When was newsweek first published




















He adds that if Newsweek's print edition can "start to get some traction on that, it can be a modest success". Mr Uzac admits that attracting potential advertisers was one of the key factors behind the move to restart the print edition. Newsweek sold to digital news firm. Newsweek to cease print edition.

In pictures: Newsweek front covers. Image source, Other. Newsweek has relaunched the print edition with a controversial story on the Bitcoin inventor. Complementing digital?

This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Today, Newsweek has a worldwide circulation of more than 4 million. Content: Newsweek offers comprehensive coverage of world events with a global network of correspondents, reporters and editors covering national and international affairs, business, science and technology, society and the arts and entertainment. NY Staff: Newsweek's editorial staff, based in New York, is made up of senior editors and writers and general, associate and assistant editors.

The editorial staff also includes head researchers, research-reporters, librarians, graphic artists, photographers and support technicians. Additional coverage is provided through "The Tip Sheet," a newsletter for consumers, covering topical subjects, such as health, money and travel. My Turn is the only newsweekly column written by readers. Approximately 4, letters to the editor are received each month. Other Editions Newsweek Inc. This was the cinematic coda to a decade of collapse.

Whatever its shortcomings, the country lost something with the demise of classic Newsweek —a magazine with guts and heart.

After years of survivable financial struggles, the magazine—founded in —cratered with the economy in , was sold by the Washington Post Co.

In the last five years, Newsweek produced some strong journalism and plenty of clickbait before becoming a painful embarrassment to anyone who toiled there in its golden age. I went to work at Newsweek 35 years ago last month. I stayed for nearly three decades as a national-affairs writer, media critic, and political columnist.

Many of my colleagues also worked there for the better part of their lives—unheard of nowadays. We bitched a lot but loved the place. Journalists are sometimes compared to the horses in Black Beauty —all we want is a nice master, a little hay to lie down on, and a sugar cube once in a while. We got that and a lot more from Katharine Graham, now immortalized by Meryl Streep in the film The Post , who until her death in was the best proprietor imaginable.

While more publicly identified with The Washington Post , she would hold monthly editorial lunches at our plush headquarters at Madison Avenue and later W. Dinosaurs still roamed the media earth, and the Grahams were satisfied with modest profits at best.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000