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New York (magazine)



 
 
New York is a weekly magazine concerned with the life, culture, politics, and style of New York City
New York City

The City of New York is the List of United States cities by population in the United States, while the New York metropolitan area ranks among the List of urban areas by population....
. Founded by Milton Glaser
Milton Glaser

Milton Glaser is a graphic designer, best known for the I Love New York logo, his "Bob Dylan" poster, the "DC bullet" logo used by DC Comics from 1977 to 2005, and the "Brooklyn Brewery" logo....
 and Clay Felker
Clay Felker

Clay Schuette Felker was an United States magazine editor and journalist who founded New York Magazine in 1968. He was known for bringing large numbers of journalists into the profession....
 in 1968 as a competitor to The New Yorker
The New Yorker

The New Yorker is an United States magazine that publishes reportage, commentary, criticism, essays, fiction, satire, cartoons, and poetry. Starting as a weekly in the mid-1920s, the magazine is now published 47 times per year, with five of these issues covering two-week spans....
, it offers less national news and more gossipy, tabloid-like stories, but has also published noteworthy articles on city and state politics and culture over the years. It was one of the first "lifestyle
Lifestyle

Lifestyle was originally coined by Austrian psychologist Alfred Adler in 1929. The current broader sense of the word dates from 1961.In sociology, a lifestyle is the way a person lives....
" magazines, and its format and style have been copied by other American regional city publications, such as Philadelphia, New Jersey Monthly
New Jersey Monthly

New Jersey Monthly is a monthly glossy publication featuring issues of interest to residents of the U.S. state of New Jersey.In addition to articles of general interest, occasional special subject issues covering and ranking high schools, lawyers and municipalities , have been popular sources of bragging rights for those selected and especi...
 and others, although New York is the only weekly among them and therefore contains more immediate coverage.






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New York is a weekly magazine concerned with the life, culture, politics, and style of New York City
New York City

The City of New York is the List of United States cities by population in the United States, while the New York metropolitan area ranks among the List of urban areas by population....
. Founded by Milton Glaser
Milton Glaser

Milton Glaser is a graphic designer, best known for the I Love New York logo, his "Bob Dylan" poster, the "DC bullet" logo used by DC Comics from 1977 to 2005, and the "Brooklyn Brewery" logo....
 and Clay Felker
Clay Felker

Clay Schuette Felker was an United States magazine editor and journalist who founded New York Magazine in 1968. He was known for bringing large numbers of journalists into the profession....
 in 1968 as a competitor to The New Yorker
The New Yorker

The New Yorker is an United States magazine that publishes reportage, commentary, criticism, essays, fiction, satire, cartoons, and poetry. Starting as a weekly in the mid-1920s, the magazine is now published 47 times per year, with five of these issues covering two-week spans....
, it offers less national news and more gossipy, tabloid-like stories, but has also published noteworthy articles on city and state politics and culture over the years. It was one of the first "lifestyle
Lifestyle

Lifestyle was originally coined by Austrian psychologist Alfred Adler in 1929. The current broader sense of the word dates from 1961.In sociology, a lifestyle is the way a person lives....
" magazines, and its format and style have been copied by other American regional city publications, such as Philadelphia, New Jersey Monthly
New Jersey Monthly

New Jersey Monthly is a monthly glossy publication featuring issues of interest to residents of the U.S. state of New Jersey.In addition to articles of general interest, occasional special subject issues covering and ranking high schools, lawyers and municipalities , have been popular sources of bragging rights for those selected and especi...
 and others, although New York is the only weekly among them and therefore contains more immediate coverage. Its 2005 paid circulation was 437,181, with 94.6% of that coming from subscriptions. The website receives visits from 1.1 million users monthly.

