Not exact matches
With that core conviction in mind, the
American Society of
Magazine Editors for over two decades has issued guidelines to make sure that the difference between advertising and editorial content is transparent to
readers and that there is no advertiser influence or pressure on editorial independence.
«Throughout our 166 year history, we have strived to play an active role in facilitating innovation in addition to reporting on it,» says Mariette DiChristina, Editor in Chief of Scientific
American, the longest continuously published
magazine in the U.S. «Scientific
American's goal is to make science content available to interested
readers anytime, anywhere - no matter which device they choose to read it on.
Mariette: The other half of that quote is «Information also wants to be expensive,» and it goes on to explain that because if you want quality information, that takes time to produce and it is thus very precious; and I think it's with that half of the quote in mind that Scientific
American and other publications need to make these step - by - step choices to find out what ultimately will be best for you, our
readers, because if the
magazine does not have a working model of providing good quality material, then no one is served.
Recent updates: Added 1/14: First Showing (additional critic), Slashfilm (additional critic) Added 1/8: Birth.Movies.Death (additional critics), Parallax View, The Tracking Board Added 1/7: Film Journey, The Film Stage (additional critic), First Showing (additional critic) Added 1/5: The Film Stage (additional critics), In Review, Moving Picture Blog, The Playlist (additional critics), Slashfilm (additional critics), Taste of Cinema Added 1/3: CBS News, Den of Geek [UK], Film Pulse, The Film Stage (substituted individual lists for consensus list), Hidden Remote, The Playlist (additional critics), PopCulture.com, Reverse Shot, ScreenAnarchy, Slant (substituted individual lists for consensus list), Slashfilm, Wichita Eagle Added 12/31: artsBHAM, Cape Cod Times, CinemaBlend (additional critics), Collider (additional critics), Criterion [The Daily], Criterion Cast, The Film Stage, First Showing, Flavorwire, The Globe and Mail, The Hollywood Reporter / Heat Vision, Lincoln Journal Star, Monkeys Fighting Robots, NOW
Magazine, Omaha World - Herald, Paste, People, ReelViews, Salt Lake City Weekly, San Antonio Current, Screen Daily, SF Weekly, These Violent Delights, Toledo Blade, Uncut, Under the Radar, Vancouver Observer, Vancouver Sun Added 12/29: The Arts Desk, Austin
American - Statesman, Austin Chronicle, Awards Daily, Boston Globe, Boston Herald, CinemaBlend (additional critics), Cleveland Scene, Collider (additional critics), The Daily Beast, Deadline, Film Journal International, Houston Chronicle, Ioncinema, Las Vegas Review - Journal, New Orleans Times - Picayune, New York Post, Paper, The Playlist, San Diego City Beat, San Francisco Chronicle, San Francisco Examiner, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Salt Lake Tribune, Seattle Weekly, Shepherd Express, The Stranger, Tallahassee Democrat, Toronto Star, Tucson Weekly, Tulsa World, Uproxx, The Virginian - Pilot, Washington City Paper, White City Cinema Added 12/27: Awards Campaign, Baltimore Beat, Buffalo News, Chicago Daily Herald, CinemaBlend, Collider, Film School Rejects, GameSpot, JoBlo, Metro UK, Newsweek, Observer, San Jose Mercury News, Seattle Times, Sydney Morning Herald, Tampa Bay Times, Thrillist, USA Today, Village Voice (Wolfe), Wired UK Added 12/22: Chicago Sun - Times, Den of Geek [US], The Guardian, Mashable, Metro US, Sioux City Journal, Star Tribune, The Verge, Wired Added 12/21: BBC, Chicago
Reader, The Commercial Appeal, IGN, Las Vegas Weekly, TimeOut New York, Village Voice Added 12/20: A.V. Club, Crave, Esquire, The Independent, Spectrum Culture Added 12/19: The Atlantic, Birth.Movies.Death., CineVue, Newsday, NPR, WhatCulture Added 12/18: Arizona Republic, Yahoo! Added 12/17: Dazed, Flood
Magazine, New Zealand Herald, Salon, ScreenCrush, The Star - Ledger (NJ.com), Time Out London, Total Film Added 12/15: BuzzFeed, Christian Science Monitor, Detroit News, Los Angeles Times, Philadelphia Daily News, Vox Added 12/14: Associated Press, Chicago Tribune, Consequence of Sound, Little White Lies, Los Angeles Daily News, RogerEbert.com, TheWrap Added 12/13: Evening Standard, Variety Added 12/12: The Hollywood Reporter, Huffington Post, PopCrush Added 12/11: CBC, The Observer [UK], Wall Street Journal Added 12/8: The New Yorker, Rolling Stone, Slant Added 12/7: Culture Trip, IMDb, The Ringer, Slate, Time, Us Weekly Added 12/6: Cahiers du Cinéma, New York Times, Vogue, Vulture (Yoshida), Washington Post Added 12/5: Scorecard launched with 15 lists.
Consider that major European academics such as Umberto Eco and the late Roland Barthes have written about movies for popular newspapers and
magazines, but their U.S. counterparts are considered much too esoteric for such exposure — which doesn't mean that
American readers are dumber, only that
American editors (and perhaps writers) are more restrictive.
