What Happened to 50 Magazines Since the Pandemic Began (2024)

What Happened to 50 Magazines Since the Pandemic Began (1)

When the pandemic hit, some media analysts warned it would speed the decline of print magazines, predicting that more titles would fold or scrap print to focus on digital operations, while those left would continue to trim frequency.

Two years on, what has happened to print magazines even as pandemic pressures have eased somewhat, the industry is still plagued by an ongoing decline in print advertising and digital competition?

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In an analysis of 50 U.S.-based titles, WWD found that 26, or 52 percent, had a lower print frequency this year compared to 2019, while another 10 have ceased print operations completely. Not all of this is directly linked to the pandemic, with some occurring prior to March 2020, while other moves are due to the general decline of print publishing and more recently a paper strike.

Out of the big three publishers — Hearst Magazines, Condé Nast and Meredith Corp. — the latter has gone through the most change by far. Since its $2.7 billion sale to digital media company Dotdash last year, its new owner, now known as Dotdash Meredith, revealed that six of the magazines it acquired — InStyle, Entertainment Weekly, EatingWell, Health, Parents and People en Español — would become digital-only publications. The move resulted in about 200 job losses, including InStyle editor in chief Laura Brown and some of the company’s highest paid publishers. Up until then, InStyle was the last women’s fashion magazine in the U.S. still publishing 12 issues a year, even during 2020 when producing shoots and obtaining items from designers was extremely difficult in certain months. Shape magazine, meanwhile, ceased print at the end of last year.

“We are investing in our brands and products: everything from enhancing the paper quality and trim sizes to ensuring world-class editorial and beautiful photography,” a Dotdash Meredith spokeswoman said. “We are infusing fresh energy across these brands in all formats to make sure they offer rich and engaging content and experiences in new and innovative ways. Dotdash Meredith continues to provide incredible value to millions of people with our print products and will print more than 350 million magazines in 2022.”

People Magazine, its biggest money spinner, remains steady at 52 issues a year, although management recently brought in Liz Vaccariello to succeed Dan Wakeford as editor in chief of the celebrity title. In a recent interview with WWD, she said, “People very much still thrives as a print product. Subscriptions have remained steady for more than a decade. We still have a readership of 25 million, and that’s just print.”

There have also been big changes at Hearst. Before the global pandemic struck, Elle and Cosmopolitan each published 12 issues a year in 2019, but Elle is now down to 10 issues a year, while Cosmopolitan revealed that it will print eight-themed issues a year, each dedicated to a different subject and numbered rather than tied to a specific month.

“I feel like doing fewer issues isn’t about fewer touchpoints. It’s about making the print touchpoint a richer, more meaningful and ultimately longer lasting one,” said Cosmopolitan editor in chief Jessica Pels.

Hearst’s Harper’s Bazaar, meanwhile, dipped to nine issues in 2020, but is now back at 10. For this year, both Men’s Health and Women’s Health will both publish nine issues instead of the usual 10, but a source put that down to an ongoing paper strike.

As for Marie Claire, Hearst sold that to Future plc last year and the new owner wasted no time cutting back on print and plans to publish just two issues a year, in May and September, the latter being the most crucial month of the year for magazine publishers as they seek to grab ad dollars. But even before the sale, Hearst quietly reduced Marie Claire’s print frequency from 11 issues to just seven in 2020.

Outside of Hearst’s fashion offerings, Esquire, Elle Decor, House Beautiful, O, The Oprah Magazine and Town & Country have all declined in frequency since 2019.

For Condé Nast, a handful of titles have seen minor changes in terms of frequency over the past few years. Perhaps the most interesting is Vogue, run by longtime editor in chief and Conde’s chief content officer Anna Wintour, which now publishes 11 issues a year instead of 12. Allure, Vanity Fair and Wired have also dipped slightly in frequency.

One Condé Nast title not included in the list of magazines analyzed by WWD is Love, the biannual publication set up by Katie Grand in partnership with the publisher in 2009, as it was until recently based in London. Following Grand’s exit, the title moved to New York, but it was understood at the time that the main focus would be social media and video. No official statement has been made on the future of the print product, but a source told WWD that the publication is set to be relaunched sometime this year. Only time will tell if there will be a print component.

