fashion magazine founded in Paris, France in 1921. It is currently available in 80 countries around the world, with local language versions available in 33 countries. The Japanese version was jointly launched by L'Official Japan and Seven & i Publishing in October 2015, and was discontinued after the December 2016 issue. (Note: It also operated between 2005 and 2008, there was also a translated edition in the 1970s)

The editor-in-chief is Tsuyoshi Kawasaki, who has gained experience as a fashion editor at magazines such as GQ JAPAN and L'UOMO VOGUE. The price is 1200 yen (estimated price). It will be released quarterly (March, June, September, November) on the 28th.
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In conjunction with the revival of the first issue, “L'OFFICIEL CAFE OMOTESANDO” will open in Omotesando, Tokyo, in October. In addition to café operations, the store will function as a pop-up and reader communication venue. The second floor of the store will operate as the head office.

A Japanese version of the web media is also planned to be launched by the end of this year.
 
Vogue Paris/France sales archive (2007-2023)

Vogue Paris/France Sales for 2007

February - Doutzen Kroes and Gaspard Ulliel: 130.870
March - Natasha Poly: 132.001
April - Lara Stone: 117.468
May - Sophie Marceau: 120.918
June/July - Catherine McNeil: 139.992
August - Claudia Schiffer: 157.853
September - Natasha Poly: 153.868
October - Gisele Bündchen: 123.101
November - Carolyn Murphy and Andre J.: 115.733
December/January - Charlotte Gainsbourg: 154.964

Vogue Paris/France Sales for 2008

February - Naomi Campbell and Kate Moss: 142.904
March - Lara Stone: 142.521
April - Kate Moss: 125.330
May - Julianne Moore: 122.054
June/July - Laetitia Casta and Noémie Lenoir: 149.933
August - Daria Werbowy: 171.324
September - Anna Selezneva: 150.748
October - Christy Turlington: 130.455
November - Vanessa Paradis: 127.290
December/January - Princess Stéphanie of Monaco: 150.218

Vogue Paris/France Sales for 2009


February - Lara Stone: 144.783
March - Iris Strubegger: 148.208
April - Scarlett Johansson: 131.127
May - Daria Werbowy: 131.084
June/July - Anja Rubik: 167.665
August - Daria Werbowy: 187.136
September - Lara Stone: 163.496
October - Kate Moss: 144.979
November - Isabeli Fontana: 138.105
December/January - Laetitia Casta: 157.603

Vogue Paris/France Sales for 2010

February - Daria Werbowy: 155.177
March - Rose Cordero: 145.801
April - Natasha Poly: 133.422
May - Penélope Cruz, Naomi Watts, Kate Winslet, Julianne Moore, Meryl Streep, Gwyneth Paltrow and Bono: 138.702
June/July - Kate Moss: 172.772
August - Freja Beha Erichsen: 198.255
September - Marion Cotillard: 163.042
October - Lara Stone: 208.707
November - Natasha Poly: 137.990
December/January - Daphne Groeneveld and Tom Ford: 165.752

Vogue Paris/France Sales for 2011

February - Lara Stone: 176.468
March - Saskia de Brauw: 157.003
April - Gisele Bündchen: 144.830
May - Kate Moss: 143.022
June/July - Isabeli Fontana: 177.497
August - Lara Stone: 180.180
September - Charlotte Casiraghi: 189.442
October - Sasha Pivovarova: 157.284
November - Arizona Muse: 146.097
December/January - Kate Moss: 150.999

Vogue Paris/France Sales for 2012

February - Daria Werbowy: 162.315
March - Natalia Vodianova: 156.028
April - Doutzen Kroes: 139.983
May - Laetitia Casta: 146.380
June/July - Gisele Bündchen: 206.492
August - Marion Cotillard: 175.685
September - Daria Werbowy, Kate Moss and Lara Stone: 179.706
October - Kate Moss and George Michael: 139.450
November - Daria Werbowy, Stephanie Seymour and Lauren Hutton: 144.073
December/January - Carla Bruni: 150.391

