Entertainment
Weekly (sometimes abbreviated as
EW) is an American
magazine, published by the Time division of Time
Warner, that covers film, television, music, Broadway
theatre
, books and popular
culture. Unlike celebrity-focused publications
US Weekly,
People, and
In Touch Weekly,
EW's primary
concentration is on entertainment media and
critical reviews. Unlike
Variety and
The Hollywood Reporter, which
are aimed at industry insiders,
EW targets a more-general
audience.
History
The magazine's original television advertising soliciting
pre-publication subscribers portrayed it as a consumer guide to
popular culture,including movies,music,and book reveiws,sometimes
with video game and stage reveiws,too. ("the post-modern
"
Farmers' Almanac").
The first issue was published on February 16, 1990 and featured
singer
K.D. Lang
on its cover. The title word "entertainment" was not capitalized on
the cover until mid-1992 and has remained so since. By 2003, the
magazine's weekly circulation averaged 1.7 million copies per week.
In March 2006, managing editor Rick Tetzeli oversaw an overhaul of
EW's graphics and layout to reflect a more-modern
look.
Typical content and frequency
The magazine features celebrities on the cover and addresses topics
such as television ratings, movie grosses, production costs,
concert ticket sales, ad budgets, and in-depth articles about
scheduling, producers, showrunners, etc.
It publishes several "double issues" each year (usually in January,
May, June and/or August) that are available on newsstands for two
weeks; because the magazine numbers its issues sequentially, it
counts each double issue as "two" issues so that it can fulfill its
marketing claim of 52 issues per year for subscribers.
Layout
Entertainment Weekly follows a typical magazine format by
featuring a
letters to the
editor and
table of contents
in the first few pages, while also featuring advertisements. While
many advertisements are unrelated to the entertainment industry,
the majority of ads are typically related to up-and-coming
television, film or music events.
News and Notes
These beginning articles open the magazine and as a rule focus on
current events in pop culture. The whole section typically runs
eight to ten pages long, and features short news articles, as well
as several specific recurring sections:
- "The Must List" is a two-page spread
highlighting ten things (books, movies, songs, etc.) that the staff
loves from the week; it usually features one pick from EW
readers.
- "First Look", subtitled "An early peak at some
of Hollywood's coolest projects", is a two-page spread with
behind-the-scenes or publicity stills of upcoming movies,
television episodes or music events.
- "The Shaw Report" is a small sidebar feature, written by Jessica
Shaw that rates several trios of related trends: one that is "in";
one that is "five minutes ago" (recently fashionable but no longer
so); and one that is "out".
- "The Hit List", written each week by critic
Scott Brown, highlights ten major events, with short comedic
commentaries by Brown. Typically, there will be some continuity to
the commentaries. This column was originally written by Jim Mullen
and featured twenty events each week, and Dalton Ross later wrote
an abbreviated version.
- "The Hollywood Insider" is a one-page section
that reports breaking news in entertainment. It gives details, in
the separate columns, on the most-current news in television, movie
and music.
- "The Style Report" is a one-page section
devoted to celebrity style. Because its
focus is on celebrity fashion or lifestyle, it is graphically rich
in nature, featuring many photographs or other images. Recently ,
the page converted to a new format: five pictures of celebrity
fashions for the week, graded on the magazine's review "A"-to-"F"
scale (see Reviews
section below). A spin-off section, "Style
Hunter", which finds reader-requested articles of clothing
or accessories that have appeared in pop culture recently, appears
frequently.
