GOOD's 51 Best Magazines Ever:
1. Esquire
Under Harold T.P. Hayes (1961–1973)Esquire
had the men's magazine formula backward. An uncommon example of a
magazine that sold out first before establishing itself as a literary
force, Esquire was launched in 1933 as an early juggs-and-journalism rag
(illustrated of course, not photographed), but its most important
period began in 1961. Under the leadership of new editor Hayes, the
magazine's pages got bigger, future celebrities Gay Talese and Tom Wolfe
ushered in New Journal-ism, and design titan George Lois produced the
most iconic magazine covers ever. Esquire captured last century's most
dynamic decade, visually and literarily altering the way Americans
thought about their changing country. Sonny Liston as black Santa Claus?
The unsuccessful quest to interview Sinatra? Anti-Vietnam-War Muhammad
Ali as St. Sebastian? We rest our case.
2. The New Yorker
A
rare cultural touchstone both relevant and revered nearly a century
after its inception in 1925, The New Yorker has remained a beacon of
intellectual clarity and incisive reporting to over-educated bourgeoisie
far beyond the borders of Manhattan. With a design that has changed
only imperceptibly over the decades (except for earth-shattering changes
under mid-1990s editor Tina Brown,who allowed-gasp!-color and-the
horror!-photographs), all that's different at the magazine are the
stories it covers. The New Yorker today is just as willing to publish a
barely illustrated, three-part, 30,000-word jeremiad on climate change
as founding editor Harold Ross was happy to devote an entire issue to
one article on the aftermath of the Hiroshima bombing. This is not to
mention the fiction, humor, poetry, criticism, and cartoons-all parts of
a consistently brilliant editorial vision.
3. Life
(1936–1972)Before
cable TV and the internet, there was Life. Publishing giant Henry Luce
(Life, Fortune, Time) helped fuel Americans' natural curiosity by
turning a then-failing general-interest magazine into a glossy weekly
with 50 pages of pictures (by photographers such as Alfred Eisenstaedt
and Margaret Bourke-White) and captions (written precisely to fit in
neatly justified blocks) in every issue. For 36 years, Life showed us
the world-for pennies a week.
4. Playboy
It
would be tough to overstate the greatness of a magazine that had
Marilyn Monroe as its first centerfold, and Kerouac, Steinbeck, and
Wodehouse on call by its fifth anniversary. Launched in 1953 by the
grotto-dwelling, robe-wearing Playboy himself, by the 1960s its table of
contents was a veritable who's-who of the best writers of the day and
their most compelling subjects. While the magazine has lost its footing
as the culturally relevant read for men, its signature "Playboy
Interviews" still deliver the kind of no-holds-barred ranting and raving
that made it famous. All that, and we haven't even mentioned the naked
girls.
5. The New York Times Magazine
Since
Sept. 6, 1896, The New York Times Magazine has without fanfare done
what it does best: publish smart, populist stories that no one else will
touch. Never sold on newsstands, it is to this day perfectly positioned
to uphold a sacred but troubled tenet of the journalist's code:
reporting news that matters to the world, instead of news that matters
to circulation managers and newsstand consultants. This same freedom
spills over to the design-minimalist, original, and completely
refreshing.
6. Mad
Post comic book, before the death of founder William Gaines (1955–1992)Mad
was the skeptical wise guy. Ever ready to pounce on the illogical,
hypocritical, self-serious and ludicrous, it was also essentially
celebratory: to accurately parody something, you ultimately have to love
it. Mad transposed onto the printed page the anarchic humor of the Marx
Brothers and Looney Tunes, parodying comics, radio serials, movies,
advertising, and the entire range of American pop culture. Nowadays,
it's part of the oxygen we breathe; and Mel Brooks, Saturday Night Live,
and The Simpsons would be unthinkable without it.
7. Spy
Until it was sold to fun-sponge Jean Pigozzi (1986–1991)With
the exception of knock- knock jokes, most of what you find funny today
probably came from these pages. In typical Spy fashion, that might not
be exactly true, but it's certainly close enough, and the well-informed
post-ironic humor behind everything from The Daily Show to Gawker owes
more than a little debt to Spy and its founding editors Kurt Andersen
and Graydon Carter (see intro; 31). The design was pitch-perfect, the
stories of office hijinks are publishing-world legends, and its impact
on the landscape of American culture is immeasurable.