History

New York began life in 1963 as the Sunday-magazine supplement of the New York Herald Tribune
New York Herald Tribune

The New York Herald Tribune was a daily newspaper created in 1924 when the New York Tribune acquired the New York Herald. The Herald Tribune was a leading Republican Party paper, and a voice for moderate "internationalism" Republicans as opposed to the "isolationism" variety represented by the Chicago Tribune....
 newspaper. Edited by Clay Felker
Clay Felker

Clay Schuette Felker was an United States magazine editor and journalist who founded New York Magazine in 1968. He was known for bringing large numbers of journalists into the profession....
, the magazine showcased the work of several talented Tribune contributors, including Tom Wolfe
Tom Wolfe

Thomas Kennerly Wolfe, Jr. , known as Tom Wolfe, is a best-selling United States author and journalist. He is one of the founders of the New Journalism movement of the 1960s and 1970s....
 and Jimmy Breslin
Jimmy Breslin

Jimmy Breslin is a Pulitzer Prize-winning United States columnist and author. He has written numerous novels, and columns of his have appeared regularly in various newspapers in his hometown of New York City....
. Soon after the Tribune went out of business in 1966–67, Felker and his partner, Milton Glaser
Milton Glaser

Milton Glaser is a graphic designer, best known for the I Love New York logo, his "Bob Dylan" poster, the "DC bullet" logo used by DC Comics from 1977 to 2005, and the "Brooklyn Brewery" logo....
, purchased the rights and reincarnated the magazine as a stand-alone glossy. Joining them was managing editor Jack Nessel, Felker's number two at the Herald Tribune. New Yorks first issue was dated April 8, 1968. Among the by-lines were many familiar names from the magazine's earlier incarnation, including Breslin, Wolfe, and the financial writer, George Goodman
George Goodman

George Jerome Waldo Goodman , is an United States economist, author, and broadcast economics commentator, best known by his pseudonym Adam Smith ....
, who wrote as "Adam Smith".

Within a year, Felker had assembled a team of contributors who would come to define the magazine's voice. Breslin became a regular, as did Gloria Steinem
Gloria Steinem

Gloria Marie Steinem is an American feminism icon, journalism, and social activism and political activism. Rising to national prominence in the 1970s, she became a leading politician of the decade, and one of the most important heads of the Feminist Movement in the United States ....
, who wrote the city-politics column, and Gail Sheehy
Gail Sheehy

Gail Sheehy is an United States writer and lecturer, most notable for her books on life and the life cycle. She is also a contributor to the magazine Vanity Fair ....
. (Sheehy would eventually marry Felker, in 1984.) Harold Clurman
Harold Clurman

Harold Edgar Clurman was an United States theater director and drama critic, most famous for being one of the three original founders of the New York City's Group Theatre ....
 was hired as the theater critic. Judith Crist
Judith Crist

Judith Crist is an United States of America film critic. She appeared regularly on the Today from 1964-1973 and has appeared in one film, Woody Allen's Stardust Memories....
 wrote movie reviews. Alan Rich
Alan Rich

Alan Rich is an United States music critic who currently writes for Bloomberg L.P.. He first studied medicine at Harvard before turning to music....
 covered the classical-music scene. Gael Greene
Gael Greene

Gael Greene is an American food critic. For more than 30 years, she served as New York magazine's "Insatiable Critic." Greene famously went to great lengths to conceal her identity, so no restaurateurs would be able to identify her....
, writing under the rubric "The Insatiable Critic," reviewed restaurants, cultivating a baroque
Baroque

In the the arts, the Baroque was a Western cultural Epoch , starting roughly at the beginning of the 17th century in Rome, Italy. It was exemplified by drama and grandeur in Baroque sculpture, Baroque painting, literature, Baroque dance, and Baroque music....
 writing style that leaned heavily on sexual metaphor
Metaphor

Metaphor is language that directly compares seemingly unrelated subjects. It is a figure of speech that compares two or more things without using the words "like" or "as." More generally, a metaphor describes a first subject as being or equal to a second object in some way....
. Woody Allen
Woody Allen

Woody Allen is an Cinema of the United States film director, writer, actor, comedian, musician and playwright.Allen's distinctive films, which run the gamut from dramas to Screwball comedy film, have made him one of the most respected living American directors....
 contributed a few stories for the magazine in its early years. The magazine's regional focus and innovative illustrations inspired numerous imitators across the country.