Vogue Paris/France Sales for 2013

February - Milla Jovovich: 144.305
March - Suvi Koponen: 141.730
April - Isabeli Fontana: 150.505
May - Freja Beha Erichsen: 134.369
June/July - Andreea Diaconu: 186.123
August - Daria Werbowy: 168.035
September - Saskia de Brauw: 165.237
October - Edita Vilkevičiūtė: 126.561
November - Gisele Bündchen: 130.219
December/January - David and Victoria Beckham: 168.534

Vogue Paris/France Sales for 2014

February - Emily DiDonato: 139.317
March - Lara Stone: 148.825
April - Cameron Russell: 137.004
May - Sophie Marceau: 157.671
June/July - Natasha Poly: 173.788
August - Anna Ewers: 148.893
September - Natalia Vodianova: 167.697
October - Natasha Poly and Aleksandra Kristin: 128.946
November - Adriana Lima: 119.538
December/January - Inès de La Fressange: 151.397

Vogue Paris/France Sales for 2015

February - Anna Ewers: 148.374
March - Daria Werbowy, Kate Moss and Lara Stone: 145.402
April - Charlotte Casiraghi: 140.534
May - Liya Kebede: 118.244
June/July - Daria Werbowy: 172.495
August - Anna Ewers: 129.972
September - Natasha Poly: 141.127
October - Christy Turlington, Gisele Bündchen, Kate Moss and Kendall Jenner: 130.009
November - Mica Argañaraz: 117.693
December/January - Vanessa Paradis: 160.656

Vogue Paris/France Sales for 2016

February - Edie Campbell: 139.047
March - Gigi Hadid: 137.683
April - Cindy Crawford and Kaia Gerber: 118.835
May - Lottie Moss and Lucky Blue Smith: 105.420
June/July - Iselin Steiro: 185.214
August - Luna Bijl: 142.922
September - Taylor Hill and Bella Hadid: 114.935
October - Luna Bijl: 125.439
November - Gigi Hadid: 108.434
December/January - Karl Lagerfeld and Lily-Rose Depp: 146.671

Vogue Paris/France Sales for 2017

February - Anna Ewers: 115.807
March - Valentina Sampaio: 99.324
April - Christy Turlington: 99.380
May - Vittoria Ceretti: 100.143
June/July - Gisele Bündchen: 145.932
August - Gisele Bündchen: 141.664
September - Edie Campbell: 109.272
October - Cara Delevingne: 118.720
November - Rianne van Rompaey: 92.079
December/January - Rihanna: 137.514

Vogue Paris/France Sales for 2018

February - Kaia Gerber: 100.230
March - Grace Elizabeth: 93.759
April - Alma Jodorowsky: 101.174
May - Anna Ewers: 87.639
June/July - Edie Campbell: 135.824
August - Iselin Steiro: 115.815
September - Christy Turlington: 125.312
October - Kate Moss and Naomi Campbell: 100.328
November - Natasha Poly: 100.980
December/January - Jane Birkin, Lou Doillon and Charlotte Gainsbourg: 124.643

Vogue Paris/France Sales for 2019

February - Erika Linder: 86.582
March - Rianne Van Rompaey: 94.199
April - Adut Akech, Andreea Diaconu and Raquel Zimmermann: 88.732
May - Rianne Van Rompaey: 101.379
June/July - Gisele Bündchen: 136.645
August - Kate Moss: 119.071
September - Rianne van Rompaey: 114.567
October - Laurijn Bijnen: 94.576
November - Erika Linder: 79.378
December/January - Virginie Efira: 108.201

Vogue Paris/France Sales for 2020

February - Jill Kortleve: 78.364
March - Vittoria Ceretti and Rebecca Leigh Longendyke: 84.326
April - Marion Cotillard: 71.661
May/June - Bella Hadid and Gigi Hadid: 85.128
July - Mica Argañaraz and Natasja Madsen: 128.607
August - Natalia Vodianova: 120.515
September - Malika Louback: 92.358
October - Rianne Van Rompaey: 75.269
November - Rianne Van Rompaey: 87.189
December/January - Léa Seydoux: 85.038

