Wednesday, September 30, 2009

BonnePan



Brad, Zen of Neato blogspot, 125mph panhead run at Bonneville. Now I'm all green with envy, like the Hulk, but without the muscles.

Will a Trancontinental boycott work?

We've put up a little poll about the proposed freelancers' boycott of Transcontinental Media; you can give your opinion of it in the right sidebar or go to this link.

Quote, unquote: The wages of survival in the NY newspaper business

"If you survived this downturn, why would you sell a newspaper now? These are very resilient newspapers. If you've survived this economy, you can survive anything. And there's a lot to be said for New York as a place to own a newspaper."-- Mitchell Moss, NYU professor, quoted in a long Village Voice feature on the New York newspaper situation entitled How New York's seven newspapers are (nearly)

Business cards pt:1





Nikki



A weekend riding






I'm so happy.
Pics by Troy.

Freelancers urged to boycott Transcon mags over refusal to budge on master contract

[This post has been updated] Transcontinental Media has apparently dug its heels in over its proposed master contract, refusing to negotiate with representatives of the freelance community, who as a result are now calling for an "unprecedented" boycott of the company.A press release has been issued that gives detailed background on the dispute and details the organizations that are supporting the

Bloomberg LP front runner in purchase of BusinessWeek

It looks as though BusinessWeek magazine willsoon be sold by parent McGraw-Hill Cos. Inc. to Bloomberg LP. At least that's what its own senior management is hoping, according to a report from Reuters. A deal still could take weeks, or could fall apart because of depressed magazine advertising and uncertainty in the financing market; but BusinessWeek executives think that Bloomberg would be the

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Ciao, Moto Guzzi Mannie pt:1

When I was in Italy my Italian fratello Davide took me over to Mannies place in Mandello del Lario on lake Como, just up the road from the Moto Guzzi factory and museum. Mannie is the best Guzzi restorer there is, he restores loads of bikes for the museum as well as private clients. What a legend, his place is a complete brilliant mess, how he does it I really don't know but he does. The bikes that roll out of there are perfect, there is Guzzi stuff everywhere, inside and outside the building. He spends all day chain smoking and working on bikes, stopping only briefly to look at Italian porn on his ancient computer. If you ever get the chance try and get over to his house, he is a very friendly amazing man. And of course lake Como is one of the most beautiful places on the planet, except for Mannies back yard that is.




Davide standing and Mannie on the computer


Ciao, Moto Guzzi Mannie pt:2







More pics of Mannies house and workshop, one of the 7 wonders of the world. The Hanging gardens of Babylon have nothing on this place.

New product, helmet light.



For those frustrating evenings when your front light just won't work, the new DicE helmet light. Alternative shade designs available. Sunglasses extra.

Concept to finished mag in a day and a half

In a day and a half, Derek Powazek created a one-off magazine called Strange Light about the red duststorm that swept eastern Australia. He blogs about how he created the finished product, complete with 54 gorgeous photos (cleared with the photographers) in less than two days. We read about it in Nieman Journalism Labs. Quick turnarounds are not exactly new, with insta-books and special

AMPA event launches Read Alberta Magazines month

Read Alberta Magazines Month is being launched on Thursday, October 1 from 5 to 9 p.m at Art Central, 100 - 7th Ave. SW in Calgary. The event is free and open to the public, with appropriate refreshments.There are events planned throughout the month of October and readers are invited to enter to win a Bellstar getaway to Canmore.

Federal minister Moore acknowledges "devastating" nature of BC arts cuts

Federal heritage minister James Moore feels your pain, BC arts organizations, he really does. During the latest in a series of funding announcements, Moore said that the arts funding cuts by the BC (Liberal) government are potentially "devastating", he said according to a report in The Tyee.But after the press conference, the MP for Port Moody-Westwood-Port Coquitlam stopped short of directly

Major shakeup at la revue Commerce

There are major changes underway at the venerable business title la revue Commerce as the editor of 7 years, Diane Bérard, is leaving her job at the end of the year and becoming a columnist for Commerce and lesaffairs.com. There is consideration of changing the name and perhaps publishing the magazine online only.According to a story in La Presse, the issue that will appear in December will be

Magazine world view

Ebony seeks buyer or partner (Newsweek)Dwell offers business help to other indie titles (Mediaweek)Morris Publishing eyes debt restructuring (Audience Development)Marketing magazine commits to reducing its carbon footprint (Brand Republic)BBC Magazines in bookazines (Brand Republic)Keeping Southern Living magazine southern (Mr. Magazine) Forget the big surveys and concentrate on smaller reader