For generations,
American schoolchildren have kept up with current events with the help of such venerable classroom
magazines as Junior Scholastic and My Weekly
Reader.
Although today EPE — the publisher of Education Week — is recognized as the premier source of news, information, and analysis on
American precollegiate education, it grew out of a bold experiment by 15 editors of leading university alumni
magazines to speak with one voice to their
readers as higher education sought to respond to the deep national concerns of that time.
One of their most dramatic moves has been to convert their monthly digital
magazine, Shonen Jump, to a digital weekly and sync it with the Japanese Shonen Jump, so that North
American readers can get their new chapters of Naruto, One Piece, and other Shonen Jump manga the same day as Japanese
readers.
Published by New
American Press, MAYDAY
Magazine presents new poetry, prose, translations, political / cultural commentary, and visual art to a growing international community of
readers.
Best Friends Animal Society's Ledy VanKavage has been nominated by the
readers of
American Dog
magazine for Animal Welfare Lobbyist of the Year.
My natural history photography has appeared in BBC Wildlife, National Wildlife, National Geographic
Magazine, Ocean Realm, Sunset, People, Ranger Rick,
Reader's Digest, Scuba Diving, Skin Diver, Scientific
American, Nature, Science, New York Times, United Press International, USA Today, has been used in various advertising and publicity campaigns as well as by all of the major textbook publishing houses, is on exhibit in aquaria and museums around the world and is occasionally recognized in photographic competitions.
Periodicals / News / Wire: BBC Wildlife, National Wildlife and International Wildlife (NWF), GEO, National Geographic
Magazine, Nature's Best, Nature, Science, All Animals, Ocean Realm, Scientific
American, Sportfishing, Saltwater Sportsman,
Reader's Digest, Tauchen (Germany), Islands, Skin Diver, Scuba Diving, Sport Diver, Dive (UK), Sea
Magazine, Sunset, People, Highlights for Children, Unterwasser (Germany), Pacific Coast Sportfishing, Marine Photo (Japan), Natural World (UK), Living Planet (Australia), Surfing Girl (sweeeet), Carve Surf (UK), Boards (UK), Wildlife Conservation, Sports Illustrated for Kids, National Geographic Kids, The New York Times, United Press International, USA Today, Ranger Rick and My Big Backyard (NWF), Outdoor California, California Wild
Thailand was honoured for a seven - page feature story on The Similan Islands that appeared in the February 2014 issue of the widely read
American magazine The Robb Report, which has a combined online and print audience reach of nearly one million
readers.
, 2009 2008 — Inclusion in Publication of Artists, Studio Visit, Volume 2, 2008 2007 — Artner, Alan, Art: Reviews, Chicago Tribune, June 22, 2007 2007 — Nance, Kevin, Art Review, «How it all happened, or not; New exhibit blurs the line between fact and fantasy» Chicago Sun - Times, June 6, 2007 2007 — Featured Artist CHI # 140, Flavorpill: Chicago, May 22, 2007 2007 — «Gallery Shorts», F News
Magazine: The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, May 2007 2007 — «Galleries and Museums: Featured Artists», Chicago
Reader, May 18, 2007 2007 — Rose, Joshua, «Persistence of Memory»,
American Art Collector, Issue 19, May 2007 2006 — Duffy, Heather, «Creative Imaginings: The Howard A. and Judith Tullman Collection», The Vanguard, USA, Nov. 20th, 2006 2006 — Harrison, Thomas, «Artwork, Imagery Provocative in Tullman Show», Mobile Register, Nov. 2006 2003 — Krenz, Marcel, «Space Invaders: Six Painters & Two Sculptors Reconstruct Representation», Contemporary, Issue 55
Dluzen is the former Editor - in - Chief of Chicago Art
Magazine, and her writing also has appeared in Newcity, Chicago
Reader, the New
American Paintings blog and The Outsider
Magazine.
A champion of education for African
Americans, Barnes made his collection of African art broadly available to black
readers through Opportunity
magazine.
Her reviews include, The New York Times, The Chicago Sun Times, The
Reader, NY Press, Art Press
Magazine, W
Magazine, Elle, Fiber Arts, Textile Plus, Surface Design, Art In America, Tema Celeste, Interior Design, Art News, Time Out Chicago, Time Out New York, The
American Art Collector and Art Forum.
With feature articles, excerpts and exposés by such quintessential writers as Hunter S. Thompson, Matt Taibbi and David Harris, this book is an irresistible and essential keepsake of the
magazine that has defined
American music for generations of
readers.
For North
American readers, Permaculture
Magazine is available throughout America and Canada on discerning newsstands or by subscription via the
Magazine CyberCenter.
Jon Lindsey is the New York founding partner of Major, Lindsey & Africa, voted the «Best Legal Recruiter» by the
readers of The National Law Journal, «best legal search firm in the United States» in Worldlaw Business
magazine's survey of the AmLaw 100, and «in a league apart» from other legal recruiters by The
American Lawyer.
Forbes
magazine's website offers various lists (forbes.com/lists) for
readers to enjoy, including «400 Richest
Americans» and «Top - Earning CEOs.»
Now, I am not a
reader of
magazines other than Scientific
American type publications, and have no curiosity for these things.