- "The Monitor" is a two-page spread devoted to
major events in celebrity lives with small paragraphs highlighting
events such as weddings, illnesses, arrests, court appearances, and
deaths. Deaths of major celebrities are typically detailed in a
one-half- or full-page obituary titled
"Legacy". This feature is nearly identical to
sister publication People's "Passages" feature. *The
"'''celebrity'''" column, the final section of "News and Notes", is
devoted to a different column each week, written by three of the
magazine's more-prominent writers: :*"'''The Pop of King'''" is
[[Stephen King|Stephen King's]] column, where he discusses various
aspects of [[popular culture]], including movie or book
recommendations among other things. :*"'''The Final Cut'''" is
written by former executive editor and author Mark Harris. Harris's
column focuses on analyzing current popular-culture events, and is
generally the most serious of the columns. Harris has written about
the writer's strike and the 2008 presidential election, among other
topics. :*"'''Binge Thinking'''" is written by screenwriter
[[Diablo Cody]]. After several profiles of Cody in the months
leading up to and following the release of her [[debut|début]]
film, ''[[Juno (film)|Juno]]'' (2007), she was hired to write a
column detailing her unique view of the entertainment business.
====Feature articles==== There are typically four to six major
articles (one to two pages each) within the middle pages of the
magazine. These articles are most commonly [[interview]]s, but
there are also narrative articles as well as lists. Feature
articles tend to focus mostly on movies and television and less on
books and the theatre. In the magazine's history, there have only
been a few cover stories (e.g., [[John Grisham]], [[Stephen King]])
devoted to authors; there has never been a cover solely devoted to
the theater. ====Reviews==== There are seven sections of reviews in
the back pages of each issue (together encompassing up to one half
of the magazine's pages). In addition to reviews, each reviews
section has a top-sellers list, as well as numerous sidebars with
interviews or small features. Unlike a number of [[Europe]]an
magazines that give their ratings with a number of stars (with
normally 4 or 5 stars for the best review), ''EW'' grades the
reviews academic-style, so that the highest reviews will get a
letter grade of "A" and the lowest reviews get an "F", with plus or
minus graduations in between assigned to each letter except "F".
The sections are: *"'''Movies'''" typically features all the major
releases for that weekend, as well as several [[independent
film|independent]] and [[foreign film|foreign]] films that have
also been released. Lisa Schwarzbaum and [[Owen Gleiberman]] are
the two primary [[film criticism|film critics]], with occasional
reviews by Scott Brown and Gregory Kirschling. It also includes
"Critical Mass" - a table of the grades that have also been given
by a number of noted movie reviewers in the American press (such as
[[Ty Burr]] from the ''[[The Boston Globe]]'', Todd McCarthy from
''[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]'' and [[Roger Ebert]] from the
''[[Chicago Sun-Times]]''). Additionally, this section includes the
box-office figures from the previous weekend and some sort of
[[Information graphics|infographic]]. The only new film that has
ever been given an A+ rating by ''EW'' is ''[[My Left Foot
(film)|My Left Foot]]'' (1989) in one of the magazine's first
issues. [[DVD]]s are now profiled in the one-page "Movies on DVD"
section that follows. *"'''Television'''" features reviews by chief
critic Ken Tucker for [[television movie|made-for-television
film]]s and new [[television program|television program or
series]], as well as some [[television special]]s. There is also a
section of [[sound bite]]s featuring quotations from various
television shows. The section also includes the [[Nielsen Ratings]]
for the previous week. On the following page is typically a "TV on
DVD" section, profiling releases of television films and specials
or complete seasons of television shows. *"'''What to Watch'''",
currently written by Jessica Shaw, features brief, one- or
two-sentence reviews of several television programs on each night
of the week, as well as one slightly longer review, usually written
by someone else, with a letter grade. *"'''Music'''" reviews major
[[album]] releases for the week, divided by [[genre]]. There is
also typically at least one interview or feature, as well as a
section called "Download This", highlighting several [[single
(music)|single]]s available for download from the internet. A table
displaying record sales and [[airplay (radio)|airplay]] for the
previous week is also included. *"'''Books'''" features reviews of
books released during the week. Sometimes, authors will write guest
reviews of other works. There is also typically one interview or
spotlight feature in this section per issue.
[[Bestseller|Bestseller list]]s appear at the end of this section.
*"'''Theater'''"* reviews productions currently playing, listed by
the city where they are running. *"'''Games'''"* reviews current
video game releases. *"'''Tech'''"* reviews new websites and
products, and profiles current internet or technology phenomena. :*
Not in every issue.
