People Magazine Heads to New Ownership. Again.
Still a hit in print, the weekly chronicle of celebs and ordinary people who make news is set to become the property of a company specializing in informational websites.
By Marc Tracy
Still a hit in print, the weekly chronicle of celebs and ordinary people who make news is set to become the property of a company specializing in informational websites.
By Marc Tracy
He also scored a major journalistic coup by securing the rights to the Zapruder film of John F. Kennedy’s assassination for Life magazine.
By Katharine Q. Seelye
After bringing big changes to Sports Illustrated in the 1960s and ’70s, Mr. Cave had an equally significant impact at Time.
By Richard Sandomir
Leaving after a five-year stint is the veteran entertainment journalist Jess Cagle. Taking his place is Dan Wakeford, who learned his craft in London.
By Jaclyn Peiser
While having a massage late Sunday, the West Coast-based tech billionaire discussed via text message why he was entering the East Coast-based media industry by acquiring Time Inc.’s flagship publication.
By David Streitfeld
An oral history of how the pre-eminent media organization of the 20th century ended up on the scrap heap.
By Sridhar Pappu and Jay Stowe
The magazines, some of the most celebrated titles in the industry, clashed with the lifestyle publications favored by Meredith, which bought Time Inc. last year.
By Sydney Ember
After buying Time Inc. for $2.8 billion, Meredith is the largest magazine company in the United States, but it’s not about to change its unassuming style.
By Sydney Ember
An American, Ms. Hawley spent decades grilling mountaineers and compiling records for climbing expeditions in Nepal.
By Rajneesh Bhandari and Kai Schultz
The nearly century-old company must turn to its new owner to chart a path for its future — one perhaps not built on the iconic photography and longform journalism that helped it become a household name.
By The New York Times
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