0 Comments to “For Sale: prime editorial space”

  1. Simon

    Sep 28th, 2009

    This reminds me of two things:

    1) Macleans’ even more blatant ad on their front cover (http://canadianmags.blogspot.com/2009/04/omg-macleans-what-happened-to-your.html)

    2) Music written by birds on a wire: http://news.cnet.com/8301-13772_3-10357175-52.html

    Personally, I’m strangely non-plussed by advertising reaching into the grey areas of magazines. You can argue either side until the cows come home, but sometimes making money is the means to achieve more justifiable ends.

  2. Dust

    Sep 28th, 2009

    I’m betting TL would have done some consumer testing beforehand to predict the response of their subscribers before taking a risk. The fact that they’re selling GM next means that they were right and nobody gives a shit.

    Anyway, I’m a great fan of change – especially ones that break convention and tradition. I say we should see where this takes us.

    -d

  3. jessekg

    Sep 28th, 2009

    Simon, That birds on a wire song is actually, for a brief minute, where I thought they were going with it. Then I realized that composing music to birds on a wire is fairly limiting, if not one-off thing, so an unlikely fall preview contender.

    As for that grey area, if it worked design-wise I wouldnt have been phased nearly as much. The fact that it didn’t though…

    unrelated note: just bought a subaru.

  4. Simon

    Sep 28th, 2009

    Possible, but I doubt it… readers tend not to really care about editorial objectivity (unless it directly impacts their lives, which is rare). Also, if magazines need to sell ad space on their cover and features, they probably can’t afford consumer testing.

    The reaction to the Macleans ad I posted above was so negative they’ve changed to a half gatefold since, not going anywhere near that scratch and sniff panel type dealy.

    It’s definitely a slippery slope. I almost want the ad to be less design oriented, so it’s more advertorial like. Subtle ads that blend into layout really are the tricky ricky. Is product placement and subconscious advertising the next frontier?

  5. Dust

    Sep 29th, 2009

    Congrats! Remember, though – those were professional drivers on a closed course…

    -d


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