Reader's Digest
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File:Readers Digest November 2022 cover.jpg
Cover of the November 2022 issue
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Chief Content Officer | Jason Buhrmester |
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Format | Digest |
Total circulation (2020) |
3,029,039[1] |
Founder | |
First issue | February 5, 1922 |
Company | Trusted Media Brands, Inc. |
Country | United States |
Based in | Manhattan, New York City, New York, U.S. |
Website | rd |
ISSN | 0034-0375 |
Reader's Digest is an American general-interest family magazine, published ten times a year. Formerly based in Chappaqua, New York, it is now headquartered in midtown Manhattan. The magazine was founded in 1922 by DeWitt Wallace and his wife Lila Bell Wallace. For many years, Reader's Digest was the best-selling consumer magazine in the United States; it lost the distinction in 2009 to Better Homes and Gardens. According to Media Mark Research (2006), Reader's Digest reached more readers with household incomes of over $100,000 than Fortune, The Wall Street Journal, Business Week, and Inc. combined.[2]
Global editions of Reader's Digest reach an additional 40 million people in more than 70 countries, via 49 editions in 21 languages. The periodical has a global circulation of 10.5 million, making it the largest paid-circulation magazine in the world.[citation needed][when?]
It is also published in Braille, digital, audio, and a large type called "Reader's Digest Large Print." The magazine is compact, with its pages roughly half the size of most American magazines. Hence, in the summer of 2005, the U.S. edition adopted the slogan "America in your pocket." In January 2008, it was changed to "Life well shared."
Contents
History
Inception and growth
In 1920, Dewitt Wallace married Lila Bell Wallace in Pleasantville, New York. Shortly thereafter, the two would launch Reader's Digest in the basement below a Greenwich Village speakeasy.[3] The idea for Reader's Digest was to gather a sampling of favorite articles on many subjects from various monthly magazines, sometimes condensing and rewriting them, and to combine them into one magazine.[4]
Since its inception Reader's Digest has maintained a conservative[5] and anti-Communist perspective on political and social issues.[6] The Wallaces initially hoped the journal could provide $5,000 of net income. Wallace's assessment of what the potential mass-market audience wanted to read led to rapid growth. By 1929, the magazine had 290,000 subscribers and had a gross income of $900,000 a year. The first international edition was published in the United Kingdom in 1938. By the 40th anniversary of Reader's Digest, it had 40 international editions, in 13 languages and Braille, and at one point, it was the largest-circulating journal in China, Mexico, Spain, Sweden, Peru, and other countries, with a total international circulation of 23 million.[4]
The magazine's format for several decades consisted of 30 articles per issue (one per day), along with an "It Pays to Increase your Word Power" vocabulary quiz, a page of "Amusing Anecdotes" and "Personal Glimpses", two features of funny stories entitled "Humor in Uniform" and "Life in these United States", and a lengthier article at the end, usually condensed from a published book.[7] Other regular features were "My Most Unforgettable Character" (since discontinued), the "Drama in Real Life" survival stories, and more recently "That's Outrageous". These were all listed in the table of contents on the front cover. Each article was prefaced by a small, simple line drawing. In more recent times, the format evolved into flashy, colorful, eye-catching graphics throughout, and many short bits of data interspersed with full articles. The table of contents is now contained inside. From 2003 to 2007, the back cover featured "Our America", paintings of Rockwell-style whimsical situations by artist C. F. Payne.[citation needed] Another monthly consumer advice feature is "What [people in various professions] won't tell you," with a different profession featured each time.
The first "Word Power" column of the magazine was published in the January 1945 edition, written by Wilfred J. Funk.[8][9] In December 1952, the magazine published "Cancer by the Carton", a series of articles that linked smoking with lung cancer,[10] and this topic was later repeated in other articles.