The Bullseye
This section occupies the back page of the magazine, rating the
"hits" and "misses" from the past week's events in popular culture
on a
bullseye graphic. For
example, the May 22, 2009, edition featured
Justin Timberlake hosting
Saturday Night Live in the center,
while the then-drama between
Eminem and
Mariah Carey missed the target
completely for being "very 2002". At the time when this was printed
on a small part of a page, events that were greatly disliked were
shown several pages away.
Specialty issues
Every year the magazine publishes several specialty issues. These
issues are often published as double issues (issues given two
consecutive weeks as its date). Many times, these features will be
so big in length that they replace all other feature
articles.
Common specialty issues include:
- Spring, Summer, Fall and Winter Preview issues — Generally each
quarter the magazine reports on upcoming releases in movies, music,
television, live shows and books. Typically the summer issue's
focus will be on upcoming movies only unless major television
series or events, music releases or book releases are occurring
then.
- The Photo issue — Once a year, an issue is dedicated to
featuring (aside from the normal reviews and news content) only
photographs of celebrities. Unlike tabloid issues, these
photographs done with the celebrities' cooperation, and often they
use some form of artistic expression. A wide variety of celebrities
have been used, including Green Day,
Reese Witherspoon, Morrissey, the cast of the television series
Arrested
Development, Tobey Maguire
and Cameron Diaz. Generally, the
photographs will contain some descriptive text, sometimes about the
person or sometimes a commentary from the photographers who
photographed them for a story.
- Academy Awards issues — In the past the magazine devoted at
least four cover stories per year to the Academy Awards; "The Oscar Race Begins" issue in January predicts
the nominees, the "Nominees" issue in February profiles the
recently announced Oscar contenders, the "Oscar Odds" issue
predicts the winners the week before the awards, and the
"After-Awards" issue covers the ceremony the week after it airs.
Virtually every issue mentions the Oscars in some capacity, often
on the cover, and a film or actor's Academy-Award chances are often
noted in the magazine's reviews. In comparison, music's Grammy Awards, television's Emmy Awards, and theater's Tony Awards are given relatively limited
coverage.
- End-of-the-Year issue — The last issue of each year, whose
cover shows the "Entertainer of the Year" chosen by readers at
EW's official website. The issue consists of the ten-best
items released in theater, film, television, music, DVD, literature
and (as of last year) fashion that year. Music, television and film
have two critics give their top ten; the others only have one. Each
section also has a five-worst list (film is the only section in
which both critics give the worst). Also in the issue are special
sections devoted to the Entertainer of the Year, great
performances, newly arrived stars, a timeline of infamous celebrity mishaps, and
obituaries of stars who died (this used to be in a separate issue;
it was combined with the "end-of-the-year" issue in 2003). This is
the only issue without any reviews.
- The complete list of the annual "Entertainer of the Year"
winners is:
- *Bart Simpson (1990)
- *Jodie Foster (1991)
- *the cast of the television series Saturday Night Live (1992)
- *Steven Spielberg (1993)
- *Tom Hanks (1994)
- *the cast of the television series Friends (1995)
- *Rosie O'Donnell (1996)
- *Ellen DeGeneres (1997)
- *Leonardo DiCaprio (1998)
- *Ricky Martin (1999)
1,000th issue and redesign
The 1,000th issue was released July 4, 2008, and included the
magazine's top-100 list for movies, television shows, music videos,
songs, Broadway shows, and technology of the past twenty-five years
(1983-2008).
As of its 1,001st issue,
EW drastically revamped the look,
feel and content of the publication — increasing
font and picture sizes and making all columns'
word count shorter.
Website
The magazine's website EW.com, under managing editor Cyndi Stivers
(creator of
TimeOut New York), provides
users with daily content, breaking news,
blogs, original video programming, entertainment
exclusives and serves as an archive for past magazine interviews,
columns and photos.
References
- Stableford, Dylan (May 16, 2008). "Stivers Named Managing Editor of EW.com — Industry
veteran joins Entertainment Weekly at a pivotal time for the
brand."Stivers Named Managing Editor of EW.com
Folio. Accessed August 10, 2009.
See also
External links