Wolfe was a regular contributor as well, and in 1970, wrote a story that for many defined the magazine (if not the age): "Radical Chic: That Party at Lenny's". The article described a benefit party for the Black Panthers, held in Leonard Bernstein
Leonard Bernstein

Leonard Bernstein was a multi-Emmy-winning and Academy Award for Original Music Score nominated American Conductor , composer, author, music lecturer and Piano....
's apartment, in a collision of high culture
High culture

High culture is a term, now used in a number of different ways in academic discourse, whose most common meaning is the set of culture products, mainly in the arts, held in the highest esteem by a culture....
 and low that paralleled
New York magazine's ethos. In 1972, New York also launched Ms.
Ms. magazine

Ms. is an United States feminism magazine co-founded by American feminist and activist Gloria Steinem and founding editor Letty Cottin Pogrebin together with founding editors Patricia Carbine, Joanne Edgar, Nina Finkelstein, and Mary Peacock, that first appeared in 1971 as an insert in New York Magazine magazine....
magazine, which began as a special issue. New West, a sister magazine on New York
s model that covered California
California

California is a U.S. state on the West Coast of the United States of the United States, along the Pacific Ocean. It is bordered by Oregon to the north, Nevada to the east, Arizona to the southeast, and to the south the Mexico state of Baja California....
 life, was also published for a few years in the 1970s. Later columnists writing for the magazine included Michael Tomasky
Michael Tomasky

Michael Tomasky is a American liberalism United States columnist, journalist and author. He is currently the editor in chief of Democracy: A Journal of Ideas....
 (city politics), John Simon
John Simon (critic)

John I. Simon, born Ivan Simon on May 12, 1925 in the city of Subotica located in the region of Backa, then Subdivisions of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia#Oblasts: 1922-1929, the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes, from 1929 known as Yugoslavia , is an American author of Hungarian descent and literary, theater, and film critic....
 (replacing Clurman on theater), David Denby
David Denby (film critic)

David Denby is an United States journalist, best-known as film critic for The New Yorker magazine....
 (film), James Atlas
James Atlas

James Atlas , is the president of Atlas & Company, publishers, and founding editor of the Penguin Lives Series. A Harvard graduate, Rhodes Scholar, and onetime contributor to The New Yorker, he was an editor at The New York Times Magazine for many years....
, Marilyn Stasio
Marilyn Stasio

Marilyn Stasio is a New York City area author, writer and literary critic. She has been the "Crime Columnist" for The New York Times Book Review since about 1988, having written over 650 reviews as of January 2009....
, and John Leonard
John Leonard (American critic)

John Leonard was an United States literary criticism, Television criticism, film criticism, and cultural critic....
 (books).

Well into the 1970s, Felker continued to broaden the magazine's palette, covering Richard Nixon
Richard Nixon

Richard Milhous Nixon was the List of Presidents of the United States President of the United States and the only president to resign the office....
 and the Watergate scandal closely. In 1976, journalist
Journalist

A journalist is a person who practices journalism, the gathering and dissemination of information about current events, trends, issues, and people while striving for viewpoints that aren't biased....
 Nik Cohn
Nik Cohn

Nik Cohn is a United Kingdom rock journalist, born in London in 1946.He is considered a father of rock and roll criticism, thanks to Awopbopaloobop Alopbamboom, written at the age of 22 in the late 60s....
 contributed a story called "Tribal Rites of the New Saturday Night
Tribal Rites of the New Saturday Night

Tribal Rites of the New Saturday Night was the title of a 1975 New York Magazine article by United Kingdom rock journalist Nik Cohn. It was the basis for the plot and characters in the movie Saturday Night Fever....
," about a young man in a working-class Brooklyn
Brooklyn

Brooklyn is one of the five Borough of New York City, located at the western end of Long Island. An independent city until its consolidation with New York in 1898, Brooklyn is New York City's most populous borough, with 2.5 million residents, and second largest in area....
 neighborhood who, once a week, went to a local disco
Discothèque

A discoth?que, , is an entertainment venue or club with music record played by "Discaires" through a PA system, rather than an Live band dance....
 called Odyssey 2001; the story was a sensation and served as the basis for the film Saturday Night Fever
Saturday Night Fever

Saturday Night Fever is a 1977 in film starring John Travolta as Tony Manero, a troubled Brooklyn youth whose weekend activities are dominated by visits to a local discoth?que....
. Twenty years later, Cohn admitted (in a story in New York) that he'd done no more than drive by Odyssey's door, and that he'd made the rest up. It was a recurring problem of what Wolfe, in 1972, had labeled "The New Journalism
New Journalism

New Journalism was a style of 1960s and 1970s news writing and journalism which used literary techniques deemed unconventional at the time. The term was codified with its current meaning by Tom Wolfe in a 1973 collection of journalism articles he published as The New Journalism, which included works by himself, Truman Capote, Hunter S....
."