From 2002 to 2006, Reader's Digest conducted a vocabulary competition in schools throughout the US called Reader's Digest National Word Power Challenge. In 2007, the magazine said it would not have the competition for the 2007–08 school year: "...but rather to use the time to evaluate the program in every respect, including scope, mission, and model for implementation."[11]
In 2006, the magazine published three more local-language editions in Slovenia, Croatia, and Romania. In October 2007, the Digest expanded into Serbia. The magazine's licensee in Italy stopped publishing in December 2007. The magazine launched in the People's Republic of China in January 2008. It ceased publishing in China in 2012, due to a lack of sales caused by a relatively high price, a poorly defined audience and low-quality translated content.[12]
For 2010, the US edition of the magazine reduced its publishing schedule to 10 times a year rather than 12, and to increase digital offerings. It also cut its circulation guarantee for advertisers to 5.5 million copies from 8 million. In announcing that decision, in June 2009, the company said that it planned to reduce its number of celebrity profiles and how-to features, and increase the number of inspiring spiritual stories and stories about the military.[13]
Beginning in January 2013, the US edition was increased to 12 times a year.[14]
Business organization and ownership
In 1990, the magazine's parent company, The Reader's Digest Association, Inc. (RDA), became a publicly traded corporation. From 2005 through 2010, RDA reported a net loss each year.[15]
In March 2007, Ripplewood Holdings LLC led a consortium of private-equity investors who bought the company through a leveraged buyout for US$2.8 billion, financed primarily by the issuance of US$2.2 billion of debt.[4][13] Ripplewood invested $275 million of its own money, and had partners including Rothschild Bank of Zürich and GoldenTree Asset Management of New York. The private-equity deal tripled the association's interest payments, to $148 million a year.[4]
On August 24, 2009, RDA announced it had filed with the US Bankruptcy court an arranged Chapter 11 bankruptcy to continue operations, and to restructure the US$2.2 billion debt undertaken by the leveraged buyout transaction.[4][16][17] The company emerged from bankruptcy with the lenders exchanging debt for equity, and Ripplewood's entire equity investment was extinguished.[4]
In April 2010, the UK arm was sold to its management. It has a licensing deal with the US company to continue publishing the UK edition.[18]
On February 17, 2013, RDA Holding filed for bankruptcy a second time.[19][20] The company was purchased for £1 by Mike Luckwell, a venture capitalist and once the biggest shareholder in WPP plc.[21]
Direct marketing
RDA offers many mail-order products included with "sweepstakes" or contests. US Reader's Digest and the company's other US magazines do not use sweepstakes in their direct-mail promotions. A notable shift to electronic direct marketing has been undertaken by the company to adapt to shifting media landscape.[22] In the mid-20th century, phonograph record albums of popular classical and easy-listening music, bearing the magazine's name, were sold by mail. Reader's Digest also partnered with RCA to offer a mail-order music club which offered discount pricing on vinyl records.[23][24]
Sweepstakes agreement
In 2001, 32 states' attorneys general reached agreements with the company and other sweepstakes operators to settle allegations that they tricked the elderly into buying products because they were a "guaranteed winner" of a lottery. The settlement required the companies to expand the type size of notices in the packaging that no purchase is necessary to play the sweepstakes, and to:
- Establish a "Do Not Contact List" and refrain from soliciting any future "high-activity" customers unless and until Reader's Digest actually makes contact with that customer and determines that the customer is not buying because they believe that the purchase will improve their chances of winning.
- Send letters to individuals who spend more than $1,000 in a six-month period telling them that they are not required to make purchases to win the sweepstakes, that making a purchase will not improve their chances of winning, and that all entries have the same chance to win whether or not the entry is accompanied by a purchase.[25][26][27]
The UK edition of Reader's Digest has also been criticized by the Trading Standards Institute for preying on the elderly and vulnerable with misleading bulk mailings that claim the recipient is guaranteed a large cash prize and advising them not to discuss this with anyone else. Following their complaint, the Advertising Standards Authority said they would be launching an investigation.[28] The ASA investigation upheld the complaint in 2008, ruling that the Reader's Digest mailing was irresponsible and misleading (particularly for the elderly) and had breached three clauses of the Committee of Advertising Practice code.[29] Reader's Digest was told not to use this mailing again.
