InStyle
- a guide to the lives and lifestyles of the world's fascinating people. The
magazine covers the private side of public faces and the expression of
personal style - the choices people make about their homes, their clothes,
their pastimes and passions. With photos and features, it opens the door to
celebrities' homes, families, parties, weddings, and charity events,
offering ideas about beauty and fashion, fitness and entertaining.
Cosmopolitan
- focuses on personal growth, relationships and careers, with expanded
reporting on fashion and beauty, health and fitness. Covered as well are
celebrities and pop culture... and just about everything else young women
want to know about.
Vanity
Fair - presents the issues, events and people that define the times.
This chronicle of contemporary culture features art, entertainment,
politics, business, and the media. Each issue includes in-depth reporting
and profiles targeted to a young, affluent audience.Since the 1980s, Vanity
Fair has enjoyed one of the more improbable comebacks in publishing thanks
to a brain trust of savvy editors and strong contributors. The updated
design successfully retools the original publication's emphasis on the upper
tiers of American society while more substantial journalism provides ballast
to photo features, occasional fashion layouts, and celebrity profiles. If
power and celebrity are still twin poles to who winds up between the
magazine's covers, solid reporting and inspired perspectives on politics,
business, and culture from such seasoned hands as Dominick Dunne, David
Halberstam, James Wolcott, and other first-rank writers balance glitz with
gravitas. The magazine also relishes high-end photographic layouts from
heavyweights such as Annie Leibovitz
GQ
- This men's magazine addresses the people, places, ideas and issues that
shape men's personal expression, development and experiences. Each issue
features fashion, journalism, contemporary fiction and service articles on
fitness, grooming and health.The "GQ look" is synonymous with
classic cool and sophistication, and despite a recent outburst of trendy
magazines (think Maxim, Gear, and FHM) vying for the attention of young
professional males, the steeped-in-tradition monthly GQ carries on without
missing a beat. Yes, there's more décolletage gracing the cover than there
used to be, but GQ continues to supply enough cultural commentary, celebrity
profiles, features, and style guides to keep the modern man in touch with
what's going on in the world from month to month. GQ's ideal reader is
probably one who actually might be able to easily afford any of the high-end
suits, shoes, and watches featured among the countless ads packed between
the covers. Though the average reader might enjoy scanning a fashion spread
about steakhouses entitled "How to Dress for a Porterhouse" and
reading articles like "50 Ways to Blow Your Bonus," it's unlikely
that such folly holds much practical advice. Literary editor Walter Kirn
keeps short fiction on display and Alan Richman's writing on food and dining
out is always entertaining, even when he comes across as borderline cranky.
Two regular Q&A features, "The Style Guy" and "Dr.
Sooth," run the gamut from when it's appropriate to wear a straw hat to
problems in the bedroom.
Cosmo
Girl - Written with the Cosmo Girl in mind P issues you face now,
subjects and circumstances that matter to you. Plus fashion and beauty tips
that fit who you are, where you are. All geared to help you discover you. Be
the first to get this hot, fun, exciting, revealing, insightful, cool
magazine now!