News Mags Ad Revenue Suffers; Celebrity Mags Thrive

Pew has posted advertising revenue analysis for major magazines over the past year. Not surprisingly, the "big three" news magazines continue to suffer, other mags such as The New Yorker hold steady, while the celebrity magazines continue to thrive. As Pew reports:

It's been a rough year for the three major U.S. newsweeklies and a boom year for the celebrity/gossip magazines, according to the most recent advertising numbers released by the Publishers Information Bureau (PIB), measuring ad pages in about 250 titles.

The 2007 ad pages are down substantially at the two biggest newsweeklies. Time may have been redesigned this year, but its ad pages were off by about 6% through the first nine months of 2007 compared with the same period in 2006. Newsweek, meanwhile, saw a drop of almost 9% in its ad pages over that period. And U.S. News and World Report's ad page count fell by just under 1%.

The numbers weren't all bad for other news magazines, however. The North American edition of the Economist is having a good 2007 with ad pages up almost 7% in the first nine months. The Week's ad pages were was up almost 11%. This comes on the heels of a good 2006, when ad pages for both were up. The New Yorker's pages were up a slim 2.7%.

Meanwhile, the year's steady diet of stories about Britney, Lindsay, Paris and O.J., have helped the celebrity magazines get fat.

InTouch Weekly, the five-year old celebrity tracker, saw its ad pages increase by almost 20% in the first nine months of 2007, compared to 2006. Ad pages in The Star, remade from a supermarket tab to a glossy three years ago, ballooned almost 25%. But the biggest winner was three-year-old OK! Magazine, which had a remarkable 45% increase in ad pages.

OK! not only benefited from the stories about bad celebrity behavior, it helped create some as well when a July photo session with Britney Spears turned into a news-making debacle on its own, thanks her to her bizarre behavior.

Industry-wide ad pages are off by 1% in consumer magazines through September.

More like this

In an analysis released last week, Pew reports that during a three month period (Dec. 13-March 13, 2008), only 2% of front page stories at the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal focused either on the environment or science/technology. The finding is troubling on a number of fronts. First…
As we argue in the Nisbet & Mooney Framing Science thesis, one reason that traditional science communication efforts fail to reach the wider American public is that the media tend to feed on the soft news preferences of the mass audience, making it very easy for citizens who lack a strong…
Gore's Live Earth concert series was supposed to catalyze American public attention around the problem of global warming, but did it? Polling data is not yet available regarding the concert's impact on American audiences, but we do have data relative to the concert's influence on the U.S. news…
Although alcohol consumption plays a role in about 31 percent of homicides, only 1.4 percent of TV news reports on murders mention alcohol. Only 12.8 percent of TV news stories on traffic accidents mention alcohol, while 34 percent of accidents involve drunk drivers. I've often wondered why people…