Quote, unquote: on publishing's broken value exchange

The truth is that there have always been awkward "church and state" encroachments for journalists, even under the classic advertising model. In the extreme, publishers would demand favorable coverage for important advertisers, but on the fringes, there have been long-standing practices of publishing "special editions," advertorials, and other custom content that effectively touted the products

Goats Across Canada magazine folds

NOTE THAT editor Kevin Vander Linden has informed us that he continues to publish as before. We regret the error. Word is that Goats Across Canada magazine has been discontinued. The magazine was published out of McBride, B.C., by Summer Waters Farms Ltd. and its owner, publisher and editor Kevin Vander Linden.The monthly had a circulation of 1,700 and was dedicated to promoting the goat

Monday, September 28, 2009

Tell the Ryerson Review of Journalism what you think of it

The Ryerson Review of Journalism is a truly precious resource; if it didn't exist, the industry would have to invent it.Right now, the Review is wrapping up an online survey of its readers, and is conducting a wider, companion survey of people (mostly in related fields) who aren't necessarily RRJ readers but are interested in the topics the RRJ covers. They've asked us to make people aware of

ACE

Demolition Derby




Yes mate! The Kennedy Bros Y'all.

Underline Studios wins Ontario art gallery award for design of Prefix Photo

Underline Studios has won a 2009 Ontario Associaton of Art Galleries award for its design of Prefix Photo 17: The Last Photograph. The publishers, Prefix Institute of Contemporary Art, also won for art book of the year for Milk and Melancholy, written by Kenneth Hayes and edited by Scott McLeod.Underline also designs U of T magazine, Rotman magazine and Precedent.

Magazine world view

William Safire, political columnist and oracle of language, dies at 79 (New York Times)Time Warner will reportedly sell magazine unit (Reuters)Ebony up for sale? (Newsweek)Red ink catches up with Condé (Crain's New York Business)New York Fashion Week a traffic boon for fashion magazine sites (New York magazine)I will only consider Playboy when I am 40: Nelly Furtado

Robertson settlements hinge on having copies of original assignments

CORRECTION: Apparently the term "assignment" in the notice of settlement in the Robertson case refers to 3rd parties to whom rights may have been "assigned", not the assignment by the editor of the story, photo or illustration work. Claimants under the class action need only fill out the claims form and specify the work that they were responsible for. We regret the error and any confusion it may

Digital newsstand allows readers to buy Canadian subs and single copies online

Magazines Canada is today launching the Magazines Canada Digital Newsstand, powered by Zinio. It is a bilingual site where people can subscribe to digital editions of a whole range of Canadian titles.So, for instance, a 56-issue subscription can be purchased to Maclean's magazine for $56.67 or single issues can be purchased for $5.49 each. Or 6 issues of Cottage Life for $29.95 or single issues

Sunday, September 27, 2009

Fast Company founder to give MASS talk

Alan Webber of Fast Company magazine will be speaking Tuesday, October 13, 2009 from 5:30 PM - 8:00 PM (ET) at the Centre for Social Innovation, 215 Spadina Avenue, which is co-hosting the event with MASS LBP. The event is free, but these talks are often packed, so it's best to RSVP to http://alanwebber.eventbrite.com.The editor, columnist and author co-launched Fast Company, the fastest growing,

Friday, September 25, 2009

NEW DicE skate deck



Now these are super radical dude. Great artwork by Jason Cruz and once again US made down at Watson in San Diego. Late 70's shape as before, 30" long x 10' wide, flat, single kicktail and they shred. Available in the next few days from our website, we only made 100 so don't dilly dally.

Cheese or font

Friday fun. [Thanks to SPD for letting us know about this] A site where you can test your knowledge of fonts...and cheese...and the differences between them. You can do a scored test or a random, unscored quiz that is work-avoidance of a high order. See if you know your Gouda from your Goudy.

New editor appointed for Mastheadonline

Valerie Maloney is the new editor of Masthead, the online site about the Canadian magazine industry. She succeeds Marco Ursi, who recently left to return to school to become a teacher. Masthead says that Maloney was an associate editor at CLB Media, working on five b2b titles and various websites and is a graduate of Humber College's posts-grad journalism program. She also holds a psychology

Farmer and former Harrowsmith editor to speak at enviro journalists' pub night

The Society of Environmental Journalists is hosting one of its periodic pub nights to hear from Thomas Pawlick, author of The War in the Country: How the Fight to Save Rural Life Will Shape Our Future. Pawlick is a former editor of Harrowsmith magazine and a small-scale farmer in Eastern Ontario.The SEJ is the only North-American membership association of professional journalists

Canadian Literature celebrates 50 years

Canadian Literature, a journal published out of the University of British Columbia, is celebrating 50 years with a gala celebration, a two-day conference, public lectures and an appeal to create a tuition fund for interns at the magazine.The journal's first issue was published in1959 (its founding editor was George Woodcock), and in the 200 issues since it has published many of the best-known

The Informant! Q&A

Senior Editor Jeff Goldsmith interviews screenwriter Scott Z. Burns about The Informant!