Vogue Paris/France Sales for 2021

February - Anna Ewers: 83.140
March - Quinn Mora: 81.605
April - Nora Attal: 88.068
May - Hailey Bieber: 85.729
June/July - Imaan Hammam: 101.277
August - Mica Argañaraz: 110.985
September - Tindi Mar: 91.057
October - 100 Ans: 130.959
November - Aya Nakamura: 83.300
December/January - Isabelle Huppert: 97.853

Vogue Paris/France Sales for 2022

February - Mika Schneider, Lola Nicon and Malika Louback: 78.652
March - Laetitia Casta: 84.833
April - Akon Changkou: 78.602
May - Hailey Bieber: 81.822
June/July - Raquel Zimmermann: 107.454
August - Mona Tougaard and Ugbad: 117.905
September - Kate Moss: 91.622
October - Lous and the Yakuza: 91.627
November - Grace Elizabeth: 77.756
December/January - Lily Collins: 96.681

Vogue Paris/France Sales for 2023

December/January - Lily Collins: 96.681
February - Angèle van Laeken: 86.335
March - Jisoo: 99.361
April - Beyoncé: 89.747
May - Mona Tougaard: 86.633
June/July - Vittoria Ceretti: 103.546
August - Ajok Daing: 95.630
September - Dua Lipa: 88.643
October - Malika El Maslouhi: 86.651
November - Victoria Beckham: 75.899
December/January - Ida Heiner: 96.098

Source: acpm.fr

Thank you for sharing this, very interesting.

Numbers melting like ice in the sun over the years...

Shows you that they best perform almost only during summertime, when you go buy a copy to read it on your sunbed.
 
Cosmopolitan Australia is coming back
news.com.au
Cosmopolitan magazine returns to Australia after six years
As the magazine industry dwindles, one defunct brand is making an unlikely comeback, six years after it was axed. by Lexie Cartwright

Cosmopolitan magazine is making a return to the Australian media market, six years after it was axed. The renowned entertainment and lifestyle glossy will head to the press for its first revived issue in August – led by Sydney publisher Katarina Kroslakova via her publishing house KK Press, in collaboration with New York-based publishing company Hearst Magazines International.
Cosmopolitan Australia will publish six issues per year, with Kroslakova in the process of building a local editorial team, including an editor.

It’s an unprecedented comeback following several years of magazine cancellations – including Cleo, Harper’s BAZAAR Australia, InStyle, Good Health, NW and OK! Australia – amid a changing landscape with a focus on digital media.
“There’s nothing like Cosmo in our magazine landscape,” Kroslakova, who was previously editor for the Australian Financial Review, told The Australian.
“Young women want to enhance their lives. They aim to live fully, unapologetically, and fulfil their potential.
“For young Australian women of today, no other publication has such a strong emotional connection or serves as an influential support network and a safe space for the sharing of knowledge.”

Cosmopolitan, which first launched in Australia more than four decades ago, was deemed commercially unviable by its previous publisher Bauer Media (now known as Are Media) in 2018, with its final issue published in December of that year.
Hearst Magazines senior vice president of editorial Kim St. Clair Bodden said the glossy mag’s return was “an exciting next chapter” for the brand.
“The relaunch of Cosmopolitan Australia marks an exciting next chapter for this iconic brand, while reinforcing our commitment to delivering culturally relevant content to audiences around the globe,” she said.

“We are delighted to partner with KK Press as we reconnect and engage with millions of authentic and bold young women in this important market.”
Journalist Mia Freedman was editor of the Australian iteration from 1996 to 2005.
The American edition of the magazine, which still prints, was helmed by late magazine icon Helen Gurley Brown, who guided the publication to bolstered sales from the ‘60s and is credited for leading a sex-positive generation of females.
Cosmopolitan’s revival comes after Elle Australia returned to stands in March after a four-year hiatus.
 