In 1976, the Australia
Australia

Australia, officially the Commonwealth of Australia, is a country in the southern hemisphere comprising the Australia of the world's smallest continent, the major island of Tasmania, and numerous list of islands of Australia in the Indian Ocean and Pacific Oceans....
n media baron Rupert Murdoch
Rupert Murdoch

Keith Rupert Murdoch, Order of Australia, Order of St. Gregory the Great , usually known as Rupert Murdoch, is an Australian-born International Mass media business magnate....
 bought the magazine in a hostile takeover, forcing Felker and Glaser out. A succession of editors followed, including Joe Armstrong and John Berendt
John Berendt

John Berendt is an United States author, known for writing the best-selling non-fiction book Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil, which was a finalist for the 1995 Pulitzer Prize in General Nonfiction....
, until 1980, when Murdoch hired Edward Kosner, late of Newsweek
Newsweek

Newsweek is an United States weekly newsmagazine published in New York City. It is distributed throughout the United States and internationally....
. Murdoch also bought Cue
Cue

Cue or CUE may refer to:...
, a listings magazine
Listings magazine

A listings magazine is a magazine which contains information about the upcoming weeks events such as TV Listings, Music, Clubs, Theatre and Film information, examples include Time Out magazine in the UK....
 that had covered the city since 1932, and folded it into New York, simultaneously creating a useful going-out guide and eliminating a competitor. Kosner's magazine tended toward a mix of newsmagazine-style stories, trend pieces, and pure "service" features--long articles on shopping and other consumer subjects--as well as close coverage of the glitzy 1980s New York City scene epitomized by financiers Donald Trump
Donald Trump

Donald John Trump is an United States business magnate, socialite, television personality, and author. He is the Chairman and CEO of the Trump Organization, a US-based real-estate developer....
 and Saul Steinberg
Saul Steinberg (business)

Saul Phillip Steinberg is a Jewish American businessman who first became wealthy in the 1960s by leasing IBM computers. He proved so creative at the practice that his company, Leasco, became valuable enough in 1968 for him to use its stock to buy Reliance Insurance, a 150-year-old Philadelphia firm....
. The magazine was profitable for most of the 1980s, and several stories from this era rose to the level of the larger culture: The term, "the Brat Pack," was coined for a story in New York, and the first big magazine story on presidential candidate Bill Clinton
Bill Clinton

William Jefferson "Bill" Clinton served as the List of Presidents of the United States President of the United States from 1993 to 2001. He was the fifteenth Democrat elected to that office....
 appeared in the magazine ten months before his election in 1992.

Murdoch got out of the magazine business in 1990, selling his holdings to K-III Communications, a partnership controlled by financier Henry Kravis
Henry Kravis

Henry R. Kravis is an United States business financier and investor, notable for co-founding and heading a leading private equity firm, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co....
. Budget pressure from K-III frustrated Kosner, and he left for Esquire magazine in 1993. After several months' search, during which the magazine was run by managing editor Peter Herbst, K-III hired Kurt Andersen
Kurt Andersen

Kurt Andersen is an American novelist who is currently a columnist for New York Magazine , and host of the Peabody Award-winning public radio program Studio 360, a co-production between Public Radio International and WNYC....
, the co-creator of Spy
Spy (magazine)

Spy magazine was a satirical monthly founded in 1986 by Kurt Andersen and E. Graydon Carter, who served as its first editors, and Thomas L. Phillips, Jr., its first publisher....
, a humor monthly of the late 1980s and early 1990s. Andersen quickly replaced several staff members, bringing in many emerging and established writers (including Jim Cramer, Walter Kirn
Walter Kirn

