Almost 80 years after first going to print, the
final Newsweek magazine hit newsstands Monday featuring an ironic
hashtag as a symbol of its Twitter-era transition to an all-digital
format.
The second-largest news weekly magazine in
the United States has been grappling with a steep drop in print
advertising revenue, steadily declining circulation and the migration of
readers to free news online.
During a fierce decades-long rivalry with
fellow American coffee-table staple Time magazine, Newsweek pushed the
envelope with bold and often controversial covers.
Its first issue, on February 17, 1933,
featured seven photos from that week's news printed on the front,
including Adolf Hitler snapped in Berlin as he declared: "the German
nation must be built up from the ground anew."
For its final cover, dated December 31,
editor Tina Brown used an aerial archive shot of the magazine's New York
headquarters as the backdrop for her message, #LASTPRINTISSUE -- the
word print emblazoned in red ink.
"Bitter sweet! Wish us luck!" Brown tweeted.
The Washington Post sold Newsweek to
California billionaire Sidney Harman for one dollar in 2010, ahead of a
deal with Internet conglomerate IAC to merge the magazine with the news
and opinion website The Daily Beast.
Memorable Newsweek covers in recent years
have included a December 2003 edition with a bedraggled, long-bearded
Saddam Hussein pictured below the headline: "We got him."
In 2011, a computer-generated image of the
late Princess Diana alongside Kate Middleton, the photogenic young lady
who was about to marry her son Prince William, caused quite a stir.
In May, after Barack Obama came out in favor
of same-sex marriage, he was adorned with a rainbow halo and the
accompanying headline: "The First Gay President."
The "#MuslimRage" cover in September, which
sought to spark a conversation about anti-American violence sweeping the
Muslim world, saw thousands take to Twitter to mock the premise with
both real and imagined gripes.
Announcing the demise of Newsweek's print
magazine in October, Brown, also editor-in-chief of The Daily Beast,
said the all-digital version would be targeted at today's "highly
mobile, opinion-leading audience."
She cited research showing that 39 percent of
Americans get their news online and said Newsweek had reached "a
tipping point at which we can most efficiently and effectively reach our
readers in all-digital format."
© 2012 AFP
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© 2012 AFP
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