8. Wired
Early years until Condé Nast buyout (1993–1998)Pages
oozing with retina-burning inks and startling layouts broadcast a
vision of the future that was both utopian and tangible. Wired was able
to bridge the cultural divide between geeks and the rest of us because
they saw that in our democratic digital tomorrow, we were all geeks.
They let us in on the secret that technology wasn't news, but how it
affected our lives was. But Condé Nast giveth (see 2; 31; 45) and Condé
Nast taketh away: Its 1998 purchase gradually sapped the infectious
energy that so characterized Wired's early years. Still, it's rare to
find something as perfect to its cultural moment; both a mirror and a
lens, a tribute and a battle hymn. What's next, indeed.
9. Andy Warhol's Interview
Until Warhol's death (1969–1988)When
an era's biggest celebrity/artist/pop-culture icon decides to start a
magazine about celebrities, art, and pop culture (though mostly
celebrities), it's bound to be interesting-if all you care about is
interviews with famous people and their pretty pictures, that is. It
turned out Warhol was onto something, as he often was, and even way
ahead of the curve. Should you be tracing the origins of our present
celebrity worshiping culture, this isn't a bad place to start.
10. Colors
The first 13 issues, under Tibor Kalman (1991–1996)Like
the screaming and still-bloody newborn that appeared on its first
cover, Colors popped wildly onto the scene in 1991. It was an exuberant,
often shocking magazine that fearlessly mirrored the world-in all its
peculiarity, fantastic injustice, and rampant possibility. The
brainchild of feather-ruffling photographer Oliviero Toscani and
designer/big thinker/wildman Kalman, Colors was wholly underwritten by
Luciano Benetton (and his clothing company), which kept it nicely free
of common media constraints. Originally published from New York, an
international staff put out front-to-back-themed issues in five
bilingual editions, each one packed with in-your-face photography that
could communicate to anybody, anywhere. From its conspicuous start,
Colors challenged all sorts of expectations, including what a magazine
could be.
11. Rolling Stone
Before the move to New York (1967–1976)Rolling
Stone, during its 1970s heyday, left a blank space on its letters page
so that aspiring contributors could write a record review and send it to
the editors in the hopes of being published. What's more amazing, this
is how editor Jann Wenner found Lester Bangs and Greil Marcus. Before
becoming disturbingly un-cutting-edge, Rolling Stone compiled the
zeitgeist of a musical revolution.Also try Creem
12. National Geographic
Founded
nine months after the eponymous society in 1888, and framed in its
instantly recognizable yellow, the magazine didn't publish photos as
covers until 1959. Whereas it initially charted and shot unknown
civilizations, it has now become a visual catalog of civilizations in
decay, and is still the benchmark for global photojournalism.
13. Collier's Weekly
Reporters
for Collier's, founded in 1888, were some of the first to get down in
the muck and start raking. Its influence was vast-Congress passed
important laws based on evidence printed in the magazine, including a
12-parter on unregulated medicines and a pre-The Jungle essay on
slaughterhouses by Upton Sinclair.
Also try McClure's
14. New York
(1968–1976)The
model for pretty much every regional magazine since, New York
(previously the Sunday supplement to the New York Herald Tribune) was
founded by editor Clay Felker and designer Milton Glaser. They curated a
unique blend of local politics, gossip, national news, and lifestyle
features-until they were forced out by Rupert Murdoch, who bought New
York in a 1976 hostile takeover.
15. Atlantic Monthly
Founded
by Emerson and Longfellow in 1857, The Atlantic was the Boston Brahmin
answer to overly intellectual magazines from New York (until a recent
move to D.C. stole its identity). Throughout its 150-year history, The
Atlantic has continued to be both sophisticated and deliberate, while
only barely dumbing things down for the increasingly culturally
illiterate masses.
Also try Harper's
16. Ebony
Often
called the Life of black America, Ebony was founded by John H. Johnson
in 1945 with a $500 loan, borrowed against his mom's furniture. By the
time Johnson died last year, his magazine had spawned a publishing
empire, the first, and for a long time, only black-owned one in the
country.
