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  • 06:31 - 29.08.2010 News >> Latest

     My so-called life as a spy Annie Machon, a former intelligence offer for MI5, explains why the life of a British spy is an insular one. Read Article    

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  • 13:22 - 31.08.2010 News >> Latest

     Amazon Working on TV, Movie ServiceAmazon.com is trying to create a service that gives paying subscribers unlimited access over the Internet to some television shows and movies, as it tries to take on Netflix and AppleRead Article    

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  • 03:31 - 26.01.2010 News >> Latest

     How long should you hold out for Mr Right?A new book urges singletons to give up the search for Mr Right and marry Mr Second Best instead. What kind of advice is that, asks Becky Pugh. By Becky Pugh
    Published: 7:00AM GMT 26 Jan 2010Sex and the City's Carrie Bradshaw held out for Mr Right Photo: REX  Single women up and down the country had good reason to spit out their cornflakes as they read the papers yesterday morning. Nestling among tales of bankers' greed and Brangelina's have-they-or-haven't-they split was arguably one of the most incendiary stories of 2010. It goes like this: American author Lori Gottlieb has written a book, published here next week, in which she declares that singletons who are still searching for Mr Right by the age of 30 should give up and settle for Mr Second Best. The book, Marry Him: The Case for Settling for Mr Good Enough, blames literature, film and TV for leading us to believe erroneously that The One is out there. Hence, she says, in our doomed search for true love, we overlook countless relationships that could have made for "viable" marriages. How many self-respecting women do you know who dream of a "viable" marriage? We are grown-up enough to know that while the perfect relationship does not exist, we can expect a lot more of marriage than just viability. Women want love and warmth and emotional connection, and they want it to last for a lifetime. The good news, contrary to the gospel according to Gottlieb, is that those things exist, and they can last a lifetime. Not to believe that is to resign oneself to lifelong mediocrity and to the notion that it is all you deserve. We don't accept mediocrity from our government; we don't accept mediocrity in our careers; and we don't accept it in our friendships. Why should we accept it in marriage? I sure didn't when I said "I do" almost two years ago. This is not the viewpoint of a spoiled, demanding 21st-century woman. It is the way women have felt since their love lives were first recorded. In Jane Eyre, the worthy, reserved St. John Rivers proposes marriage to Jane because he believes she'd make a good missionary's wife. In a move that Gottlieb would consider foolish, Jane turns him down flat, saying, "I scorn your idea of love … I scorn the counterfeit sentiment you offer … and I scorn you when you offer it." Gottlieb's suggestion is absurd, says Maureen Waller, author of The English Marriage: Tales of Love, Money and Adultery. "I didn't meet Mr Right until my forties, and now I realise that he was definitely worth waiting for". Time and again, Sex and the City's Carrie Bradshaw could have walked off into the sunset with kind, wholesome Aidan. But she didn't. Instead, she valiantly endured years of pain while she listened to her instincts and waited for Mr Big. She was right: just look…

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  • 10:31 - 13.08.2010 News >> Latest

     Pilot in Stevens Crash Was 'Chuck Yeager' of Bush PilotsTheron "Terry" Smith, the pilot of the airplane that crashed Monday in Alaska, killing five people including former Sen. Ted Stevens, as a flamboyant former airline pilot who reveled in seat-of-the-pants flying. Read Article   

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  • 08:44 - 27.05.2010 News >> Latest

     The Palin BrandSome of Sarah Palin’s recent choices have her own base questioning her judgment.Read Opinion

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Magazines’ Newsstand Sales Fall 9.1 Percent Print E-mail

 

Magazines’ Newsstand Sales Fall 9.1 Percent

 

Magazines’ newsstand sales plummeted in the last six months of 2009, and subscriptions dropped as well.

Newsstand sales for the 472 consumer titles in the United States measured by the Audit Bureau of Circulations declined 9.1 percent, to 39.3 million, in the last half of 2009 versus the same period a year earlier, the organization reported this morning. That follows an 11.12 percent decline from July through December 2007 compared to July through December 2008.

Some of the well-known titles with dramatic single-copy declines included W, down 41.7 percent to about 25,000 for an average issue; Newsweek, down 41.3 percent to about 62,000 (Newsweek had decreased the number of copies on sale, noted a spokesman); SmartMoney, down 37 percent to about 26,000; Time, down 34.9 percent to about 90,000; Good Housekeeping, down 30.7 percent to 395,000; and Redbook, down 30.1 percent to 126,000.

Newsstand sales tend to be driven by the economy and are a more timely indicator of a magazine’s vitality than subscriptions, which tend to lag and which can be driven by heavy discounting. While newsstand sales are a small percentage of most magazines’ circulation, they are a profitable part of it — publishers typically charge only a fraction of the newsstand price for a subscription copy.

Overall circulation, including subscriptions, fell 2.23 percent. There were some bright spots. A magazine called Off-Road Adventures had the highest percentage increase, with overall circulation rising 483 percent — however, it was starting from a very low base of a 40,611 circulation.

Other popular titles that saw spikes were Rodale’s Women’s Health, which rose 21.5 percent, from 1.2 million to 1.45 million. The Disney magazine FamilyFun rose 16.7 percent, from 1.9 million to 2.2 million circulation. And Time Inc.’s People StyleWatch, which had been one of the few titles to post a big ad-page increase, also saw a circulation bump of 8.6 percent, rising to 803,000 circulation.

Among the 25 biggest magazines, the largest circulation drops were at TV Guide Magazine, which was sold for a dollar to a private-equity firm in 2008. Circulation there declined more than a quarter, to 2.4 million. Reader’s Digest, which is in the midst of a bankruptcy filing and is cutting the circulation it guarantees advertisers to 5.5 million, fell 13 percent to 7.1 million. And Prevention declined 13.2 percent, to 2.9 million.

The filings also provided intriguing figures about magazines that have been in the news recently. National Geographic Adventure, which announced it was ceasing publication in December, had a rise in newsstand sales of 1.5 percent, although overall circulation fell by 8.9 percent. Harper’s Magazine, where the editor Roger Hodge was dismissed a few weeks ago, saw a decline in newsstand sales of 28.5 percent and an overall circulation drop of 7.2 percent. Bloomberg BusinessWeek, which is undergoing a makeover from new owner Bloomberg L.P., had a newsstand-sales drop of 26.1 percent along with a slight drop in overall circulation.

And Bon Appetit, which was expected to benefit from sister publication Gourmet’s closing, declined both on newsstand sales (down 9.1 percent) and subscriptions (down 6 percent). However, Frederika Brookfield, a spokeswoman, said Gourmet was only closed with its November issue. As of January 2010, Bon Appetit’s circulation increased 15.4 percent, to 1.5 million, which will be reflected in the next Audit Bureau period.

 

 

 
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