Copyright Unlikely Films, Inc. 2009. All Rights Reserved.

Not Currently Available

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Magazine world view

New issues of WSJ magazine to be online only (WWD)CQ-Roll Call group reorganizes, 44 editorial positions eliminated (Folio:)Martha Stewart says business realities have softened her stance about ad:edit divide (MediaPost)

Magawards poster gets 2nd use as book cover

The image on the 30th anniversary poster for the National Magazine Awards has found new life as the cover of the about-to-be-released collection by Stuart "Vinyl Cafe" Mclean, Extreme Vinyl Cafe. Who was the illustrator?

Canadian Business Press discontinues MagsU, becomes a partner in MagNet

[This post has been update]Magazines University -- or Mags U as it has come to be called -- is being discontinued by its current owners, the Canadian Business Press (CBP) and CBP is becoming a full partner in MagNet, the annual conference led by Magazines Canada from 2010 and beyond.The change has come about after long discussion between the board of CBP and the MagNet managment team.[Update: For

Letter



How good is this eh?! Sent in the mail, thats right, not by email, no computers involved. Except I suppose at the post office where they use computers to sort the mail and stuff, but I digress, our bruv Ed Ryan drew this. Then sent it with a letter inside, which was hand written, no computers involved there either. Except maybe at the factory where they make the pens and the paper and all that. I will shutup now.

Coco Before Chanel Q&A

Adam Stovall interviews co-writer/director Anne Fontaine about Coco Before Chanel

Copyright Unlikely Films, Inc. 2009. All Rights Reserved.

Not Currently Available

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

The new Issue 28 is a dandy.



Preview and y'know, buy it here, www.dicemagazine.com

Almost...



...there.

Ray Abeyta, Brooklyn NY

So the Dice party in Brooklyn was brilliant! in fact the whole weekend was. Our good friend Ray looked after us real proper like, even giving up his apartment for me and the missus


Himself


Rays studio and some of his paintings.



His basement apartment


Justina really hungover after a night doing Jager and red bull bombs, ha.

ASME best cover finalists named by Amazon visitors

Vanity Fair, Sports Illustrated and Harper’s Bazaar were among the ten magazine covers chosen by Amazon.com customers as “Best Magazine Cover of the Year” in their respective categories, the American Society of Magazine Editors have announced.According to a story in Audience Development, this is the first time ASME has had consumers, rather than ASME members, choose the winners and it was done

Marc Blondeau leaves Rogers

Perhaps the commuting finally got to him. Marc Blondeau, the senior vice-president, consumer publishing and président, Les Éditons Rogers – Québec, will be leaving the company on October 16th, according to a story from Mastheadonline. He has been with the company for nine years and for most of that time has been splitting his time between the Toronto campus and the Montreal offices.The story said

Selling a name change: Coastlands

The first issue of the newly rebranded Coastlands: The Maritimes Policy Review (formerly Nova Scotia Policy Review) is now out and in it the magazine found a clever, cheeky way to deal with any (unlikely) reader dissatisfaction with the new name. [orwell answers] A name to remember George Orwell has been graciously answering questions about political culture and local media since this

New logo for former Quebcor World magazine printer

Well, it beats the heck out of "Novink", which was a contender for the renaming of the former Quebecor World magazine printer. World Colour Press of Montreal has introduced its new name and logo, effective immediately. It will be all over the company's website worldcolor.com (note the American spelling).What good is a new logo without a complicated rationale for it? Here is Worldcolor's cour:“

Boba Fett



So this is what happened to him, hiding out busking in NY, and wearing a suit.

legend




Grant took the pics yonks ago

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Magazine world view

Neilsen: 'No plans' to shut down print edition of The Hollywood Reporter (Folio:)Reader’s Digest Association Reorganizes Interactive (Folio:)BBC charts new relationship with commercial media(Brand Republic) Readers prefer subscriptions to micropayments according to paidContent:UK Harris poll (Journalism.co.uk)GMG chief executive to step down from board of Lloyds Banking Group (Guardian)Dow Jones

Quote, unquote: blame the internet

I asked some of my European friends if the internet was killing the newspaper and magazine business there like it was in the States and they looked at me like I was insane. What [Michael] Moore says is correct -- American publishers have been giving readers less content and turning them off, while conveniently blaming the internet for their troubles. -- from a comment on the Hollywood Elsewhere

Will Lonny replace Domino in readers' hearts?