International editions
International editions have made Reader's Digest the best-selling monthly journal in the world. Its worldwide circulation including all editions has reached 17 million copies and 70 million readers. Reader's Digest is currently[when?] published in 49 editions and 21 languages and is available in over 70 countries, including Slovenia, Croatia, and Romania in 2008.[citation needed]
Its international editions account for about 50% of the magazine's trade volume. In each market, local editors commission or purchase articles for their own markets and share content with U.S. and other editions. The selected articles are then translated by local translators and the translations edited by the local editors to make them match the "well-educated informal" style of the American edition.[citation needed]
Over the 90 years, the company has published editions in various languages in different countries, or for different regions. Often, these editions started out as translations of the U.S. version of the magazine, but over time they became unique editions, providing material more germane to local readers. Local editions that still publish the bulk of the American Reader's Digest are usually titled with a qualifier, such as the Portuguese edition, Seleções do Reader's Digest (Selections from Reader's Digest), or the Swedish edition, Reader's Digest Det Bästa (The Best of Reader's Digest).[citation needed]
The list is sorted by year of first publication.[30] Some countries had editions but no longer do; for example, the Danish version of Reader's Digest (Det Bedste) ceased publication in 2005 and was replaced by the Swedish version (Det Bästa); as a result, the Swedish edition covers stories about both countries (but written solely in Swedish).[citation needed]
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- 1938 – United Kingdom (sold in 2010, operated under license)
- 1940 – Cuba and Latin America (in Spanish) (as Selecciones)
- 1942 – Brazil
- 1943 – Sweden, Egypt (in Arabic) (Al-Mukhtar)
- 1945 – Finland[31]
- 1946 – Australia, Denmark, Japan (operations discontinued in 1985)
- 1947 – Belgium (in French), France, Norway, Canadian French
- 1948 – Canada (English), Germany, South Africa, Switzerland (in French and German), Italy (operations discontinued in 2007)
- 1950 – Argentina, New Zealand
- 1952 – Austria, Spain (as Selecciones in Spain)
- 1954 – India and Pakistan (in English)
- 1957 – Netherlands
- 1959 – Chile, Costa Rica and Central America
- 1965 – Taiwan, Hong Kong and Southeast Asia (in traditional Chinese)
- 1968 – Belgium (Dutch)
- 1971 – Puerto Rico and United States (in Spanish), Portugal
- 1978 – South Korea (operations discontinued in 2009)
- 1991 – Hungary, Russia
- 1993 – Czech Republic (operations discontinued in 2017)
- 1995 – Poland
- 1996 – Thailand (operations discontinued in 2014)
- 1997 – Slovakia
- 2004 – Indonesia (operations discontinued in October 2015)
- 2005 – Romania, Slovenia, Croatia, Bulgaria
- 2007 – Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, Ukraine
- 2008 – China (operations discontinued in 2012)
Arabic editions
The first Reader's Digest publication in the Arab World was printed in Egypt in September 1943.[32] The license was eventually withdrawn.
The second effort and the first Reader's Digest franchise agreement was negotiated through the efforts of Frederick Pittera, in 1976, an American entrepreneur, who sold the idea to Lebanon's former foreign minister, Lucien Dahdah, then son-in-law of Suleiman Frangieh, President of Lebanon. Dahdah partnered with Ghassan Tueni (former Lebanon ambassador to the United Nations, and publisher of Al Nahar newspaper, Beirut) in publishing Reader's Digest in the Arabic language. It was printed in Cairo for distribution throughout the Arab world under title Al-Mukhtar. In format, Al-Mukhtar was the same as the U.S. edition with 75% of the editorial content. Philip Hitti, Chairman of Princeton University's Department of Oriental Languages and a team of Arabic advisers counseled on what would be of interest to Arabic readers. The publication of Al-Mukhtar ceased in April 1993.
Canadian edition
The Canadian edition first appeared in July 1947 in French and in February 1948 in English; today, the vast majority of its content is Canadian. Nearly all major and minor articles are locally produced or selected from Canadian publications that match the Digest style. Usually, there is one American article in each issue.
"Life's Like That" is the Canadian name of "Life in These United States." Most of the other rubrics are taken from the American publication.
On December 6, 2023, it was announced that Reader's Digest Canada would cease publication in the spring of 2024.[33][34]
Indian edition
The Indian edition was first published in 1954. Its circulation then was 40,000 copies. It was published for many years by the Tata Group of companies. Today, the magazine is published in India by Living Media India Ltd,[35] and sold over 600,000. It prints Indian and international articles.[35] According to the Indian Readership Survey Round II of 2009, the readership for Reader's Digest was 3.94 million, second only to India Today at 5.62 million.[35] That has since declined. In the 2017 Survey, the India edition had fallen to ninth position with a readership of 1.354 million, and in the latest Survey (Quarter 1 of 2019), it is not in the Top 10 list of English-language magazines published in India.