17. Details
Original incarnation, pre-Condé Nast (1982–1988)Launched
in 1982 under the legendary Annie Flanders, Details was the ultimate
insider look at New York's downtown cool. It knew how to dress, what
music to listen to and, most importantly, where to party. It went on to
have countless identity crises, and no longer comes even close to
downtown cool.
Also try Index
18. Ramparts
The most left-wing magazine on our list.Famous
for its radical 1960s muckraking, Ramparts broke the story on the CIA
infiltration of college campuses during the Vietnam War, published the
diaries of Che Guevara, and attracted some of the left's brightest
stars. Rolling Stone's Wenner got his start there; so, too, did Mother
Jones founder Adam Hochschild.
19. Might
More than the
start of founding editor Dave Eggers' career, Might (1993–1997) was the
definitive expression of Clinton-era/internet-boom post-college
confusion. Admittedly and ambivalently entangled with pop culture, Might
was nonetheless the exceptional youth magazine that refused to pretend
the latest CDs, books, movies, and TV shows were the most important
things in life.
Also try Vice
20. Portfolio
Created
by art director/ editor Alexey Brodovitch (of Harper's Bazaar) and
editor/art director Frank Zachary (of Holiday and Town & Country),
Portfolio only existed for three issues in 1950 and 1951-but its
integration of form and content is still inspiring over half a century
later. Brodovitch exploited his medium to its fullest, using foldouts,
die-cuts, and other printing tricks to feature the work of artists and
designers like Charles Eames, Paul Rand, Saul Steinberg, and many
others.
Also try Artforum
21. National Lampoon
From its founding through its best-selling issue (1970–1974)Started
in 1970 by Harvard Lampoon alumni, National Lampoon obliterated the
idea that a college degree made you a grown-up. Deeply profane and
juvenile, it launched the careers of Michael O'Donoghue and director
John Hughes; spawned a syndicated radio program that featured Chevy
Chase, John Belushi and Bill Murray, and spun off a series of movies
that began with Animal House.
Also try Army Man
22. Wallpaper
(1996–2002)Founded
by former journalist Tyler Brûlé, Wallpaper (like a lot of the
magazines in this list) showed up in the right place at the right time.
At the height of the dotcom boom, Wallpaper talked about "the stuff that
surrounds you" to a gener-ation hungry for soft-core design
pornography. Brûlé sold out to Time Warner in 1997, but the flavor of
the magazine didn't change that much until he left in 2002.
23. Cosmopolitan
Under editor Helen Gurley Brown (1965–1997)Launched
in 1886 and later bought by William Randolph Hearst, Cosmopolitan
already had a million-plus circulation by the 1930s. But it was Brown,
who in 1965 single-handedly reinvented the magazine (and the genre) by
giving ladies something to talk about other than falsies, pot roast, and
marrying a lawyer: casual sex.
Also try GQ
24. Highlights
With
a stranglehold on the dentist waiting-room market, Highlights has been
entertaining (and subtly educating) the pediatric-fluoride set since
1946. From the vaguely preachy "Goofus and Gallant" to the awesomely
interactive back covers (nope, that hammer doesn't belong in the tree),
Highlights hasn't missed a beat in half a century.
Also try Dynamite, Nickelodeon Magazine
25. Sassy
The best teen magazine on our list.Until
it moved from LA (1987–1994) Rewriting the rules of teen magazines,
Sassy addressed its readers in a smart, sarcastic voice. Its frank
coverage of sex, drugs, and politics, and its support of indie music and
fashion earned everlasting devotion from its fans and the ire of
conservative groups who pressured Sassy's advertisers, resulting in its
demise.
Also try Dirt
26. The Saturday Evening Post
It
wasn't until 95 years after The Saturday Evening Post's 1821 launch as a
weekly magazine of current events and popular fiction that its
then-editor met a 22-year-old artist named Norman Rockwell. After
running his first cover illustration in 1916, Rockwell churned out
American classics for the SEP on a weekly basis.
Also try Newsweek, Time
27. The Face
(1980s)Though
ostensibly a music magazine, The Face realized that cool tunes didn't
matter unless everyone looked good. With the innovative marriage of
fashion and music, "the best dressed magazine" quickly became the
arbiter of style and cool in 1980s England.
