Bust (magazine)

Bust (magazine)

"BUST" is an United States-based feminist magazine that addresses a variety of young women's interests, including celebrity interviews, music, fashion, art, crafting, sex and news.

BUST's official Web site [http://bust.com "bust.com"] features the Boobtique, an online shop, as well as the magazine's blog, forum and links to other interesting and BUST-y sites.

The bi-monthly women's lifestyle magazine was founded by Debbie Stoller, Laurie Henzel and Marcelle Karp in 1993.

Content

BUST has had a variety of cover girls and guys, including recent covers Amy Sedaris, Flight of the Conchords, Elijah Wood and Eve.

Sections:
*Broadcast - Pop culture personalities and events relevant to women
*Real Life - DIY tips (some subjects: cooking, crafts, cars and careers)
*Looks - Health, beauty and style coverage, including new designers, trends and products
*Sex Files - Sex toys, sex-enhancing products, porn guides

Columns:
*Pop Tart - Wendy McClure
*Museum of Femoribilia - Lynn Peril
*News From a Broad - Laura Krafft
*Eat Me - Chef Rossi
*Mother Superior - Ayun Halliday
*Around the World in 80 Girls
*X Games (crossword) - Deb Amlen

Events

BUST Magazine's largest event is its Holiday Craftacular, an annual craft fair in New York City. The first Craftacular, described as the "craft fair with rock 'n roll flair," was held in December 2005. [http://nyc.flavorpill.net/mailer/issue288/index.html Issue 288] "flavorpill" Dec 13-19, 2005]

BUST threw its first Spring Fling Craftacular in 2008.

In addition to DIY vendors for shopping, BUST's Craftaculars of the past have also featured dancing, photo booths, open bars and craft stations. [http://www.bust.com/index.php?itemid=327&catid=4#c Spring Fling Craftacular Preview] "BUST blog" April 21, 2008]

History

Debbie Stoller, Laurie Henzel and Marcelle Karp founded BUST after meeting at Viacom company Nickelodeon in 1993 "Mediaweek" July 24, 2001] . The trio wanted to create a new, positive, outspoken women's magazine for their generation and started the then zine photocopying and stapling issues themselves after work."Mediaweek" July 24, 2001]

Editor-in-Chief Debbie Stoller named the magazine BUST, because it was "aggressive and sexy and funny." While BUST had the connotation of "breaking through and busting stereotypes," she also like that "it was a title that could belong to a men's porn magazine.""Mediaweek" July 24, 2001] The tagline is "For Women With Something To Get Off Their Chests.""Mediaweek" July 24, 2001]

As the company grew, BUST went national and its circulation grew, and in 2000 the founders sold the company to Razorfish Studios."Mediaweek" July 24, 2001]

Stoller and Henzel bought back the magazine in 2001 and have since transformed BUST into an award-winning glossy magazine with hundreds of thousands of readers around the world.

Publishers

Debbie Stoller, BUST's Co-Publisher and Editor-in-Chief, received her PhD in the psychology of women from Yale University. After working at MTV and Nickelodeon, she began BUST magazine in 1993 with business partner Laurie Henzel. She co-edited "The BUST Guide to the New Girl Order", and in 2003 she penned the "New York Times" bestseller "" and has since released three more books in the "Stitch 'n Bitch" series. Debbie is frequently invited to speak about the burgeoning DIY movement she helped inspire, as well as topics related to women and the media, at universities and bookstores around the country. She has been a featured guest on NPR, The Today Show, The Early Show and many others.

Laurie Henzel, BUST's Co-Publisher and Creative Director, received her BFA from the prestigious Parsons School of Design. Prior to BUST, she did design production work for "Rolling Stone", "Spin" and "Nickelodeon" and launched her own boutique design company, creating album and CD packages for influential indie bands and major music labels.

References

External links

* [http://www.bust.com "BUST"] official site
* [http://www.myspace.com/bust_magazine "BUST" MySpace]
* [http://www.knithappens.com/ "Stitch 'n Bitch"] Debbie Stoller's promotional site
* [http://www.poundy.com/?page_id=2/ Pound] Wendy McClure's site
* [http://www.pinkthink.com/ Pink Think] Lynn Peril's site
* [http://www.rossirant.com/index.htm/ Rossi Rant] Chef Rossi's site
* [http://www.ayunhalliday.com/ Dare To Be Heinie] Ayun Halliday's site


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно сделать НИР?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Bust — may refer to: * Bust (sculpture), a sculpture depicting a person s head and shoulders * Bust (magazine), a feminist pop culture magazine * An alternative term for an arrest. * An alternative term for human breasts. * A song by Outkast from… …   Wikipedia

  • bust — I. n 1. an arrest, especially for possession of illicit drugs. An item of hippy jargon which originated in the early 1960s and which by the late 1980s had become a common enough colloquialism to be used in the written and broadcast media. In… …   Contemporary slang

  • Nefertiti Bust — Bust of Nefertiti The iconic bust of Nefertiti is part of the Egyptian Museum of Berlin collection, currently on display in the Neues Museum. Material limestone and stucco[1] …   Wikipedia

  • Red Herring (magazine) — Red Herring is a weekly magazine focused on the business of funding, building, and taking new technologies to market. It also sponsors a number of conferences designed to bring venture capitalists, entrepreneurs, and technologists together. It is …   Wikipedia

  • Daniel W. Voorhees (bust) — Daniel W. Voorhees Artist James P. Voorhees Year c1905 1909 (c1905 1909) Type Plaster bust Dimensions …   Wikipedia

  • Colonel Richard Owen (bust) — Colonel Richard Owen Artist Belle Kinney Scholz Year 1913 Type Bronze on limestone base Dimensions 180 cm × 100 cm (70 in × 40 in) Location Indiana Statehouse, Indianapolis, IN …   Wikipedia

  • Mark Eden bust developer — For the British actor, see Mark Eden. The Mark Eden bust developer was widely advertised in women s magazines of the 1960s and 1970s. The Mark Eden bust developer was a device and regimen sold by the Mark Eden company of San Francisco, California …   Wikipedia

  • Mad (magazine) — Mad Editor Harvey Kurtzman (1952–1956); Al Feldstein (1956–1984); John Ficarra (1984– ) and Nick Meglin (1984–2004) Categories Satirical magazine Frequency …   Wikipedia

  • Mega (magazine) — Mega Cover of issue 2, November 1992 Editor Neil West Andy Dyer Gerry Doak Lee Brown Categories Video game magazines Frequency Monthly …   Wikipedia

  • Tribune (magazine) — Infobox Newspaper name = Tribune type = Weekly Magazine format = foundation = 1937 price = owners = political = Democratic socialist headquarters = Arkwright Road, London editor = Chris McLaughlin circulation = website =… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”