In the case of glossy newspaper supplements, WSJ. Magazine, the monthly fashion and luxury-focused insert of the weekend edition of The Wall Street Journal, shrank from 12 issues in 2019 to eight in 2021, with a renewed focus on digital, while The New York Times made no changes to its two publications T Magazine and The New York Times Magazine. While not a supplement, Vox’s New York Magazine also held steady at 26 issues.

The remaining list of those that reduced frequency since 2019 include W, The Atlantic, Time, Out, Men’s Journal, Fortune, Forbes, C Magazine, Paper, Playboy and California Sunday Magazine. The latter was shuttered entirely after Emerson Collective, a foundation started by Laurene Powell Jobs, pulled its funding.

Time Out New York, which was not included in the below list as it was unclear how many issues it published prior to the pandemic, paused print in March 2020 with many city-dwellers working from home and fewer commuters in the city. That’s understood to still be under review. In contrast, Time Out is back in print in London, Lisbon, Porto, Barcelona and Madrid.

In the other direction, a number of new magazines have launched during this period, such as Grazia, Playgirl, Jay Z’s Edition, Stefano Tonchi’s Palmer and Citizen, an independent magazine documenting Black life and culture. Many of the new categories are niche and have smaller circulations as publishers look at new models when it comes to print publishing.

THE WWD LIST: MAGAZINE FREQUENCY

Magazine (Publisher)

2019

2020

2021

2022

Allure (Condé Nast)

11

10

10

10

Architectural Digest (Condé Nast)

11

11

11

11

Better Homes & Gardens (Dotdash Meredith)

12

12

12

10

Bon Appétit (Condé Nast)

10

10

10

10

C Magazine (C Publishing)

12

11

4

4

California Sunday Magazine (Emerson)

6

2

Condé Nast Traveler (Condé Nast)

8

8

8

8

Cosmopolitan (Hearst)

12

10

9

8

Country Living (Hearst)

10

10

10

10

CR Fashion Book (Carine Roitfeld)

2

2

2

2

Eatingwell (Dotdash Meredith)

10

10

10

3

Elle (Hearst)

12

10

10

10

Elle Decor (Hearst)

10

9

8

8

Esquire (Hearst)

8

6

6

6

Entertainment Weekly (Dotdash Meredith)

22

12

12

4

Forbes (Forbes Media)

9

6

6

6

Fortune (Fortune Media)

12

10

6

6

GQ (Condé Nast)

10

11

10

10

Harper’s Bazaar (Hearst)

10

9

10

10

Health (Dotdash Meredith)

10

10

10

3

House Beautiful (Hearst)

10

8

6

6

InStyle (Dotdash Meredith)

12

12

12

2

Marie Claire (Future)

11

7

3

2

Martha Stewart Living (Dotdash Meredith)

10

10

10

10

Men’s Health (Hearst)

10

10

10

9

Men’s Journal (AMI)

11

6

6

6

New York Magazine (Vox)

26

26

26

26

O, The Oprah Magazine (Hearst)

12

11

4

4

Out (Pride Media)

8

6

6

6

Paper (ENTtech)

4

1

Parents (Dotdash Meredith)

12

12

12

3

People (Dotdash Meredith)

52

52

52

52

People en Español (Dotdash Meredith)

12

12

12

2

Playboy (Playboy Enterprises)

4

2

Real Simple (Dotdash Meredith)

12

12

12

10

Shape (Dotdash Meredith)

10

10

10

Southern Living (Dotdash Meredith)

13

11

11

10

T Magazine (The New York Times)

11

11

11

11

The Atlantic (Atlantic Media)

11

10

10

10

The New York Times Magazine (NYT)

52

52

52

52

The New Yorker (Condé Nast)

48

48

48

48

Time (Marc Benioff)

52

48

24

24

Town & Country (Hearst)

10

9

9

9

V (Stephen Gan)

6

7

7

6

Vanity Fair (Condé Nast)

12

11

10

10

Vogue (Condé Nast)

12

11

11

11

W (BDG)

8

4

6

6

Wired (Condé Nast)

11

11

10

10

Women’s Health (Hearst)

10

10

10

9

WSJ. (Dow Jones)

12

11

8

8

FOR MORE, SEE:

The Monthly Fashion Magazine Is No More

The City of New York Brings Legal Action Against L’Officiel USA for Failing to Pay Freelancers

Marie Claire Isn’t Completely Done With Print

What’s Going On With Celine and Vogue?