Also try i-D
28. Sports Illustrated
This
ur-sporting tome brought joy and titillation through that unique
magazine innovation: the football-phone giveaway in the 1980s. A golden
age under Frenchman André Laguerre (1960–1974) saw the rise of serious
reportage that baptized a generation of sports writers as legitimate
cultural players. Also: Swimsuit Edition-a pivotal moment in the lives
of young men everywhere.
29. Eros
The most controversial magazine on our list.Ralph
Ginzburg was the first American publisher ever to go to jail over the
content of a magazine-this one. A gender-neutral quarterly devoted to
intelligent eroticism, Eros helped spark the sexual revolution. Four
issues were published in 1962 before Ginzburg was indicted for
"distributing obscene literature."
Also try Hustler
30. Fuck You/ A Magazine of the Arts
"I'll
print anything" was the motto of founder Ed Sanders, but Fuck You
mostly printed work from famous Beat writers. A proto-'zine (it was
printed on a mimeograph machine in Sanders' basement, starting in 1962)
Fuck You was an inspiration to countless other out-of-the-mainstream
underground publications.
31. Vanity Fair
If culture is
the collection of stories we tell about ourselves, Vanity Fair might
just be our greatest raconteur. Its contributor roster since its
founding reads like a social register of talent (both words and
pictures), and the 1980s revival at Condé Nast ushered in a renewed time
of plenty: increased circulation, exclusive stories, and unparalleled
visibility.
32. The Whole Earth Catalog
Original incarnation (1968–1972)A
bible for the counterculture proto-dork (read: the future billionaires
club of northern California), WEC stuffed every oversize page with
cheek-puckering idealism for purchase-think Buckminster Fuller
manifestos and folk-style autoharps. Between the lines was the implicit
power of centralized, comprehensive information-as Steve Jobs once said:
"Like Google in paperback form, 35 years before Google."
33. Fortune
Until the death of founding editor Henry Luce (1930–1967)It
was a different era when a great financial publication might also be
one of the most beautiful. Launched just months after Black Tuesday, the
oversize Fortune came with an exorbitant $1 cover price (most other
magazines sold for pennies), justifying its cost with stunning graphic
covers followed by hundreds of luscious pages brimming with business
information and beautiful photography.
Also try: Fast Company, Inc.
34. People
A
1974 spin-off of Time's "People" section, notably read for its various
annual issues of superlatives (most beautiful, best/worst dressed,
sexiest), it occupies a unique space in the world of celebrity
journalism: It may sit next to tabloids on supermarket shelves, but
stars who grace its pages are covered willingly.
35. Ms.
The greatest women's advocate on our list.Since
its launch in 1971, Ms. has consistently informed policy, making it as
much a provocateur as a political force. Gloria Steinem made history
when, pre-Roe v. Wade, she printed the names of women who admitted to
having abortions. It has since broken taboo stories like domestic
violence and sweatshop labor-all before the colored ribbons made
activism cool.
Also try Bitch, Bust
36. Games
Before it was sold (1977–1990)Games'
wonderful dreamland of mind-boggling conundrums-for a time edited by
the New York Times crossword guru Will Shortz-was the perfect read for
anyone whose mind required strenuous workouts. Lest it seem uncool, know
that it was owned by Playboy.
37. The Paris Review
Until George Plimpton's death (1953–2003)The
first magazine to publish literature by Adrienne Rich, T.C. Boyle, and
Phillip Roth, the New York-based Paris Review is renowned for its virtu,
its interviews (Hemingway, Faulkner, Kerouac) and its community: 50
years of literati parties at founding editor-in-chief George Plimpton's
East Side apartment.Also try Granta
38. Popular Mechanics
In the golden industrial years (1930s–1950s)Popular
Mechanics was a perfect magazine at the perfect time. As the industrial
age matured and science and tech-nology entered people's everyday
lives, Popular Mechanics was there to hold hands and calm nerves
("Written so you can understand it," proclaimed every cover). The future
never looked so good.Also try Omni, Popular Science, Seed
39. The Little Review
Founded
in 1914, this literary journal's list of contributors is eye-popping:
Ezra Pound, T. S. Eliot, James Joyce, William Butler Yeats, Marcel
Duchamp, Ford Madox Ford, Emma Goldman, Carl Sandburg, Gertrude Stein,
Wallace Stevens, and William Carlos Williams. And it wasn't just
leftovers: Ulysses was first published in its pages, garnering founder
Margaret Anderson a $50 fine for obscenity and an obscure but important
place in the history of modern literature.
