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- <text id=90TT1729>
- <title>
- July 02, 1990: The Big Shake-Out Begins
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- July 02, 1990 Nelson Mandela:A Hero In America
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PRESS, Page 50
- The Big Shake-Out Begins
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A publication glut and a soft ad market spell turbulent times
- for the consumer-magazine industry
- </p>
- <p>By Stephen Pomper
- </p>
- <p> The overstuffed newsstands of the '80s told the story at a
- glance: the fast-money decade spawned a prodigious magazine
- boom, with titles crammed three deep into every trendy market
- niche. Some 2,800 new magazines flew off the presses in the
- past decade, 584 in the past year alone. Foreign media barons
- opened their wallets wide, and American entrepreneurs--from
- Hartz Mountain pet-food magnate Leonard Stern to Frances Lear
- (ex-wife of TV producer Norman)--rushed into the circulation
- game.
- </p>
- <p> But now the shake-out is at hand. Magazines are going under
- or changing hands at a dizzying rate. Owen Lipstein's
- Psychology Today suspended publishing in February; struggling
- monthlies such as CMP's Long Island Monthly and Time Inc.
- Magazines' Southpoint went out of business; Rupert Murdoch's
- debt-ridden News Corp. sold the gossipy Star to the National
- Enquirer and delayed plans to launch its own weekly
- newsmagazine.
- </p>
- <p> Last week Metrocorp's Manhattan, inc., which won a 1985
- National Magazine Award for general excellence and critical
- acclaim for its lacerating exposes of the New York City
- business community, announced that its July issue would be the
- last. The magazine and its top editor will be subsumed by
- Fairchild Publications' M, a clothes-conscious men's
- periodical. The new title: M inc. Manhattan, inc. lost more
- than $8 million over six years, says publisher D. Herbert
- Lipson. Its ad base was crippled when New York's financial and
- real estate markets went dry. The 1987 stock-market crash stole
- the magazine's indispensable asset: high-flying Wall Street
- targets to shoot down. The magazine also lost some of its edge
- when founding editor Jane Amsterdam was replaced by Clay
- Felker.
- </p>
- <p> Still, the main source of all this turbulence has been the
- advertising-industry slump--attributed to soft markets in
- cigarettes and automobiles. The downturn has robbed the big
- consumer "books" of 3.5% of their ad pages in the first quarter
- of this year and underscored the glut of consumer magazines on
- the market. Even such industry stalwarts as Business Week,
- Newsweek, PEOPLE, SPORTS ILLUSTRATED, TIME and TV Guide have
- been affected, sharing in the ad-page losses for the first
- quarter, however healthy their circulations. (Circulation
- typically provides half of a magazine's revenues.)
- </p>
- <p> The biggest threat appears to be to highly leveraged foreign
- investors. Diamandis Communications, a subsidiary of
- French-owned Hachette, is looking to sell Woman's Day to offset
- Hachette's estimated $400 million U.S. debt. Murdoch's News
- Corp., reportedly $6.5 billion in debt, will soon begin
- experimenting with the venerable but faltering TV Guide,
- adjusting the magazine's iconic size and format in an effort to
- become more accessible and compete with proliferating local
- cable guides. Leslie Hinton, president of Murdoch Magazines,
- rejects speculation that foreign investors want out of the U.S.
- altogether. "Things go up and down," he says. "It would be
- pretty shortsighted of us to abandon the market right now."
- </p>
- <p> In New York City, where one-third of all U.S. magazines are
- launched, the slump has become a full-fledged recession. Thus
- the city's small, high-profile purveyors of the trendy and
- transient have less control over their own destinies. Details,
- a chronicle of downtown marginalia, was bought by S.I. Newhouse
- Jr.'s Conde Nast, and will be repositioned as a more mainstream
- men's fashion magazine. And Spy, a satirical magazine that
- proclaims itself "hip, but suspicious of hip," failed in a
- highly publicized capital drive, although it still posts slim
- profits. Spy hopes to hedge its bets by moving into
- partnership deals in TV and movies.
- </p>
- <p> But the future may not be as bleak as the present. Thomas
- Ryder, president of American Express Publishing, predicts that
- the consumer-magazine industry will emerge from its slump
- during the next 18 months "shaken, but stronger for it." In the
- meantime, certain less glamorous market niches are flourishing:
- witness the success of highly targeted publications like Model
- Railroader and Golf Illustrated. Service and life-style
- magazines, meanwhile, are attracting some keenly interested,
- well-financed investors. American Express recently acquired D
- (for Dallas) and Atlanta as part of a plan to expand into 20
- city markets. And on June 1 Time Inc. Magazines paid
- approximately $215 million for the parent company of Sunset
- magazine, a West Coast life-style publication. Says Ryder: "The
- next twelve to 18 months represent one of the great buying
- opportunities of all time."
- </p>
- <p> Unfortunately, as service-oriented publications are snatched
- up, some of the most incisive new voices in journalism may be
- lost. Abe Peck, chairman of the magazine group at Northwestern
- University's Medill School of Journalism, complains that while
- "there are plenty of magazines that tell you what to wear,
- where to eat and how to shop," publications that offer a more
- provocative editorial edge may be an endangered resource. Many
- analysts feel this editorial quality is more important than
- most advertisers realize, because it delivers more attentive
- readers. Some of yesterday's faddiest publications, like
- Rolling Stone, built on precisely that kind of approach to
- become today's prosperous graybeards. Many media watchers had
- recognized similar prospects for 7 Days, which in April won a
- National Magazine Award for general excellence. It was an
- ironic epitaph: the magazine had gone out of business one week
- earlier, citing low ad pages, a slack economy and a dearth of
- interested buyers.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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