Rosie Vogel is leaving Vogue as global director of talent and casting:

 
Thank you for sharing this, very interesting.

Numbers melting like ice in the sun over the years...

Shows you that they best perform almost only during summertime, when you go buy a copy to read it on your sunbed.
I think it's also because the summer sales number covers two months instead of one 😅
 
I swore this would happen, she doesn't follow Chioma on Instagram, she doesn't post the magazine covers anymore. Too bad, I liked her.

she waited years for the role and didn't get it. hopefully she finds something else worth her talent and time.

i lowkey felt she was kind of like the hamish bowels of vogue uk, except we have yet to know is she'll get a consolation prize of a EIC position at another mag like hamish had at WoI before his health declined.
 
And sometimes you can wait so long for something, that when it finally comes around, it's not worth having.

All for Anna to pretend to be woke while keeping the colored folks firmly under her thumb. She’s literally pulling a Miranda by bypassing the rightful people for her own survival.
 


Does Margaret Zhang work at Chanel now? I think I recognized her doing the interviews for the celebrities there now.
 
Rocco Liu is Vogue China's new editorial director.


Following months of speculations, Rocco Liu, a popular and digital-savvy editor responsible for the success of GQ China, has been named Vogue China‘s latest editorial director, succeeding the controversial Margaret Zhang after a three-year tenure, WWD has learned. An official announcement is expected to come on Friday morning in Beijing. The 41-year-old Liu, who joined GQ China in 2009 and now serves as editorial director of the men’s fashion and lifestyle title, will take over the role with immediate effect, overseeing the editorial direction of the Vogue China brand across all platforms and events, Condé Nast said in a statement shared exclusively with WWD. It’s understood that Liu’s successor at GQ China will be named at a later date. As of now, Cui Yanyu, creative director at GQ China will serve as interim editorial director. “I have long admired everything Rocco has done at GQ,” said Anna Wintour, Condé Nast global chief content officer and Vogue editor in chief. “He has great instincts for creating stories that live on new platforms, that find new audiences, and for imagining events that get people talking. In all the work he’s done with us, he’s been super creative, ambitious and has proven that he knows how to make an impact. I’m thrilled and excited that he’s joining the Vogue team,” added Wintour. Insiders would agree that Liu, who has risen through the ranks at Condé Nast China to become a seasoned fashion editor and a rising social media personality, should be able to replicate the success of GQ China, where digital innovation and content localization drive lucrative revenue streams not generally found elsewhere. After graduating from Beijing Foreign Studies University with a bachelor’s degree in English, Liu spent four years as an English teacher at New Oriental Education, one of the largest foreign language training schools in China at the time. In 2009, Liu began his career at GQ China, where he took on various roles such as senior copyright editor, report editor, and GQ Lab editor, according to Linkedin. GQ Lab was incubated by the glossy’s features editor Jon Lian in late 2014 as a digital spinoff on WeChat, the popular Chinese social media platform, as confirmed by two former employees of GQ China. However, Condé Nast wrongfully stated on its website that the WeChat account was launched by Liu in 2017. In 2016, Liu became the editor-in-chief of GQ Lab and turned it into a fashion digital media site with millions of followers. At the time, GQ Lab could command around half a million renminbi, or $70,500, for a single social media post. Condé Nast China back then also disclosed that GQ China became the most profitable edition due to the success of GQ Lab, yielding 200 million renminbi in revenue in 2018, an amount equivalent to several European editions combined. A champion of the project, Sophia Liao, the beleaguered chief executive officer of Condé Nast China who stepped down in September 2020, called GQ Lab’s wide-ranging success “the rebirth of GQ,” according to local media coverage at the time. Apart from WeChat, GQ Lab has over 4.8 million followers on Weibo, Douyin, and Xiaohongshu. Eager to break down barriers between content and commerce, GQ Lab editors recently began livestream selling on Xiaohongshu. Products range from Stanley cups, and Salomon sneakers, to healthy