Snowflake creatives

Sally Hampton
Consumer Magazines Publisher
DC Thomson

@sallyhamp

I guess I knew this already but lockdown has underlined just how resilient and innovative magazine people are.

When the threat of Covid-19 became obvious, these “snowflake” creatives calmly picked up their kit and began making their publications at home.

They also responded magnificently to the transformation of readers’ lives. I can’t put it any better than this unprompted comment from a reader, “They did a great job in tweaking content following lockdown – presumably at short notice – so it didn’t appear to come from a bygone age!”

A magazine is a friend who has your back – never more than now.



Grub Street Journal

Fall hard or fly

Paul McNamee
Editor
The Big Issue

@pauldmcnamee

When it happens, you fall hard or you fly. And boy, we flew! 

Covid gripped, The Big Issue was off the streets for the first time in 29 years. We had to help vendors and make sure we were to be around when it’s over.

We called out with subscriptions. Readers came. We went into shops (for the first time ever). Readers came. 

We built an App and we built a podcast. We fixed online. 

The public support moved us in majestic, glorious ways.

Like being on the back of a wild horse, it’s terrifying at times. Onwards, we ride!



Grub Street Journal

The Magazine Diaries: 2020

About six years ago, I reached out to friends and colleagues in the magazine industry and asked what it felt like to be working in magazine publishing “in the middle of the biggest disruption in publishing history”.

The Coronavirus crisis is clearly now the biggest disruption in publishing history and I’m resurrecting The Magazine Diaries to chronicle how magazine people are coping with the chaos that this awful disease has unleashed… and support The Big Issue

Continue reading →

Grub Street Journal

The Magazine Diaries makes it to Singapore

Magazine Diaries in Singapore

Jo Upcraft, Editor-in-Chief of Cosmopolitan Singapore, posted this picture to Instagram with this glowing review.

Just read @MagazineDiaries. Made me laugh, cry (a little bit), feel nostalgic for the past, hopeful for the future and more in love with the industry than ever. For anyone who’s been at it as long as I have, or has any passion for magazines and creativity, just order yours.

Grub Street Journal

An introduction to the Magazine Diaries

I stumbled across an old New Yorker cartoon a while back. The forever-missing Wally is sat alone at a bar in his trademark hat and stripes. Four or five drinks in, he complains, “Nobody ever asks how’s Wally?”.

That’s how I feel about working in magazines. Everyone is frantically searching for a sustainable future, endlessly debating where our industry is headed, how best to make money, how best to save money, what new platform will or won’t work. No one ever stops to ask anyone else how they feel about making magazines in the middle of the biggest disruption in publishing history. Continue reading →

Grub Street Journal