It was surprising last year when Domino magazine was folded just how many people were passionately devoted to it and lamented its passing. Sort of "you don't know what you've lost 'til it's gone".Well, Domino fans can take heart that a former Domino editor is launching an online-only magazine that, while it won't replicate the late title, will carry on its spirit. According to a story in Women's

Senior media executive program launched by Rotman and CJF

The Rotman School of Management at the University of Toronto and the Canadian Journalism Foundation are together launching an executive program for media management. The Media Management Executive Education Program (MMEEP) is believed to be the first such certificate program for journalists in Canada.The three-day residential program will be held from October 23- 25, 2009 at The Bank of

Mapping magazine stores

Here's a good rainy day project. The magCulture blog has published a Google map of the best magazine stores in London.View London magazine stores in a larger mapMaybe a project for the next couple of months would be to do a Canada-wide map of the best magazine stores in each city. You send me the stores and their addresses, I'll compile the map.

Ian Brown named to chair Banff literary journalism program

Ian Brown, a frequent contributor to Canadian magazines and an acclaimed broadcaster and author, has been appointed Rogers Communications Chair for the Banff Centre's literary journalism program. Brown, who is a staff writer for the Globe and Mail in Toronto, is the author of the recently published non-fiction book The Boy in the Moon, about his relationship with his son, who suffers from a rare

Monday, September 21, 2009

Toronto Life Square is no more, as signage removed

Toronto Life has succeeded in its drawn-out struggle to have its brand name removed from the downtown Toronto building that is now being called 10 Dundas East. What had been Toronto Life Square (which was not a square, but a commercial mall) at the northeast corner of Yonge & Dundas, now has bland signage saying 10 Dundas East or nothing at all, according to a story in the Globe and Mail.The

Belts will be tighter this year at Condé Nast

A company-wide cost savings drive at Condé Nast has spared all of its titles for at least a year, according to a story from the New York Post. But it will cramp the style of some of the most prominent editors, who will either forego foreign junkets or stay at less glam hotels.McKinsey & Co. prepared a belt-tightening report for Conde's senior management which nevertheless apparently keeps all

Distinctions between ad and edit are sometimes being lost online

The fuzzy alliances of web publishing and advertising, particularly by established print publishers, is illustrated by the recently announced cooperation between Reader's Digest Canada and Kraft Foods. Not that these companies are exceptional, but a release from Reader's Digest highlights their close connection of the editorial and advertising functions online. If a church and state divide exists

Barely half of U.S. newspaper publishers think charging for content will work

Research for the American Press Institute has found a real gulf between newspaper publishers who think the public will pay for online content and those who aren't so sure. As reported in Allan Mutter's Reflections of a Newsosaur blog, only 51% of publishers think pay walls will fly. The other 49% either fear that pay walls will fail or just aren’t sure.The research was carried out with 118

PMB fall biannual readership results due October 6

The Print Measurement Bureau (PMB) has announced that the results of its first-ever biannual release will be made on October 6. The twice-yearly release (spring & fall) is intended to give subscribers the most up to date and timely readership, product and brand data demographics, lifestyle and psychographic information. "Reactions to the move to biannual release has been very favourable across

Sunday, September 20, 2009

Canadian Poker Player owners to launch web-based poker TV channel

The owners of Canadian Poker Player magazine are about to launch a 24-hour online poker television channel. According to a story in Poker News Daily, HeadsUp Entertainment has announced it intends to launch CanadianPokerPlayer.tv later this fall.The company, which owns the Canadian Poker Tour as well as the magazine, is publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange. president Kelly B. Kellner

Is consistency the hobgoblin of the heritage ministry?*

The minister of Canadian Heritage, and by extension his department, can at least be given points for their consistency. Recently, as a result of a review process, Heritage has decided to terminate a program that supported independent performers and small scale independent music-making in favour of support for enterprises that are considered more commercially marketable.If this sounds familiar, it

Friday, September 18, 2009

Canadian Living offers internships, publication and cash for journalism prize

Canadian Living magazine is launching a competition for Canadian journalism students to earn cash prizes, publication in Canadian Living and on CanadianLiving.com, and to secure a 12-week editorial internship with the magazine in Toronto.The Canadian Living Journalism Prize is open to current, full-time journalism students at a Canadian college or university. Applicants are asked to submit a