Australian edition
Reader's Digest Australia has an any issue readership of 1.5 million (according to Nielsen) and a circulation of over 200,000.
Books
Nonfiction books with the Reader's Digest brand and yearly collections of the magazine's content are currently published by Trusted Media Brands, sold through their website and distributed to retailers by Simon & Schuster.[36]
Since 1950, Reader's Digest has published a direct mail series of hardcover anthologies containing abridged novels and nonfiction. The series was originally called Reader's Digest Condensed Books and renamed in 1997 to Reader's Digest Select Editions.
From the mid-1960s to early 1980s, full-length, original works of non-fiction were published under the imprint Reader's Digest Press and distributed by Thomas Y. Crowell Co. Beginning in 1982, a series of classic novels was published as World's Best Reading and made available by mail order to magazine subscribers.
In Germany, Reader's Digest runs an own book-publishing house called Verlag Das Beste which not only publishes the German edition of the Reader's Digest magazine. Since 1955, it has published Reader's Digest Auswahlbücher (a German edition of Reader's Digest Condensed Books). Besides publishing the magazine, the publisher is especially well known in Germany for the science fiction anthology Unterwegs in die Welt von Morgen ("The Road to Tomorrow"), consisting of 50 hardcover volumes of classic science fiction novels (such as Robert A. Heinlein's Stranger in a Strange Land, Arthur C. Clarke's 2001, or Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451, usually two novels per volume) published between 1986 and 1995.[37] More recent book series by the publisher include Im Spiegel der Zeit ("Reflections of the Times", a series of recent newspaper or magazine reports) and Klassiker der Weltliteratur ("World Literature Classics").
Editors-in-chief
- Lila Bell Wallace and DeWitt Wallace (1922–1964) (original founders)
- Hobart D. Lewis (1964–1976)
- Edward T. Thompson (1976–1984)
- Kenneth O. Gilmore (1984–1990)
- Kenneth Tomlinson (1990–1996)
- Christopher Willcox (1996–2000)
- Eric Schrier (2000–2001)
- Jacqueline Leo (2001–2007)
- Peggy Northrop (2007–2011)
- Liz Vaccariello (2011–2016)
- Bruce Kelley (2016–2021)
- Jason Buhrmester (2021–present)
See also
- World's Best Reading
- List of United States magazines
- John Patric, noted writer for Reader's Digest during the 1930s and 1940s
- "My Last Wonderful Days", a 1956 article about an Iowa woman dying from cancer
References
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- ↑ Don R. Vaughan, Ph.D., vocabulary columnist.[full citation needed]
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- ↑ Reader's Digest Association – News & Releases
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- ↑ Milidragovic, Visnja (April 13, 2012). "From direct marketing tool to digital niche product: a Reader's Digest Sweepstakes case study" SFU.
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- ↑ "Reader's Digest Magazine to cease activities next spring". The Montreal Gazette, December 6, 2023.
- ↑ Reader’s Digest Canada, once a household staple, will end its run after 76 years The Globe and Mail December 05, 2023.
- ↑ 35.0 35.1 35.2 Indian version of Reader's Digest.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Unterwegs in die Welt von Morgen on the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
Bibliography
- John Bainbridge, Little Wonder. Or, the Reader's Digest and How It Grew, New York: Reynal & Hitchcock, 1945.
- John Heidenry, Theirs Was the Kingdom: Lila and DeWitt Wallace and the Story of the Reader's Digest, New York/London: W.W. Norton, 1993
- Samuel A. Schreiner, The Condensed World of the Reader's Digest, New York: Stein and Day, 1977.
- James Playsted Wood, Of Lasting Interest: The Story of the Reader's Digest, Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press, 1958.
- Clem Robyns, "The Internationalisation of Social and Cultural Values: On the Homogenization and Localization Strategies of the Reader's Digest", Folia Translatologica 3, 1994, 83–92
- Joanne P. Sharp, Condensing the Cold War: Reader's Digest and American Identity, University of Minnesota Press, 2000.
- Joanne P. Sharp, Hegemony, popular culture and geopolitics: the Reader's Digest and the construction of danger, Political Geography, Elsevier, 1996.
- Visnja Milidragovic, "From direct marketing tool to digital niche product: a Reader's Digest Sweepstakes case study", SFU, 2012.
External links
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