American Decades
Collier's Closes
Magazine Economics.
The closing of Colliers magazine in 1956 shockingly illustrated the postwar changes in magazine economics and the entertainment and editorial tastes of the American reading public. A venerable name in magazine history, Collier s had reached its peak of circulation of above four million at the time of its demise. But rising costs and competition from television and more nimble and aggressive magazines had cut drastically into advertising revenues.
Early History.
The magazine began publishing as Once a Week in 1888 and as Colliers in 1895. It finally became consistently profitable in 1929 as circulation broke through the two million mark. During the Great Depression Collier's prospered. This was the result of the magazine editors' decision in 1925 to reverse their stand and editorialize against Prohibition; after the Eighteenth Amendment to the Constitution was...
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1950's Media
- Overview
- Topics in the News
-
Headline Makers
- Alsop, Joseph 1910-1989 and Alsop, Stewart 1914-1974
- Ashmore, Harry 1916-
- Berle, Milton 1908-
- Gaines, William M. 1922-1992
- Gleason, Jackie 1916-1987
- Higgins, Marguerite 1920-1966
- Luce, Henry R. 1898-1967
- Murrow, Edward R. 1908-1965
- Paley, William S. 1901-1990
- Sarnoff, David 1891-1971
- Sullivan, Ed 1902-1974
- People in the News
- Awards
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Media, 1950–1959
