
Magazines.
Magazines,
periodicals,
glossies or
serials are
publications, generally published on a regular schedule, containing a variety of
articles, generally financed by
advertising, by a purchase price, by pre-paid magazine
subscriptions, or all three. Magazines can be distributed through the
mail; through sales by
newsstands,
bookstores or other vendors; or through free distribution at selected pick up locations.
Publication
The various elements that contribute to the production of magazines vary wildly. Core elements such as publishing schedules, formats and target audiences are seemingly infinitely variable. Typically, magazines which focus primarily on current events, such as
Newsweek or
Entertainment Weekly, are published weekly or biweekly. Magazines with a focus on specific interests, such as
Cat Fancy, may be published less frequently, such as monthly, bimonthly or quarterly. A magazine will usually have a
date on the cover which often is later than the date it is actually published. Current magazines are generally available at bookstores and newsstands, while subscribers can receive them in the
mail. Many magazines also offer a
back issue service for previously published editions.
Most magazines produced on a commercial scale are printed using a
web offset process. The magazine is printed in sections, typically of 16 pages, which may be black-and-white, be in full colour, or use
spot colour. These sections are then bound, either by
stapling them within a
soft cover in a process sometimes referred to as
saddle-stitching, or by
gluing them together to form a spine, a process often called
perfect-binding.
Some magazines are also published on the
internet. Many magazines are available both on the internet and in hard copy, usually in different versions, though some are only available in hard copy or only via the internet: the latter are known as
online magazines.
Most magazines are available in the whole of the country in which they are published, although some are distributed only in specific regions or cities. Others are available internationally, often in different editions for each country or area of the world, varying to some degree in editorial and advertising content but not entirely dissimilar.
Other publications
Although similar to a magazine in some respects, an academic periodical featuring
scholarly articles written in a more specialist register is usually called an "
academic journal". Such publications typically carry little or no advertising. Articles are vetted by referees or a board of esteemed academics in the subject area.
History
The Gentleman's Magazine, first published in
1731, in
London, is considered to have been the first general-interest magazine.
Edward Cave, who edited
The Gentleman's Magazine under the pen name "Sylvanus Urban", was the first to use the term "magazine", on the analogy of a military storehouse of varied
materiel, originally derived from the Arabic
makazin "storehouses".
The oldest consumer magazine still in print is
The Scots Magazine, which was first published in
1739, though multiple changes in ownership and gaps in publication totaling over 90 years weaken that claim.
Lloyd's List was founded in Edward Lloyd’s England coffee shop in
1734; it is still published as a daily business newspaper.
Environmental impact
A
life cycle study shows that the
CO2 emissions caused by the production and distribution of one copy of an average sized 0.39 pound magazine in the
USA total about 0.95 kilograms (2.1 pounds) -- including paper from trees, materials, production, shipping and customer use. The loss of natural habitat potential from the 0.39 pound magazine is estimated to be 0.73 square meters (7.9 square feet).
See also
Types of magazines