- Sassy (magazine)
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Sassy Categories Teen Magazine Frequency Monthly Publisher Matilda Publications (1988-89), Lang Communications (1989-1994) First issue March 1988 Country United States Language English Sassy magazine is a defunct teen magazine, aimed at teenage female fans of alternative and indie rock music. It was founded in March 1988 by an Australian feminist, Sandra Yates, CEO of Matilda Publications, who based it on the teen magazine Dolly, which is still in publication in Australia.
Contents
Editorial staff
Sassy's founding editor was Jane Pratt, and it had a half Australian, half American staff. Its original main writers were referred to by Pratt as "Sex" (Karen Catchpole), "Drugs" (Catherine Gysin), and "Rock 'n Roll" (Christina Kelly)[1] because of the topics they covered. The fashion department was headed by Mary Clarke and Andrea Lee Linett, and one of their discoveries was Chloë Sevigny, whom they spotted on the street and hired as an intern. The Australian half of the staff covered the art & design (Neil McCutcheon) and beauty departments.
Publishers
Sassy was originally published in March 1988 in the United States by Matilda Publications with a circulation of 250,000. It was acquired by Lang Communications in October 1989, at which point its circulation was 450,000.[2] Petersen Publishing officially took over with the February – March 1995 issue,[3] and its editorial offices were moved to Los Angeles from Manhattan. It then stopped publishing as its own title in 1996, when editorial sections (and staff) of Sassy were absorbed into another magazine published by Petersen called `TEEN [4] beginning with the January 1997 issue.[5]
Dirt Magazine
In 1992, Sassy spun off a short-lived title for teen boys called Dirt: Son of Sassy, which was edited by Andy Jenkins, Mark Lewman and music video director Spike Jonze (collectively known as "the Master Cluster"). It published seven sporadic issues until 1994.
According to Canadian author Douglas Coupland, "Dirt was a funny and smart magazine for young people".[6]
Chia Pet
Sassy's in-house band was named after the Chia Pet, with various members from the editorial staff, including Jane Pratt on violin, Christina Kelly on vocals, her then-husband Robert Weeks on guitar, her then-sister-in-law (and Sassy writer) Jessica Vitkus Weeks on bass guitar, Mary Ann Marshall (also a Sassy scribe) on drums. Karen Catchpole also lent co-lead vocals to some songs.[7]
Releases
- Hey Baby -- CD single of original songs
- "Hey Baby"
- "Lunch"
- "Blind Date"
- Tannis Root Presents: Freedom Of Choice -- various-artists pro-choice fundraising CD of cover songs
16. "Don't You Want Me Baby"
Book: How Sassy Changed My Life
In April 2007, Faber and Faber released a tribute to and history of Sassy by former Teen Vogue editor Kara Jesella[8] and Marisa Meltzer called How Sassy Changed My Life: A Love Letter To The Greatest Teen Magazine Of All Time. The book recounts the magazine's rise and fall; its unusual appeal to both men and women, teenagers and adults; and its influence on mainstream as well as alternative women's magazines. It includes interviews with staffers and fans.
See also
References
- ^ Sassy, Jane Pratt's Editor's Page, 1988
- ^ Stakes Sold In Magazines
- ^ Petersen Will Restart Sassy With Push for Older Readers
- ^ TIME, INC. v PETERSON PUBLISHING, Decided: April 14, 1999
- ^ "Sassy and Teen Will Be Merged" -- The New York Times, October 30, 1996
- ^ Coupland, Douglas. Souvenir of Canada, Douglas & McIntyre, Vancouver, 2002, p. 14.
- ^ "Hey Baby" CD liner notes
- ^ How Sassy Changed My Life
External links
- The Sassy Era at WWD (subscription required)
- Sissy Magazine at Blairmag: the lost December 1994 issue -- Sassy's Last Issue Ever
- Too Young to Know: The Selling of Sassy
- KICKING SASS -- sassy's dead. R.I.P. Sassy. And it's about damn time.
- Why Jane Pratt's "Jane" never quite lived up to Jane Pratt's "Sassy"
- The New York Review of Magazines: We Still Love Sassy
- Interview with Jane Pratt in The Oberlin Review
- Cute Band Alert: How Sassy magazine created a new sex object.
- Sonic Youth 7" info
- Issue 8 of Dirt, never published (archived site that went offline in 2006; may contain dead links and broken images)
- Wired.com article on Dirt
- Hawaiian youth magazine also entitled Sassy
- Some of the articles Marjorie Ingall wrote for Sassy (as Margie Ingall)
- Recent articles by ex-Sassy writer/editor Marjorie Ingall
- Confessions of a Sassy Girl article by writer Mengly Taing
- NPR's Talk of the Nation on Sassy, April 25, 2007
- February 1990 cover: The Sassiest Girl in America
- Sassy Magazine's Role as a Pioneer of Social Media/
Categories:- Teens' magazines
- Defunct magazines of the United States
- American lifestyle magazines
- Publications established in 1988
- Publications disestablished in 1996
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