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Mangesh
In the Beginning: A Little Media Madness
by Mangesh - October 31, 2007 - 8:26 AM

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Another installment from our new book In the Beginning. Enjoy!

A Few Newspapers and Magazines

Sure we know all about the birds and bees. But periodically, we like to explore where the rest of the buzz is coming from.

The New York Times

times.jpgFounded in 1851, the Times made serious history just 20 years later: In 1871, its muckraking brought down the famous Boss Tweed of Tammany Hall. (The term “muckraking” hadn’t actually been coined at the time, however; it was an early-1900s phenomenon.) Bought by Adolph Ochs in 1896, it was soon given its famous slogan “All the News That’s Fit to Print,” which was more than just a boast: it was also a jab at its rivals’ infamous “yellow journalism.” The Times moved into its new digs on 42nd Street in 1904, giving its name to the surrounding area, known today as Times Square.

The Washington Post

Like the Times, the Post – one of the city’s most venerable non-government institutions – produced high-end copy right from its founding in 1877. Unlike the Times, it needed some extra help to increase circulation. In 1889, in a bid to get people excited about reading the paper, the Post management commissioned, we kid you not, a theme song. The resulting tune, named simply “The Washington Post March,” is often heard by oblivious spectators at patriotic parades: It’s the work of John Philip Sousa.

Time and Newsweek

time_magazine_first_cover_1923.jpgIn 1923, Briton Hadden and Henry Luce – old buddies from the tony Hotchkiss School in Connecticut, as well as Yale – got together and decided to start a magazine. They thought at first that they’d call it Chance or Destiny, which is a little mind-boggling considering that they’re opposing concepts … but the magazine’s real fate was to be named Time. Although the men were only 24, they were able to raise a boatload of cash from wealthy family friends. Still, the first issue was met with “a burst of total apathy on the part of the U.S. public,” as well as some pretty strong criticism from more established editors. Undeterred, the pals redesigned the magazine then crossed their fingers and put out a second issue. By 1929, the mag was firmly established, and Henry Luce was well on his way to becoming a legend. (Hadden died tragically that year at 31.) Like the Pepsi to Time’s Coke, Newsweek – or as it was then known, News-week – got its foothold just a few years later, during the Depression. Also like Pepsi, Newsweek was an immediate direct rival to Time; its founder had left the latter magazine with hopes of “run[ning] Henry Luce out of business.”

Scientific American

more after the jump…

Rufus Porter invented a number of things in his lifetime – clocks, cameras, and an early washing machine – but none of his inventions had nearly as much success as Scientific American, which essentially started as a pamphlet advertising his latest creations. Later on, the magazine would feature articles from some rather more accomplished inventors (Samuel Morse, Thomas Edison), but we think its greatest claim to fame is its prediction in 1849 of underground mass transportation. Readers howled at this for about 20 years, until workers started building a tunnel in lower Manhattan that would become, indeed, the New York subway system.

Cosmopolitan

150px-CosmopolitanMagazineMarch1894.jpgIt wasn’t always about sex. Actually, when Cosmo started up in 1886, it wasn’t about sex at all, nor was it targeted at women, nor was it lowbrow: In 1892, a single issue featured stories by Henry James, James Russell Lowell (the poet and founding editor of The Atlantic Monthly), and Theodore Roosevelt! Early stories, according to Charles Panati, covered “such disparate subjects as how ancient people lived, climbing Mount Vesuvius, the life of Mozart, plus European travel sketches and African wild animal adventures.” This sounds suspiciously like another magazine we know.

51yai+MKH5L._AA240_.jpgCan’t wait the day for In the Beginning? Pre-order your copy at any of these fine stores today: Amazon, B&N, Borders, Books-A-Million. Oh, and if you e-mail us your proof of purchase at newsletters@mentalfloss.com, we’ll send you an autographed sticker to place in the book!

Comments (3)
  1. Except that unlike Pepsi, Newsweek has truly surpassed Time. I check out Time every few years to see if it would be worth an additional subscription or replacing Newsweek, and it’s consistently subpar.

  2. As an actual Newsweek reporter, I would like to clarify that I did not pay Charles to say that.

    Charles, marry me.

  3. It’s sad that the modern Scientific American has degenerated so much from its origins. The orignal journal (although far less fancy) was a far more objective publication.

    Today, SA, merely shills for left-leaning points of view. As an engineer with a lot of background in energy & automotive technology, I occasionally buy it for the articles that deal in those subjects. Every time without fail I am flabbergasted at how much they leave out of the articles and only present either the good or bad points of something (depending on whether they are trying to advance or decry it). Most of the time, they aren’t presenting outright lies — rather the authors always seem to have rather biased agendas. Speculative theories get presented as given facts w/o the alternative points of view. Advantages of a certain technology get extolled without any of the bad points mentioned, even the rather obvious incontrovertible ones.

    When I can’t trust them to present the full story on subjects I know well, I can only assume the practice carries through to areas where I have little expertise.

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