snacks. Unlike Zhang, who was often seen as a lone wolf, Liu is regarded among his peers as a compassionate leader and an encouraging editor. Liu has forged a close personal relationship with luxury brands on the ground, one thing his predecessor Zhang failed to achieve. His playful and friendly personality is fully displayed on Xiaohongshu, where he has over 45,000 followers. Liu often posts his experience traveling the world and hanging out with Chinese celebrities, including Yang Mi, Jackson Wang, Good Bai, and most recently with Eileen Gu at a Louis Vuitton event in Beijing. As first reported by WWD, the Chinese edition of the women’s fashion title has been plotting a succession plan to replace the controversy-laden Zhang since last November. During her tenure, she wasn’t able to maintain a relationship with leaders on the ground, which ultimately hindered the publication’s reputation and profitability. In April 2023, she was publicly called out by competitor Huasheng Media founder Chuxuan Feng on Weibo for being disrespectful to the Chinese market for installing a one-sided non-compete clause around model Du Juan, who was set to appear on the cover of Vogue China, but got removed since T Magazine China, a licensing deal between Huasheng and The New York Times, released their cover, also featuring Du, days earlier. Wendy Yu, founder of the Yu Prize, a Chinese design talent scouting competition, and fashion investor said of Zhang at that time that “there is no need for a Chinese fashion magazine to have an opinion given by an overseas Chinese who doesn’t know China and doesn’t respect the Chinese market.” It was revealed in February that Zhang, the youngest editor in the group, would step down from her post as editorial director at Vogue China. It’s understood that her departure coincides with her pregnancy. Zhang is now expected to pursue her goal of becoming a film director and retain a working relationship with Chanel. Upon revealing Zhang’s departure, Wintour said it was her “top priority to find a visionary new leader without delay.” It’s understood that Condé Nast spoke to an extensive list of candidates for Zhang’s successor, including Hung Huang, Lucia Liu, Cui Dan, Leaf Greener, Weimo Wang, and Blake Abbie, as well as Liu. It became apparent Liu emerged as a front-runner when GQ China earlier this month parted ways with its local publishing partner Zhizu Magazine, a subsidiary of China News Service, a state-owned news agency based in Beijing. Industry sources said China News Service refused to let Liu go. In the Chinese market, fashion glossies exist as syndications that copublish with a state-owned entity, which grants the publication its ISSN number, and its Chinese title and has the final say on all editorial content. Sources said GQ China has signed a new deal with the Shanghai Translation Publishing House to continue to operate in China. In the case of Vogue China, it’s China Pictorial, which allegedly had an uneasy time with Zhang and is said to have rejected her cover choice for the recent issue of Photo Vogue, a supplement of the June issue of Vogue China, the last issue Zhang edited. While the title promoted on Western social media that Kim Kardashian was the cover star, the actual print issue sold in China had a blank cover with the names of photographers featured in the issue at the bottom. In his new role, Liu will be tasked with establishing a good reputation and strong relationships while reintroducing a new vision at Vogue China. During Zhang’s tenure, at least five Vogue China covers, which can fetch at least 3 million renminbi, or $428,000, each, have gone unsponsored. According to industry insiders, some luxury brands’ cover sponsorship budgets have shifted to new titles such as W China. Additionally, online spectators noticed that two of Vogue China’s anchor event supporters – Chanel and Bulgari – both decamped to competitors after Zhang took over the helm from founding editor Angelica Cheung.

Source: WWD
 


Does Margaret Zhang work at Chanel now? I think I recognized her doing the interviews for the celebrities there now.

I feel like they keep using Margaret for all these fashion interview podcast set ups, at Vuitton, at Chanel and then some of the Vogue China ones as well (respectively). But I don't think she's a dynamic interviewer, she's actually pretty dull as a personality. A great creative, but the only thing bright about her presence is her blue hair. No shade, all tea.
 
Thaleia Karafyllidou has departed Vogue Greece as EIC, with Suzy Menkes reporting Elis Kiss is now editor.
 

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