Monday, May 11, 2009

Magazines are dead. Long live magazines.

Print is dying. No, I'm not going to bother backing that up, I'm pretty sure we all know and realise that. Ad sales are down, magazines are rapidly dwindling to nothing, major newspapers are folding. Hell, the Rocky Mountain News is no longer in print, and the Boston Globe isn't looking too healthy.

Magazines are dying too, but not all of them. Because, it seems, the magazines that are vanishing are the ones that use their pages solely as a way to transmit information. Magazines like Cosmo, Time, Maxim, EGM and Wired all come out regularly, and use their pages to bring as much information (though I use the term loosely) as they can to their readers, and that's it. Because of this, the paper is usually as low quality as they can get away with, and so too is the writing and content. The problem with this is that all this information is available easier, cheaper and faster online.

The ones that are arising in their place, however, are fetish magazines. Not in the kinky sense (though there are those too), but in a more traditional manner, as objects of worship. This is the magazine as an Object in and of itself. These are magazines that you don't buy for what's in them, but rather to possess them. They are high quality, of inherently niche topic, and designed to be kept. You don't throw them away in the recycling a week after you get them, rather they're closer to art books. The message isn't in the medium, the medium is the message.

The two that spring to mind (though both are occasionally NSFW), are Coilhouse and Filament. Coilhouse is home to the weird and the wonderful. Each page is stunningly laid out on heavy stock paper, with gorgeous photography and illustrations. Even the advertisements are freakishly beautiful. Filament is a magazine of intelligence and male nudity aimed at "the female gaze". Once again, it doesn't come out very frequently, and it's an object to be purchased as a thing of beauty in its own right.

A wonderful historic example of this is the magazine Gentry, which was aimed squarely at the upper-class British male, and it even came with fabric samples woven in. Once again the importance was in the object itself, as a permanent Thing.

Another excellent example (though in fiction) is Jon Armstrong's novel Grey (available for free as an ebook here). The plot in the book is by all accounts mediocre, but it's worth reading just for the outfits. It is pure clothing porn in a way I can't even begin to explain. In the novel, the main character is a devotee of the magazine "Pure H".
Then she introduced me to Pure H and everything changed again. Published every other month, the magazine is one-half meter square and printed on the most luscious and expensive paper made. It is a joy to touch and hold. But the most extraordinary thing about the magazine is that one anonymous person produces it. Although I’d heard speculation about who he might be, I preferred to enjoy his art without worrying about identity. He photographed every photo. He wrote all the copy. And each issue was a complex puzzle to be savored and deciphered.

You know what? I love this trend. I love the idea of magazines that exists as an Object itself, more than its readily pirated contents. An Object of inherent value. Magazines are dead. Long live magazines.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

I worked in ad sales for Conde Nast (Wired and Vanity Fair) for 3 years before starting life as a grad student. Magazine profit is entirely tied to ad sales. A magazine with a wide circulation can have a fiercely loyal following but if it can't get advertisers to back it up then it will fold (RIP Jane Magazine, I still mourn your loss). It's kind of cool that these niche magazines are around now, but only time will tell if they will be sustainable. But I'd be willing to shell out for a high quality niche mag with no advertising (ala cook's illustrated).

Arthur Curry said...

Tell me about it. I have a subscription to Wired, and it's ludicrously thin at present, there's just no ad sales. Things are also getting bad online. The website I work for (which is based around digital cameras) has been reduced to running an ad for an online dating service.

Sarah said...

I guess that in this age - where you can surf the information super highway of wikipedia and google to find anything and everything you ever wanted, or didn't want, to know - information has become so easily accessible and ludicrously abundant that it is no longer a valuable asset. Information can't be the prize of magazines, as we are now able to largely access a plethora of information for free using the wonderful series of tubes. I think this largely explains why news has become the entertainment show that it is - no longer are we content with mere information, we need it super sized, with surround sound and elite graphics, holographed images, and 3d graphs you can pull out of your pen to project to the studio audience. I'm waiting for them to add in laugh tracks. I guess magazines are then working with the medium that they have - flash it up, create a work of art in and of itself, regardless of the content. Survival of the fittest, or something.