Arena was a
British monthly
men's magazine. The defunct magazine was created in 1986 by
Nick Logan, who had started
The Face in 1980, to focus on trends in
fashion and
entertainment. British graphic designer
Neville Brody, who had designed
The Face, designed
Arena's launch appearance. On March 3, 2009 Bauer Consumer Media announced that Arena would be suspended from publication. The last edition was sold on March 12 2009.
The magazine featured articles on
food,
movies,
fitness,
sex,
music,
toys, and
books. It was pitched at a similarly upscale audience to
GQ, attempting to offer a more adult read than
lad mags like
Maxim and
FHM, and gearing itself specifically towards the "black collar worker".
Arena launched the careers of several prominent British media professionals, among them
Dylan Jones, the editor of
GQ UK who had served as
Arena's editor in the late 1980s.
In July 2006, facing competition from the internet, the editorial team behind Arena launched a team blog which features regular posts from its contributors.
In spite of this, magazine circulation continued to fall and in 2007,
Giles Hattersley, chief interviewer at
The Sunday Times was brought in as Editor. Hattersley oversaw a revamp of the publication and in November 2007, the magazine relaunched with a new design and new palate of content, featuring
David Beckham on its cover.
Hattersley returned to
The Sunday Times in March 2008 and was replaced in the interim by deputy editor Mat Smith. Smith left in August 2008 to take over as features director at
Esquire UK.
As of April 2009, international editions of Arena outside the UK continue to be published. These editions include
Ukraine,
Turkey,
Denmark,
Korea and
Thailand. Arena Singapore, the first English language edition outside the UK, was launched on October 27, 2006 by the publishing division of
Mediacorp.
Mediacorp had announced on 30 April 2009 that it was closing the Singapore edition of ARENA