Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Teen Vogue Shutters Printed Publication but Will Remain Digital

Teen Vogue Shutters Printed Publication but Will Remain Digital

Teen Vogue will no longer offer printed magazines as parent company Conde Nast made a round of cuts as part of a hiring freeze mandate on Thursday. But rest assured, the publication will live on in digital format.


According to WWD, the New York-based publication resorted to eliminating 2.5% percent of its 3,000 staff members. Other underperforming publications are expected to make their final rounds through the print shop for their final, tangible publications.

For now, Conde Nast's other notable magazines, including Vanity Fair, Vogue, Wired and The New Yorker, have been spared from the cuts.

While publication officials haven't issued details about the layoffs and budgets cuts, a major overhaul of operations and editorial teams took place earlier this year which led to 100 employees losing their jobs within the company. An interdepartmental restructuring forced creative, copy, and research teams to combine, making it for a rough transition until operations settled.

Meanwhile, an outside executive was hired to oversee the business side of the publishing house. Jim Norton from AOL was brought in to create a group-publishing mentality in which the position of chief industry officer would oversee sales across all magazine categories. But due to his lack of understanding the publication's core values - fashion, luxury, and beauty, he was immediately shown the door after he exhibited a lack of improvement and failure to nab any big sales.

Norton was replaced by chief marketing officer Pamela Drucker Mann as the title of chief revenue officer and marketing officer as the first female to head up sales in the company.

Chief executive officer Bob Sauerberg hired Norton, a move that was considered bold at the time. But now with Drucker Mann on board, Norton's decision is once again faced with some skepticism. But he maintains that such bold moves are imperative for an ever-evolving industry:

“Our company and our industry are in dynamic periods of change, which is exciting, but also can be daunting. But Condé Nast has always met challenges with boldness and creativity, and we will continue to do so as we transform and change for the future. We have the best brands, the best talent and the most opportunities, and I am both confident and excited for the future of our company.”

While magazines like GQ, Glamour, Allure and Architectural Digest will decrease in the publication of their printed formats from 12 issues to 11 a year, Teen Vogue will not appear on newsstands altogether. Though the magazine will remain a digital mainstay, it's still the end of an era.

Commemorating the debut issue.

Conde Nast's move is being legitimized as a way of the future.

No need to lament the loss of it entirely. Some people feared the magazine was going to become obsolete.

No attempt at accentuating the positive here.

Please SHARE this with your friends and family.

H/T - wwd, twitter

More from News

Screenshot of Lisa and Dr. Mehmet Oz
The Katie Miller Podcast

Dr. Oz Accidentally Tells The Truth About The Trump Administration's Gaslighting—And Yeah, That Tracks

Speaking on the podcast of former Trump administration official Katie Miller, Dr. Mehmet Oz, Trump's administrator of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, accidentally told the truth about the administration's gaslighting of the American public.

Oz admitted that people "might not like us" but then had a Freudian slip that says all you need to know about an administration that is called out on a daily basis for openly lying and obfuscating.

Keep ReadingShow less
Karoline Leavitt
Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images

Karoline Leavitt Gets Awkward Reminder After Claiming Anything On Truth Social Is 'Directly From President Trump'

During the Wednesday press briefing, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt directly contradicted her boss, MAGA Republican President Donald Trump.

Leavitt told the White House press corps:

Keep ReadingShow less
Keke Palmer attends the 8th Annual American Black Film Festival Honors at SLS Hotel.
Savion Washington/WireImage via Getty Images

Keke Palmer Explains Why She's 'Almost 100% Sure' She's Asexual In Candid Post—And Fans Are Here For Her

Keke Palmer had the internet talking after revealing she is “almost 100 percent sure” that she’s asexual. The Emmy-winning actress shared the revelation in a sultry Valentine’s Day Instagram post featuring a chic pixie cut, a champagne-toned halter corset top, a thin gold necklace, and stud earrings.

But while the photos turned heads, it was her caption that sparked the conversation.

Keep ReadingShow less
Reese's Peanut Butter Cups; Brad Reese's Open Letter to Todd Scott
Julia Ewan/TWP/Getty Images; Brad Reese/LinkedIn

Grandson Of Reese's Founder Shames Hershey Co. For 'Replacing' Candy's Iconic Ingredients In Powerful Open Letter

Brad Reese, the grandson of H.B. Reese, who invented Reese's Peanut Butter Cups, is now speaking up about the quality of the product and his grandfather's original promise: real peanut butter and real milk chocolate.

When H.B. Reese invented the deliciously simple candy, he pointed out that using real ingredients wasn't a marketing tactic for him; it was a promise to the consumer that they knew what they were eating, and that what they were eating was real food.

Keep ReadingShow less
Elon Musk
Harun Ozalp/Anadolu via Getty Images

X User Asks What The First Thing You'd Do If You 'Wake Up As Elon Musk'—And Everyone Had The Same Idea

Billionaire Elon Musk was widely mocked on his own platform after X user @buffys opened a veritable Pandora's box by asking what people would do if they woke up as him one day.

The question was simple:

Keep ReadingShow less