Walter Kirn is an American novelist and critic who lives in Montana. A 1983 graduate of Princeton University, he has published a collection of short stories and several novels, including Thumbsucker, which was made into a 2005 film featuring Keanu Reeves and Vince Vaughn; Up in the Air, currently in production as a feature film direct...
, Tomasky and Jacob Weisberg
Jacob Weisberg

Jacob Weisberg is an American political journalist, serving as editor-in-chief of Slate Group, a division of The Washington Post Company, and a columnist for the Financial Times....
) and editors (including Michael Hirschorn, Kim France, Dany Levy, and Maer Roshan), and generally making the magazine faster-paced, younger in outlook, and more knowing in tone. Newsstand sales rose, and profits increased to a level not seen since.

In August 1996, Bill Reilly
Bill Reilly

William Francis Reilly was an United States publishing and media executive who was the founder and former chairman of Primedia. During Reilly's time at the helm of Primedia, the firm built a collection of more than 200 magazines that included American Baby, National Hog Farmer, Chicago and New York ....
 fired Andersen from his editorship, citing the publication's financial results. According to Andersen, he was fired for refusing to kill a story about a rivalry between investment bankers Felix Rohatyn
Felix Rohatyn

Felix George Rohatyn is an United States investment banker known for his role in preventing the bankruptcy of New York City in the 1970s, who also served as United States Ambassador to France....
 and Steven Rattner
Steven Rattner

Steven "Steve" Lawrence Rattner is an American financier and private equity investor. He is one of the four founding partners of the private investment firm Quadrangle Group, which invests media and communications companies globally....
 that had upset Henry Kravis
Henry Kravis

Henry R. Kravis is an United States business financier and investor, notable for co-founding and heading a leading private equity firm, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co....
, a member of the firm's ownership group. His replacement was Caroline Miller, who came from Seventeen (another K-III title). Michael Wolff
Michael Wolff

Michael Wolff is an American jazz pianist, composer, bandleader, and singer-songwriter....
, the media critic she hired in 1998, won two National Magazine Awards for his column, in 2002 and 2003. Miller's magazine also ran political columns by Tucker Carlson
Tucker Carlson

Tucker Swanson McNear Carlson is an American political news correspondent and commentator. Currently, he is listed as MSNBC's Senior Campaign Correspondent and is a senior fellow for the libertarian Cato Institute....
.

New York was sold again at the end of 2003, this time to financier Bruce Wasserstein
Bruce Wasserstein

Bruce Wasserstein is an American investment banker and businessman. He is a graduate of the University of Michigan, Harvard Business School, and Harvard Law School, and is currently the Chairman and CEO of Lazard....
. He in turn replaced Miller with Adam Moss
Adam Moss

Adam Moss is an American newspaper and magazine editor. Since 2004, he has been the editor-in-chief of New York magazine. Under his editorship, New York Magazine has repeatedly been recognized for excellence, notably winning five National Magazine Awards in 2007 ....
, known for editing the short-lived New York weekly of the late 1980s "7 Days" and the New York Times Magazine. A relaunch of the magazine followed in late 2004, marked by two new sections: "The Strategist," devoted mostly to shopping, fashion, travel, and food, and "The Culture Pages," covering the city's arts scene. Moss also rehired Kurt Andersen as a columnist. In the spring of 2006, Moss's New York was nominated for five National Magazine Awards by the American Society of Magazine Editors; it won in two categories, for design and for general excellence in its circulation class.

In 2007, the magazine once again bested its own ASME awards performance, with seven nominations (including one in the Public Interest category for Robert Kolker’s story ) and five wins, including a rare repeat award for General Excellence. Much of the coverage the next day noted that the magazine's sometime rival, The New Yorker, took home no awards that night, despite receiving nine nominations, and also noted that New York was the first magazine to win for both its print and Internet editions in the same year. Though media coverage rarely forms a consensus, most press critics have considered Moss's remade magazine a success, and suggest that it has improved substantially under his leadership.

