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A glossy monthly with a unique and singular positioning, Vanity Fair is a high profile international brand, with an editorial mix that marries investigation with glamour, information with aesthetics.

Country: France
City: Paris
VIP

Good-humored and irreverent, it is a benchmark to the modern man’s behavior, fashion and beauty.

Country: Brazil
City: São Paulo
Country: Argentina
City: Buenos Aires

NOVA is a monthly feminine magazine Published by Abril and part of the international Cosmopolitan group.

It was started in Brazil in September 1973. In agreement with Publisher Abril, the magazine has a monthly circulation of approximately 400,000 copies.

The content editorial of all of the editions is composed of the following themes: Love / Sex, Life / I Work, Famous People, Beauty / Health and Fashion / Style.

The reader profile of NOVA is a young woman, that she works out and between 18 and 49 years, of the classes A, B and C.

Country: Brazil
City: São Paulo

Pride has been the lifestyle bible of the woman of colour for nearly two decades. Pride is unique, blending multiculturalism with modern UK living. Pride is the face of black Britain.

Pride brings out the very best in its readers, who strive to be the best in every area of their very demanding and colourful lives.

The Pride woman is very aware of her cultural background and eager to retain and promote her identity. However, she is also fully integrated within the British cultural society.

The Pride woman is a well-educated, ambitious go-getter who has overcome the carelessness of her flirty freedom years. More than 50% of Pride readers have completed a degree. She is focused and responsible. Striving to be the best in both her personal and career life, she is now more confident and cultured. She is aware of her attributes and has learned to use them well. She is opinionated but always open to new ideas.

Pride has fed the spirit of the woman of colour for the best part of two decades, offering information that is important to her, such as career, health, hair and beauty, and advice on issues ranging from dealing with cultural racism to updates on the latest braid sprays – issues that are not found in any other lifestyle title.

By advertising in Pride, companies speak specifically to the woman of colour through her medium and join the celebration of all that she is. Because when a Pride woman sits down with Pride, she goes on an exciting journey of cultural self-discovery with her best friend, who understands where she is coming from and – most importantly – where she is going.

Country: United Kingdom
City: London

Vogue is a fashion and lifestyle magazine published in 16 countries + Latin America by Condé Nast Publications. Each month, Vogue publishes a magazine addressing topics of fashion, life and design.

Vogue is most famous as a presenter of images of high fashion and high society, but it also publishes writings on art, culture, politics, and ideas. It has also helped to enshrine the fashion model as celebrity.

Country: Mexico
City: Mexico City
Country: United States
City: Montpelier

Launched on February ’07, Style.it, has become the definitive online reference for the Italian women, combining the editorial authority of three prestigious brands - Vogue, Glamour and Vanity Fair - with the spirit and participation of the web.

The site offers in a lively and engaging environment original content specifically written and designed for the Web: comprehensive runway coverage of all the major fashion shows; lavish and authoritative reports on seasonal trends; the latest social, celebrity, and fashion news; detailed shopping guides; expert advises on beauty, fitness, psychology and wellness.

Editorials developed by a dedicated team of journalists marry with user generated contents: from personal looks published in the ‘Streetmemo’ channel, to hundreds of blogs grouped by areas of interest, to comments and lively discussions that take place in the forums where users interact among themselves and with the magazines’ top contributors.

Country: Italy
City: Milan

GOSH! Magazine was a short-lived, but influential Los Angeles-based arts, entertainment, and fashion magazine published in eleven issues between October, 1978 and August, 1979. In its short history it became notable enough to be recognized by the Smithsonian Institution and included in their archives. In addition, GOSH! articles written by Dennis Cooper have been archived as part of the Dennis Cooper Papers in the Fales Library and Special Collections of New York University. It was distributed free of charge in art galleries, alternative bookstores and music shops in the Los Angeles area. Articles ranged from interviews with experimental filmmakers like George Kuchar, Sara Kathryn Arledge, and Ted V. Mikels; influential radio announcers like Rodney Bingenheimer; to reviews of art exhibits, like Susan Greiger's (now Susan Singer) controversial show at Aarnun gallery featuring life-sized nude photos arranged in a flip book and an exhibit about how celebrities and common folk relate to their own noses.

Also included in the magazine were punk, jazz, and alternative music reviews featuring musicians like "The Hipster" Harry Gibson, Fred Frith, Charlie Parker, and Lester Young; and reproductions of original art, illustrations, comics, and photographs from many avant garde contributors. Even the advertisements were very interesting, such as the artist Jack McIntosh's ads selling art trash from his studio for five to two hundred dollars. One Jack McIntosh ad offered his services as a speaker at your church or club for $20. Included in the ad was the picture of a bizarre, drooling man with bulging eyes and vampire teeth.

The magazine's legacy was publishing early work by a variety of writers, artists, and photographers who went on to considerable success in their respective fields. Dennis Cooper, Michelle Huneven, Kirk Silsbee, Doug Humble, Gusmano Cesaretti, Jules Bates, Karla Karin, Sid Griffin, Steve Escandon, and others contributed to GOSH! The legendary illustrator, Neon Park, best remembered for his record album covers for the rock band Little Feat and for the Mothers of Invention's Weasels Ripped My Flesh did cover art for the ninth issue, showing an atom bomb exploding through an open zipper in the surface of the earth, as if a nuclear explosion is the ultimate male erection.

GOSH! was printed on newsprint in black and white in a signature of 12 sheets. Some covers contained black and one color, usually red or blue, used on the magazine logo of the word GOSH! surrrounded by a circle. It was published in folio format on paper 17 by 22 inches and folded twice to appear 8 1/2 by 11 inches. When unfolded to reveal the content, 24 pages were each 11 x 17 inches and facing each other. The editor and publisher of GOSH! was Terry Cannon, who is himself as notable as the other artists he included in the magazine. Cannon also founded the Pasadena, and later, Los Angeles Film Forum which continues to be active in Hollywood showing the works of experimental filmmakers, and the Baseball Reliquary, which presents exhibits showing an alternative view of the history and social impact of America's national pastime, and annually inducts prominent baseball figures into its 'Shrine of the Eternals'. In addition, Cannon served as an editor on his father's classic car mechanic's magazine Skinned Knuckles. The editorial office for GOSH! was located at 35 N. Raymond Avenue in Old Town Pasadena during Pasadena's period of intense art making activities of the 1970s and 80s.

Country: United States
City: Los Angeles
Country: Russia
City: Moscow
Country: Slovenia
City: Ljubljana

XOXO The Mag is a free of charge, art-driven magazine, published 10 times a year.

XOXO The Mag has a blended spirit of high fashion, new music, exceptional lifestyle and latest art & design.

Country: Turkey
City: Istanbul

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