Print magazine still has some cache to it, and it's great to grab one at the airport, but the industry itself is in decline. In fact, here are several print magazines that are most likely to shut down ...
Soon after the Kindle craze, some warned of print books’ imminent extinction—but thus far, the codex has shown laudatory tenacity. It seems that, if things continue in their favor, print books are ...
In a companywide note Monday, Kristen O’Hara, chief business officer of Hearst Magazines, confirmed reports that O, The Oprah Magazine, a 20-year-long collaboration between Hearst Magazines and Oprah ...
Remember the brand magazine trend? It may seem like a long time ago, but it was only in 2019 that more brands were investing in print magazines as a marketing tool despite traditional media companies ...
Print magazine culture has seen a massive decline. Once-popular print magazines are now entirely online or are largely sustained by digital subscriptions. Social media has also cut into the ...
The seat-back pockets on United Airlines flights could look slimmer beginning this fall. The airline said on Thursday it is grounding the print edition of its long-running onboard magazine, called ...
There were 122 new print-magazine launches in 2021, representing a sharp rebound from the 60 that launched last year, and offering hope that print media has a strong — though admittedly more boutique ...
The days of print are not quite over, even if magazines ar e mostly digital, online affairs now. In the video game space, we still have Game Informer (at least as long as GameStop survives) PC Gamer ...
Good day for trees, bad day for magazines – in particular, the printed kind. A pair of venerable print publications – Life Magazine, and our IDG sister publication, InfoWorld – announced today that ...
Paper is one of many goods in short supply these days, and the shortage has been exacerbated by supply chain jams and a resurgence in demand. Mother Jones’ production director, Claudia Smukler, wrote ...
A new Playboy magazine is being published this week — both on newsstands and as a digital download — and it will be the last one this year, a decision made, in part, due to the coronavirus pandemic.
COVID lockdowns apparently are good for at least one thing: all that extra time to spend flipping through a magazine — a down-and-out corner of the media industry that got an unexpected boost last ...