The February 25, 2008 issue featured a series of nude photographs of Lindsay Lohan
Lindsay Lohan

Lindsay Dee Lohan is an United States actress, fashion model and pop music singer. Lohan started in show business as a Child modeling for magazine advertisement and television commercials....
. Shot by Bert Stern, the series replicated several poses from Stern's widely reproduced final photos of Marilyn Monroe
Marilyn Monroe

Marilyn Monroe was an American actress, singer, model, and a sex symbol.After spending much of her childhood in foster homes, Monroe began a career as a model, which led to a film contract in 1946....
, shot shortly before the actress's fatal drug overdose. That week, the magazine's website received over 60 million hits and with traffic 2000 percent higher than usual.

Puzzles and competitions

New York Magazine was once known for its competitions and unique crossword puzzles. For the first year of the magazine's existence, the composer and lyricist Stephen Sondheim
Stephen Sondheim

Stephen Joshua Sondheim is an American composer and lyricist for theatre and film, winner of an Academy Award, multiple Tony Awards and the Special Tony Award for Lifetime Achievement in the Theatre, multiple Grammy Awards, and a Pulitzer Prize....
 contributed an extremely complex crossword-style puzzle to every third issue. (Richard Maltby, Jr.
Richard Maltby, Jr.

Richard Maltby, Jr. is an United States theatre director and theatre producer, lyricist, and screenwriter....
 took over thereafter; since 1980, the magazine has run a simpler crossword by Maura B. Jacobson.)

In the remaining two weeks out of every three, Sondheim's friend Mary Ann Madden edited an extremely popular witty literary competition calling for readers to send in humorous poetry or other bits of wordplay on a theme that changed with each installment. (A typical entry, in a competition calling for humorous epitaphs, supplied this one for Geronimo: "Requiscat in Apache.") Altogether, Madden ran 973 installments of the competition, retiring in 2000. Hundreds, sometimes thousands, of entries were received each week, and winners included the likes of David Mamet
David Mamet

David Alan Mamet is an United Statesn author, essayist, playwright, screenwriter and film director. His works are known for their clever, terse, sometimes vulgar dialogue and arcane stylized phrasing, as well as for his exploration of masculinity....
, Herb Sargent
Herb Sargent

Herbert Sargent was an Emmy Award-winning United States television writer, a Television producer for such comedy shows as The Tonight Show and Saturday Night Live, and a screenwriter ....
, and Dan Greenburg
Dan Greenburg

Dan Greenburg is an United States author and screenwriter.He was born in Chicago, Illinois.Greenburg has been married three times. His first wife was writer Nora Ephron; their marriage ended in divorce after six years....
. David Halberstam
David Halberstam

David Halberstam was an United States Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author known for his early work on the Vietnam War, his work on politics, history, business, media, American culture, and his later sports journalism....
 once claimed that he had submitted entries 137 times without winning. Sondheim, Woody Allen, and Nora Ephron
Nora Ephron

Nora Ephron is an United States film director, film producer, screenwriter, novelist, journalist, and weblog.She is best known for her romantic comedy and is a triple nominee for the Academy Award for Writing Original Screenplay; for Silkwood, When Harry Met Sally... and Sleepless in Seattle....
 were fans.

The Competition's demise, when Madden retired, was greatly lamented among its fans. In August 2000, the magazine published a letter from an Irish contestant, John O'Byrne, who wrote: "How I'll miss the fractured definitions, awful puns, conversation stoppers, one-letter misprints, ludicrous proverbs, openings of bad novels, near misses, et al (what a nice guy Al is!)." Many entrants have since migrated to The Washington Post
The Washington Post

The Washington Post is the newspaper with the largest circulation in Washington, D.C., United States and is the city's oldest paper, founded in 1877....
s similar "Style Invitational
The Style Invitational

The Style Invitational, or S.I., is a long-running humor contest that ran first in the Style section of the Sunday Washington Post and currently is in Saturday's Style....
" feature. Three volumes of Competition winners were published, titled Thank You for the Giant Sea Tortoise, Son of Giant Sea Tortoise, and Maybe He's Dead: And Other Hilarious Results of New York Magazine Competitions.

See also

  • Media of New York City
    Media of New York City

    The media of New York City are internationally influential, and include some of the most important newspapers, largest publishing houses, most prolific television studios, and biggest record companies in the world....
  • New York Magazine's Cultural Awards of 2006


External links