What Happened to 50 Magazines Since the Pandemic Began (2024)

FAQs

What Happened to 50 Magazines Since the Pandemic Began? ›

In an analysis of 50 U.S.-based titles, WWD

WWD
Women's Wear Daily (also known as WWD) is a fashion-industry trade journal often referred to as the "Bible of fashion".
https://en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Women's_Wear_Daily
found that 26, or 52 percent, had a lower print frequency this year compared to 2019, while another 10 have ceased print operations completely.

Why are magazines dying out? ›

The explosion of social media has also cut into the advertising market on which print magazines have traditionally depended. Online audiences have come to expect new content daily or even hourly. Casual readers are less willing to wait for a weekly or monthly print magazine to arrive in the post or on a newsstand.

Why are magazines not popular anymore? ›

As technology and communication develop, newer generations have recognized the logic of investing in online content rather than waiting for new print publications. For media outlets, the cost of printing 100,000 issues of the latest magazines is more than the revenue coming back.

What magazines have gone out of business? ›

There are many magazines we loved that are no more. Remember Sesame Street's 3-2-1 Contact (1979-2001)? Disney Magazine (1965-2005), Atari Connection (1981-1984), Autoweek (1958-2019), Barney Magazine, (1994-2003), CD-ROM Today (1993-1996), Children's Digest (1950-2009), Cosmogirl (1999-2009), Cracked (1958-2007).

What magazines are going out of print? ›

Condé Nast-owned outlets Self, Teen Vogue and Glamour announced the end of regular print runs in 2016, 2017 and 2018, respectively. Dotdash Meredith cut the print editions of six magazines at once in early 2022 — Entertainment Weekly, InStyle, EatingWell, Health, Parents, and People en Español.

Why are magazines struggling? ›

The biggest challenges for print publishers lie in the mega-trends of readership and ad dollars are migrating to digital. Additionally, rising costs of publishing a print magazine, combined with shrinking rates and ad pages are putting many print publishers in a major cash crunch.

How are magazines still around? ›

Publishers produce print magazine because there are still some advertisers who prefer print to online to reach their audience. There will probably always be some print. Just like there are still hardbound copies of books even though you can have them electronically.

Do magazines have a future? ›

It never finishes. There is no such thing as the end of print. Print will be here forever, but it will be a slightly more artisan product than it has been over the last 50 years.” What McCabe is describing is a move from the industrial era to the artisan era which he predicts will happen around 2030/2035.

Does anyone buy magazines anymore? ›

In 2021, the magazine industry added 300,000 subscriptions after falling to all-time lows during the 2020 pandemic year.

Will magazines make a comeback? ›

The positive outlook for printed magazines was highlighted in Technavio's Magazine Publishing Market by Type, Application, and Geography - Forecast and Analysis 2023-2027 report.

What happens to old unsold magazines? ›

You may or may not know that the majority of unsold magazines are pulped by larger distributors. Coming from the book trade I was aware of the lifespan of an ordinary book in the average bookshop, but the cyclical culling of magazines is something else altogether.

Who reads magazines anymore? ›

While some people instinctively think of print as being almost exclusively for older people, about two-thirds of adults aged 18 to 34 said they love the touch and feel of printed magazines. When we surveyed our readers, we found that they run the gamut in age, and two-thirds are under 45 years old.

What is the oldest magazine still in circulation? ›

Scientific American has the distinction of being the oldest continuously published magazine in the United States (see website).

What is the most widely printed magazine? ›

"The Watchtower," the World's Most Widely Distributed Printed Magazine : History of Information.

Is print dying out? ›

With the increasing popularity of digital media, many people believe that print publications are dying a death and are on their way to becoming obsolete. The reality, however, is that none of the 'old' media have totally disappeared. People still read newspapers and magazines.

Why do people still buy printed magazines? ›

Simply put, people trust print more than most other sources. With the worry of fake news and how quickly things are posted and shared online, people find it harder to trust what they read digitally. In a survey done by Two Sides, they discovered print magazines are rated as the single most trusted news source.

Are magazines a dying industry? ›

Whatever happens, one thing is certain: magazines are not going away anytime soon. The magazine industry is not dead, but it is evolving. With the rise of digital media, magazines have been struggling to keep up. However, there are still many people who enjoy reading them.

What is the future of magazines? ›

But what does the future hold for magazine publishing? Here are a few key trends to watch: Digital-first publishing: As more readers turn to digital magazines, publishers are shifting their focus from print to digital-first publishing, creating content specifically for online and mobile platforms.

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