distribution

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News magazines are the big news themselves today, with the new NYT magazine launching yesterday (I live tweeted my first impressions of each page on Sunday morning) and, entirely coincidentally I’m sure, the first issue of Tina Brown’s combined Newsweek/Daily Beast magazine appearing on newsstands today.

I’ll post more on both those two shortly, but first I’d like to highlight a really interesting-sounding creation by Chimurenga, which is a particularly creative pan-African magazine based in Cape Town that I’ve been a fan of since their excellent graphic novel issue.

The next Chimurenga project, working in collaboration with Nigeria’s Cassava Republic Press and Kenya’s Kwani?, is “a once-off, one-day-only edition of a speculative, future-forward newspaper that travels back in time to re-imagine the present.”

The new creation promises to be “a multi-section broadsheet with news, long-form journalism, comics, sport, art etc. and 100-page books magazine to be released in September 2011, in numerous African cities. Back-dated to the week May 18-24 2008, it’s situated during the first week of the so-called xenophobic violence in South Africa, two years ago – but it focuses outward, covering the events, scenes and situations around the world during this period.”

And it’ll be distributed by newspaper sellers across South Africa, Nigeria, Kenya and Southern Africa. You can read more about the concept on their hand-drawn dummy newspaper pages here.

Sounds fantastic – and they want your help. They want to turn the classifieds of their paper into a literary platform of its own. Learn how to participate here.

The medium of newsprint combined with deep thought and literary experimentation, with a more overtly political slant than the San Francisco Panorama, created and distributed in a region where newspapers remain the primary source of information? Can’t wait to see how this one turns out.

Q: What do you get if you cross the internet and magazines?
A: Ivan Pope.

Pope is a former zinester who created the world’s first internet magazine, The World Wide Web Newsletter (later 3W Magazine), in 1993. He later went on to help launch the first consumer magazine about the web, .net, and also invented the cybercafé as part of an installation at the ICA in London.

He’s now turned his entrepreneurial zeal to creating Magazero, an online magazine store dedicated to “gathering the best, freshest, strangest, most inaccessible, juciest, loveliest independent magazines from around the world and bringing them into your life.”

Magtastic talked to him about the future of magazine selling, setting up a competitor to Stack, and the glory of the magazine ecosystem.

What made you want to set up an online magazine shop?
I’ve wanted to open a magazine shop for about fifteen years now. In the nineties, I had an internet business with an office in New York (domain names; I sort of invented that industry). I used to spend a lot of time there and one thing I loved were the magazine shops with floor to ceiling racks of every magazine you could imagine. I always thought it would be a great thing to open something similar in the UK.

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In every crisis, opportunity. Many mainstream magazine publishers are desperate keen to get readers onto their digital editions, in which they’ve invested a lot of money for (so far) pretty low readership returns.

Conde Nast, however, have sensed an opening with the postal strikes in the UK. They recently emailed subscribers thusly:

Dear XXXXXXX

Royal Mail industrial action means that your copy of the December edition of WIRED may be delayed. Please accept our apologies for the inconvenience; we are doing everything possible to ensure delivery in good time.

In the meantime, a digital copy will be available in your private page on our subscription website. You will get exclusive access to this page using your subscriber number and surname; you can also amend your details.

Followed by a reminder of the subscriber number, and a link. A smart move, and a sensible one too, not only because it might get some readers to opt for digital-only subscriptions come renewal time, but also because it might persuade them not to seek out their technology news elsewhere on the web instead. After all, imagine what would happen to the remains of the printed newspaper industry if they couldn’t get papers out to newsagents for a week or two.

The only misstep, in my opinion, is in making it subscriber-only – with the sudden boost in interest, they might have picked up a few impulse purchases too.

For now, the strikes seem to have been postponed until the new year. If they start up again in January, I’d expect digital magazine strategists to be better prepared with more offers and unique content. And if that happens, could it be the game changer the industry has been waiting for?

(Thanks Mr B.)

Troubled times in the USA magazine market. A few weeks ago, publishers rebelled against a 7% hike in prices from two of the country’s biggest magazine distributors. Today, the distributors have reacted by… well, according to some reports, by stopping doing any distribution. Ever again.

Jim Gillis, the head of one of the two companies, Source Interlink, denies his firm is quitting distribution, but he will be dropping all the magazines from those clients he couldn’t get an agreement with.

“I’m shipping magazines,” Gillis said. “And my retailers are not accepting product from anyone but me. So I don’t know what Anderson and News Group are doing and I don’t really give a sh*t. In my footprint, nobody is delivering magazines but me. So that means that AMI, Curtis, Bauer and Time Warner are out.”

The other company involved, Anderson News, has yet to comment. There’s going to be some market adjustment on this one, and how. FOLIO is all over the story, which continues to change as more news comes in.

No sooner do I bemoan a lack of distributor imagination than one saunters in and does something marvellous. Motto is a Swiss magazine distributor whose blog has been mentioned in posts passim; it has just opened its first physical store in Berlin (open Saturdays only, it seems), and to celebrate has a week of special magazine presentations from Mono.Kultur, Spike, Piktogram, Gagarin and Kilimanjaro, starting today (Dec 16th). Screenings, talks, the unveiling of Mono.Kultur’s new box set, and much more, all in a warmly wooden surrounding. Can’t wait to visit.

Here we have one of the futures of magazines: bespoke spaces for bespoke mags. More, please.

Mygazines starts to reveal its monetising strategy
No news on if the lawyers tracked them down. Meanwhile on the legal side of the fence…

Publishers to give away 50 million digital magazines
Zinio are behind this; a rather smart way for them to get the lead over their rivals, but will it get many readers? Speaking of digital, did “iPhone magazine” PMc ever launch? It’s fashion week, but it isn’t in the iTunes app store as promised yet…

Yet another version of that Obama cover
How come almost all the parodies are funnier than the original?

Wired gives a play-by-play on how they edit an article
I’ve suffered at the hands of their editors before

ITV becomes digital newsagent
That’s the leading UK commercial TV broadcaster, for non-Britishers. They also own Friends Reunited, which is what nostalgic stalkers in England used to use before Facebook; this diginewsstand adds one more random bullet to their scattergun web offering

Yet another new luxury fashion supplement
Washington Post arrives late to the party, hunts around for any uneaten vol au vents

Taschen publishes entire reprint of Arts and Architecture
Now there’s a trend that could get interesting/expensive. They should open up the choice of their next reprint to the audience (I’d probably vote for Nest)

Life magazine resurfaces yet again, as a social photo archive website
If we’ve seen less than 3% of what they have, there are going to be some amazing unseen images in there. I just wish they’d donate them to the nation / Library of Congress on a similar non-commercial clause that NASA uses. Set the archive free!

Main distributor of foreign magazines in Japan goes bust
Via Jean Snow

Esquire e-cover hacked. To death
My review of the full anniversary issue coming soon