The Official Teen Magazine Thread

peacelover142002 said:
Tyson Ritter from All-American Rejects and Girlfriend
August Teen Vogue
ONTD

I wonder if they're on the cover?

I got my issue and that ed isn't in here. :huh: :ninja: Are you sure it's Teen Vogue, or is my issue incomplete? :cry:
 
OMG....ellegirl is gone? i have a subscription and i didn't get anything (no notice or anything) can someone PLEEEEEEEEEEEAAAAAAASE fill me in!?! i love ellegirl so much more than teenvogue........:( :(
 
I think the Tyson Ritter editorial is in Teen People - that's the one with Katherine McPhee on the cover.
 
^Thanks, that's what I thought too... It's a shame, because I got my Teen Vogue, flipped through it all, and no Tyson!! :doh: You can imagine my despair. :cry: :lol:
 
^Yeah, sorry about that. It is Teen People. Whoever posted it on ONTD said it was from Teen Vogue.
 
i am so happy Kate is on the cover of Teen Vogue! I am totally obsessed with Superman Returns! She looks very cute :)
 
btw, did ellegirl's editor write a goodbye letter or something in her monthly 'letter from the editor'?

i got teenvogue and cosmogirl. both were kinda blaaah. katebosworth is nice, but she bores me *ducks tomatoes* :ninja:
 
^^ No, I didn't see ANYTHING in ElleGirl that referred to it being their last issue.. Kinda weird.

Kate Bosworth sucks if I can say so myself. :p
 
i just renewed my teen magazine subscriptions :9 sometimes i get so bored with them though and sometimes i feel like they are slightly age appropriate. but the other timesi feel like they can be so.. what'[s the word.. teeny? annoying?

and i got seventeen in the mail. the fashions, imo, are.. bleeech :doh: :blink: but its not a high fashion mag soo..
 
August CosmoGirl - Keira Knightley

ec_1.JPG


ebay
 
Hey guys!
I have a somewhat fashionably urgent question about the August kate bosworth issue of teenvogue^_^
On page 50 there's a little thing about LC and in the biggest photo to the left shes wearing a purple chanel jacket and a beige skirt with these turquoise shoes--i would love loveto know who made them
thanks sooo much in advance [karma is waiting!]
 
upcoming teen mag news...from fwd...

Hilary Duff is taking a cue from the breakout hit of the summer "The Devil Wears Prada" and going to work at a fashion magazine.

No, the toothy teen isn't going to slave under the tutorship of Vogue domin-editrix Anna Wintour. The 18-year-old phenom will guest edit an upcoming issue of the teen bible known as Seventeen magazine. http://www.seventeen.com/

While Hilary may not have much publishing experience, the barely legal babe does have her own fashion line called Stuff by Hilary Duff. And in the last year has slowly transformed from teen tart to more sophisticated style icon.

You can check out all of the Duff's mag magic when her issue of Seventeen hits newsstands in the fall.
 
^ :ninja: :angry: NOOOO. duff.

oh well, seventeen's gone to h#$% anyway and i don't care for it much at all.

stuff by hilary duff is :yuk:
 
Posted back in April:
042706_1.jpg

A mock-up cover of Deluxe.
SEVENTEEN GOES DELUXE: The failure of Seventeen's reality series to earn a second season on MTV hasn't diminished the title's appetite for brand extensions. This fall, Hearst will publish the first installment of Deluxe, a Seventeen supplement about "West Coast luxury fashion," according to editor in chief Atoosa Rubenstein. The 24-page outsert will be polybagged with the September issue and will go out to subscribers who live in households with an income of at least $75,000. (Another 50,000 copies will be distributed at retail.)

Deluxe's editor will be stylist-to-the-stars Rachel Zoe, whom Rubenstein calls "an old friend of mine." "Her vision has been mostly living art," she added, in a rather grand reference to Zoe's celebrity clientele. "I thought it would be fun to put that on paper and do a project around it." Naturally, one of Zoe's clients, Nicole Richie, will be on the cover, shot by the singly named photographer Tesh. The fashions highlighted will be "very Robertson Boulevard, very insider-y," promised Rubenstein.

The idea of a magazine produced only for Seventeen's wealthiest readers is somewhat at odds with the big-tent approach Rubenstein has pursued since taking over the magazine in 2003. She acknowledged that, saying, "That's why we're not calling it Seventeen," but added, "We are constantly, through our various brand extensions, talking to various portions of our readership. I always liken Seventeen to Central Park: It's the place to be for young people, but within it there are various niches." Like, young people whose parents buy them a new Lexus when they turn 16.

(Speaking of brand extensions, Sabrina Weill, a former editor in chief of Seventeen who returned to the magazine last year as special projects editor, overseeing extensions, is leaving again. Her duties will be assumed by Elizabeth Dye, formerly a publicist for Seventeen and Cosmopolitan.)

Deluxe isn't the first magazine concept Rubenstein has worked up as a potential Seventeen spin-off. Last fall, she let slip plans for a new lifestyle title called Orchid, which would have a more sophisticated and offbeat sensibility than Seventeen. (Rubenstein has described herself during her high school years as "an orchid among carnations.") She said Wednesday that swapping out Orchid for Deluxe was a simple business decision: "Orchid didn't necessarily make sense for the opportunities that were out there." Rubenstein declined to comment further on the matter, but sources who know her speculated about a possible connection between the shelving of Orchid and the negotiations over her contract, which is up for renewal this summer. Might she be keeping the concept in reserve as a hedge against future unemployment?
Jeff Bercovici

The results:






ONTD
 
^ I just read that!

NEW YORK, July 25 (Reuters) - Magazine publisher Time Inc. said on Tuesday it would stop publishing Teen People magazine after nearly a decade, but keep the Web site, www.teenpeople.com.
The company, a unit of media conglomerate Time Warner Inc. (TWX.N: Quote, Profile, Research), said it was taking steps to place as many magazine employees as it could in other positions at Time Inc. The magazine has about 50 employees on in editorial and sales.
Time launched Teen People in 1998 as a version of its popular celebrity weekly People magazine.
The decision to cut the magazine comes as the U.S. publishing industry tries to preserve newspapers and magazines as Internet popularity grows among readers and advertisers.


Hachette Filipacchi Media said in April it would close its Elle Girl magazine for teenaged girls but preserve the brand online.
Dose, a free Canadian paper designed for younger readers, said in May that it would cut its printed product in favor of an Internet-only approach. Dose is owned by CanWest Media Works (CWM_u.TO: Quote, Profile, Research), a unit of Canada's largest media company, CanWest Global Communications Corp. (CGS.TO: Quote, Profile, Research)


http://today.reuters.com/stocks/QuoteCompanyNewsArticle.aspx?view=CN&storyID=2006-07-25T221412Z_01_N25219827_RTRIDST_0_MEDIA-TEENPEOPLE.XML&rpc=66
 

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