Look at the former insiders acting like they weren't complicit to the problem![]()
Ahem.....Fabien Baron letting loose.
Full interview, here:
WWD: That’s for sure.
F.B.: The issue is that magazines are where they are because of magazines.
WWD: So it’s not all outside forces? What did magazines do wrong?
F.B.: They wanted to be so tied up with the moment, with what’s going on with entertainment, with personalities, and then, so tied to Instagram. They attached themselves too much to an outside thing rather than remembering what they were about, so they became irrelevant in some degree. Actresses — you see them in a movie. Instagram is where you want to see the Kardashians, or on television; you don’t want to see them in magazines. Any picture of them, you’re going to see it on Instagram anyway.
Magazines have lost their point of view; they gave it up too early. I’m talking about the big ones. If you look at the way they were relative to now [which is] blue sky, little flowers, girl wearing a big skirt, a famous person from Hollywood. That became the formula for a lot of magazines. Supermarket fashion.
WWD: Any magazines in particular?
F.B.: I’m talking about big magazines in general.
WWD: What could big magazines in general have done to prevent this from happening?
F.B.: They should have stuck with fashion. They should have stuck with fashion. They should have made that the real core, the point of view. They should have sold the customer — the people who were buying magazines — fashion, real, real, real fashion, and in a big way. That’s what they should have done. Social media and Instagram, these things came up in the midst of magazines not being very powerful and not being very strong. So people flipped, they just shifted to that. The two could have lived [together]. All these small magazines, they’re doing better now than the big ones because they have a point of view.
It’s almost like in the movie industry. There’s Hollywood and there’s the independents, right?….Hollywood collapsed to a certain degree with Netflix and all these things. All the talent are going into Netflix, to do things that are more [adventurous]….
WWD
Fashion should be the main value....
Amen sister.
Fabien spoke nothing but truth in that interview. It's incredibly sad that fashion died because people became lazy and privileged by the rise of internet and social media. Sure, it's all available online anyway but have you ever bought an old issue of your favorite magazine, and despite knowing what every next page will feature because you've seen it online, you still feel that excitement because you now get to actually hold and own your own copy of it? I know like every page of any old Vogue Italia I buy but it's still a big and exciting experience for me to get my own copy and go through it in person. The feeling of going though an actual magazine versus a digital copy is incomparable. It's like books! It's the smell of it, the feeling of it, the whole look of it and the point of it. Every editorial looks better in person, on a beautiful glossy paper (which is probably one of the reason why I always disliked W in print, because of it's horrible paper).
I know it's all about business and sales now, but that's not how it should be. Not with art! And fashion is art. Real fashion photography is an art form, clothes are an art form. And they should be treated like that. You don't make art for sales or to please the lazy, arrogant society who's just gonna scroll through your feed without even paying attention. You do it to express yourself, you do it to show the world that there are things beyond just plain, boring reality. You do it to bring dreams and inspiration to life. That's why you do it. And that's why fashion should do it. Cause the thing we have in present day, that's no fashion at all.
People want a customized/personal experience now. And big corporations and magazines like Vogue and Elle are too huge to have an intimate connection with it's customers.

That's precisely why magazines are failing. Vogue doesn't function on an algorithm that can customise its content to suit millions of fans. But they're trying to, and that is what Fabien is talking about. Magazines used to have a defined point of view which they stuck to, and you either endorsed or aspire to those ideals and bought the magazine, or you didn't. It was as clear cut as that. British Harper's Bazaar is a perfect example. They don't run after everyone and their mum to buy their issues. And yes, that's definitely the future for magazines if they want to survive. A niche experience. So why not just face the facts and start by fine-tuning your content and your point of view to a dedicated audience before you're forced to go 'digital only'. The excuse that it's strictly business? That didn't save the likes of British Marie Claire, who quite possibly had the most innovative marketing ways in the UK glossy scene, from going down the drain.
American Vogue, at it's core, used to be elitist. Only the cream of the crop made the cut, from brands to cast and crew. And they've adapted rather well to the winds of change such as diversity and politics. But to water that down with a cover of a woman whose claim to fame is a sex tape, or a rapper who very recently partnered with a bottom-feeding brand with an appalling sustainability record, considered to be the athlete's foot of the fashion industry....all under the guise of 'sparking conversation' when in actual fact it's really just for a bunch of likes and shares which will never translate into sales?
There are so many codewords in that Vogue Values edit that at least one will resonate with social media culture, and that's all that they're bargaining for. As well as giving the rapper a cover, dressed in scarlet. Oh, the comedy!![]()
But a “niche experience” won’t get you money to fund expensive editorials. Not just in terms of set, but the experienced photographers, stylists, etc.
Magazines, like any media platforms, are thriving because they rely more on advertisers than on the people who buy them, and advertisers will always look for a media platform that has a high penetration.
It’s a “chicken and egg” situation, definitely. But the reason why sensationalists like Cardi are being featured on a cover is the mere fact that they bring engagement, which has become a more valuable metric than readership or circulation. Yes, engagements don’t have a linear translation into sales, but that doesn’t matter anymore. Advertisers will look for digital metrics (not just engagement or engagement rate, but also website session and bounce rate per-page) as their KPI (key performance indicator), and to them, they are more than enough.
We have to accept the phenomenon in which online features are not an appetizer to magazines, they are part of the main course as well.
My apologies, not 150-page pamphlet, 110 pages!
In multiple stores today in Indianapolis I only saw Stella's cover. I'm worried about which I'll receive in the mail.
It needs to be fixed from the root, which is design. Anna's presence and its monopolistic tendency is highly problematic and has definitely set the tune for a lot of what has gone wrong (from being out of line enough to 'advise' designers to her lobbyist practices) but ultimately, it was the corporate side what crumbled fashion's foundation and what fed all of its different branches (magazines being one of them), which is design. You can have a lot of wonderful ideas for magazines and imagery but if all you have are essentially ironic rags, knock-offs, your best 'tribute' to the taste of a 70 year-old man who died 40 years ago, you're as good as the fashion zine project of a small fashion design school of any suburb. You're not speaking to anybody. Who's modeling these rags matters but it's such a fifth, sixth consequence of a change of mindset and priorities from those responsible for growing fashion. Fashion week right now is empty, it's sailed away so far from the input of similar events produced by its 'peers' (industrial, graphic design, architecture, etc) in the fact that there's hardly anybody receiving support and recognition for designing under his/her own name.. just the idea of being on your own is now understood and accepted as the preamble for your big entrance into a fashion house with codes established at least some 50-70 years ago for the needs and ideas of the lucky generation at that time. That is no longer academic foundation and knowing your history and what you stand on so you can then fly away, learn to know yourself and nurture your creative needs AS you create and provide something to your field, it's the be all end all, which is so tragically bizarre and yet seen as the most natural thing, even on tFS, where it's a recurrent hot topic (who will design where).But what’s a concrete solution for a new form of creativity of this business in the future?