40. Ray Gun
During the peak of the grunge era (1992–1996)Founding
art director David Carson walked a fine line between typesetting
brilliance and visual schizophrenia. Despite its eventual folding in
2000 and the appropriation of its style by mainstream outfits, Ray Gun
spent its first few years laps ahead of the curve aesthetically and in
its music coverage.
41. Brill's Content
Brill's Content
was an inside-the-sausage-factory look at media for people who eat
sausages, not those who make them. From 1998 to 2001, watchdog-in-chief
Steven Brill demanded more from the press through accountability,
transparency, and shame. Content's lasting gift was the awkwardly
revolutionary premise that journalism is for consumers, and serving them
should be a priority.
42. Domus
Founded and edited by
the Milanese architect Gio Ponti (1927–1979), the monthly Domus shone a
spotlight on modernist décor and architecture. Domus championed Italian
forward-thinkers like Carlo Mollino, and international innovators like
Charles and Ray Eames, who guest-edited an issue in 1963.
43. Wet
Maybe the weirdest magazine on this list. The
self-described "magazine of gourmet bathing" existed from 1976 to 1981
as a uniquely Angeleno tangent to New Wave-think Less Than Zero as read
by an avant-guard artist. Published in Venice Beach, founder Leonard
Koren featured young talents Matt Groening, Matthew Ralston, and April
Greiman. Bright, bold, and bizarrely on point.
44. Lucky
Founded
in 2000, Lucky is essentially shopping porn, though the "I read it just
for the articles" excuse isn't transferable for the simple reason that
there aren't any. Makeup brushes, silk camisoles and slingbacks make up
the centerfolds-always with price tag and contact number-which helped
Lucky mint the "magalog" genre.
45. Vogue
Founded in
1897, Vogue is as renowned to this day for its editrixes as for its
fearless trendsetting-though it hasn't been the same since 1971, when
they canned the infinitely quotable Diana Vreeland ("People who eat
white bread have no dreams," "Pink is the navy blue of India"). The
Starbucks of fashion mags, there's still a franchise based in every
fashion mecca worldwide.
46. The New England Journal of Medicine
The
peer-reviewed medical and surgery quarterly frequently boasts the
highest "impact factor" (a measurement the number of times a journal is
cited by other articles) of any American medical publication, and
occasionally even flirts with casual readability.
Also try Nature, Science, Scientific American
47. Architectural Record
Architectural
Record chronicled, in simple and elegant design, the blossoming of
modern architecture in America, giving space to architects like Frank
Lloyd Wright and Louis Sullivan to publish treatises that changed the
field forever.
48. Punch
The longest running satire magazine on our list (1841–1992)A
direct descendant of French satirical publications like Le Caricature
and Le Charivari, Punch counted Kingsley Amis, Quentin Crisp, and P.G.
Wodehouse among its contributors; perfected what we know as a magazine
cartoon (a one-panel gag with a caption but no dialogue); and coined the
now-ubiquitous term "cartoon" to describe it-all under the aegis of its
glove-puppet mascot, Mr. Punch.
49. Loaded
The
perverted done-it-all older brother of the lad mags, the U.K.'s Loaded
has, since 1994, outdone its American siblings in terms of nudity,
crassness and, we suspect, binge drinking. It also nailed that
irreverent I-know-you-are-but-I-am-cooler tone well before Americans
started importing British editors to try to replicate it.
50. The Source
Until the start of the burnout (1988–1994)Started
in 1988 as a Harvard radio-show 'zine, it was the first magazine to
give frontline coverage to the war on drugs, expose NYPD brutality, and
introduce the world to a guy named Biggie Smalls. Its fall from grace
was wince-worthy, but it wasn't called the hip hop bible (by its own
founders, mind you) for nothing.
51. Tiger Beat
When
they fell weak-kneed for Elvis, screamed for John and Paul, fainted for
David Cassidy, swooned for Donny Osmond, or melted for Luke and Jason,
Tiger Beat was there on the supermarket shelves in all its Technicolor
glory, shining like a beacon of hunkdom for the teeny boppers of the
day.
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