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SEE JANE FOLD (Dinosaur Media DeathWatchâ„¢)
New York Post ^
| July 10, 2007
| Keith J. Kelly
Posted on 07/10/2007 5:24:53 AM PDT by abb
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To: Malacoda
When these left wing mags and fishwraps crash and burn, we are better off.
21
posted on
07/10/2007 10:12:27 AM PDT
by
Grampa Dave
(Support Free Republic with donations, That is the conservative way. No Freeploading!)
To: abb
Absolutely Fabulous
22
posted on
07/10/2007 10:18:50 AM PDT
by
bert
(K.E. N.P. +12 . Happiness is a down sleeping bag)
To: abb
I thought Jane was a magazine about the Defense industry?
23
posted on
07/10/2007 10:23:20 AM PDT
by
Cowboy Bob
(Withhold Taxes - Starve a Liberal)
To: Cowboy Bob
Janes provides intelligence about militaries and other things.
24
posted on
07/10/2007 11:27:48 AM PDT
by
Milhous
(There are only two ways of telling the complete truth: anonymously and posthumously. - Thomas Sowell)
Make that Jane's as in the surname of Fred T. Jane as opposed to Jane, the first name of Jane Pratt. :)
25
posted on
07/10/2007 11:32:19 AM PDT
by
Milhous
(There are only two ways of telling the complete truth: anonymously and posthumously. - Thomas Sowell)
To: Malacoda
“Better sex technique, how to give a mind-blowing BJ, birth control adverts,”
Well, no wonder it failed.
To reach the proper twenty-something gamine, you need headline teasers like these:
How to get him to keep his hands to himself!
Lie There, Loathe It.
You want me to do what?
Trains and tunnels — Wild, Wild West exposed
Riding the clothes dryer — uneven loads rule!
Calibrate your skinniness in Coulters.
26
posted on
07/10/2007 11:43:19 AM PDT
by
gcruse
To: Grampa Dave
My kids used to love looking at pictures in magazines, I hope your DIL can find something lovely to pass the summer afternoons with your granddaughter. It’s a wonderful experience!
27
posted on
07/10/2007 5:00:26 PM PDT
by
ishabibble
(ALL-AMERICAN INFIDEL)
To: Malacoda
Don't forget all the girl-on-girl promotion.
Although I still must admit a certain fondness for Vogue, the only fashion mag I subscribe to now is Lucky.... they have absolutely blessedly nothing to say.
28
posted on
07/10/2007 5:05:54 PM PDT
by
AnnaZ
(I keep 2 magnums in my desk.One's a gun and I keep it loaded.Other's a bottle and it keeps me loaded)
To: abb
'That Baby That Went Off and Got On Drugs'
By Nat Ives
Published: July 10, 2007 NEW YORK (AdAge.com) -- One day after Conde Nast Publications shut down Jane magazine, founder and namesake Jane Pratt used a special edition of her Sirius Satellite Radio show to blast what the title became after her departure two years ago.
Jane Pratt says she could have helped keep her namesake magazine going even after leaving Conde Nast. 'I think I could have helped the magazine stay alive.'
Photo Credit: Larry Busacca/WireImage
"I feel like Sassy was my baby; I feel like Jane was my second baby," said Ms. Pratt, who started Jane in 1997 and was the first editor of Sassy, a ground-breaking title for teen girls, before that. "I feel like I abandoned that baby and it went off and got on drugs or something. I do have guilt about that. What I really would have liked would have been to have kept more of a connection to the magazine."
Ad pages sunk It isn't clear, of course, whether maintaining close ties would have been possible in the summer of 2005, when Ms. Pratt and Conde Nast split in what they called a mutual decision. But, in any case, it didn't happen. Brandon Holley was hired to succeed Ms. Pratt as editor in chief and Carlos Lamadrid was tapped to take over as publisher. What followed was rocky for everyone: A Conde Nast ad campaign tried without much luck to position Ms. Holley as "so Jane," while advertisers stuck their hands in their pockets and let ad pages sink 21% in 2006. One cover last year, showing Jessica Simpson wearing pink and biting her finger, appalled some old readers who had loved Ms. Pratt's less mainstream touch.
Yesterday Conde Nast told Ms. Holley, Mr. Lamadrid and the staff that recent improvements in performance were not enough; Jane's August issue will be its last.
"I would have liked to have had some say over who was brought in," Ms. Pratt said on the radio show. "I think I could have helped the magazine stay alive by being involved on the advertising side, not letting as many of those advertisers slip away. I could have helped on the publicity side."
"If a magazine's named Jane, then people want to see Jane on TV or see Jane in the meeting with L'Oreal," she added. "I think it could have been handled differently."
'Still had hope' Ms. Pratt said she had hoped the magazine would live on without her. "I didn't want the magazine to fold because I still had hope for it," she told a caller who said she had lost interest in the magazine, "that it could take on the right direction and that it could get back the advertising that it had lost and some of the readers like you that had defected."
She also said she had wished well for her former colleagues at Jane who stayed after she left -- although there was one thing that bugged her on that front. "I have some questions why they stayed after it became crappy," she said.
29
posted on
07/10/2007 9:38:13 PM PDT
by
Milhous
(There are only two ways of telling the complete truth: anonymously and posthumously. - Thomas Sowell)
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