Creative industries band together with statement on copyright opposing "fair use"

Some 45 organizations in Canada representing the creative industries have submitted a joint statement to the current federal consultation process on copyright reform, asking the government not to implement the concept of "fair use". The stance, not surprisingly, runs counter to the position taken by many of the advocates of fair use.The signatories include such magazine-related organizations as

Thursday, September 17, 2009

Quarto Communications buys Outdoor Canada and Canadian Home Workshop

[This post has been updated] Quarto Communications, the publishers of Cottage Life and explore magazines, have acquired Canadian Home Workshop and Outdoor Canada magazines from Transcontinental Media.The sale is effective Monday and Quarto has already leased additional office space to accommodate the 13 staff who are moving over with the magazines. (All editorial staff will be in one place,

These guys say our democracy is broken and they know how to fix it

Two of Maclean's magazine's lead columnists -- Andrew Coyne (right) and Paul Wells -- say they know how to fix Canada's "broken democracy". One way is to square off in this week's issue of the magazine. Another is to hold a roundtable discussion with guests former NDP leader Ed Broadbent, former prime minister's chief of staff Eddie Goldenberg and author John Ralston Saul.The roundtable is at the

Fashion magazine gives away everything in its October issue

Fashion magazine is giving away to readers everything featured in their October issue - from clothing to makeup -- between September 21st to October 16th. There’s quite the mass of excellent merch up for grabs; among the mass is a Dsquared dress, Pink Tartan skirt suit, Mackage coat and a buttload of designer makeup and hair care products.The main coverline of the shopping issue (isn't every

Research universities start own wire service to promote discoveries

Concerned that journalistic coverage of science, medical and other discoveries is declining with the unhappy financial fortunes of traditional media, a group of 35 leading U.S. research universities have decided on an end run. According to a story in the Mercury News, they have formed their own nonprofit wire service, Futurity, to provide articles and information to the top news and social media

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Wal-Mart, moving magazines to back of store, also reducing space and titles

Not only is Wal-Mart moving magazines to the back of its stores, its "Project Impact" remodeling program will actually decrease the space devoted to magazines and reduce the number of authorized titles, based on profitability and sales. According to a story in Audience Development, the major magazine retailer is reducing mainline space by 20 feet -- about half of what it was previously -- which

Duncan Hood named editor of MoneySense, managing editor of Canadian Business

[This post has been updated]Duncan Hood, formerly a senior editor at Maclean's, has been named to the double-barrelled job of editor of MoneySense magazine and a* managing editor of Canadian Business. Word came in a message to staff from publisher of all three magazines, Ken Whyte.[*Conan Tobias was the managing editor; now he is a managing editor.]His appointment to both jobs is consistent

My '32 3 Window Now!


Pretty much unchanged...except for truck grill, 5 spokes and teeny headlights.

My '32 3 Window in 1968



The circulation promotion worked almost too well. Too bad about the premiums

For the Conde Nast circulation boffins in Britain, there was good news and bad news. The good news was that their subscription promotion for House and Garden magazine went quite well, exceeding expectation by 50%. The bad news, according to a story in the Press Gazette, was that they ran out of the advertised premiums -- Molton Brown toiletries -- and tried substituting other things (in this

Traffic's up, page views are up, but where's the revenue for newspaper sites?

Figures provided by the Newspaper Association of America indicate that there has been a 75% increase in unique audience U.S. newspapers' online sites. Which, says a story from MediaDailyNews, raises the question about whether or how newspapers could capitalize on this "spectacular growth".The story reports that active reach -- the measure of how many U.S. internet users viewed newspaper web sites

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Is Best Health's U.S. cousin, Best You, toast?

[This post has been updated]Not so long ago, a couple of months in fact, Reader's Digest Association Inc. was trumpeting its new publishing model, its efficiency and publishing savvy in launching Best Health in Canada and then all-but-cloning it for the U.S. market as Best You. RDA's president said the cost was far less than a traditional magazine launch. Since then, RDA (US) has gone into

Lewis Leathers

The best of British bike riding wear and still going strong, nice one.






"Yeah mate, goin' down the 59 club aint I, see if I can do the ton on me Beezer, cor blimey guvnor"........um, and all that sort of stuff.

Twinkies



I reckon Twinkies have way too much bad press. Look at Caleb on the EDR 2 here, he's loving that thing. Think about it. You can keep one strapped to your bike for years and still be able to eat it. They won't give you the shits either, in fact quite the opposite. Although I've thought of something bad, eat too many and that chopper will just have to make way for a new Steet Glide so the new larger you can ride in comfort. Twinkies forever!!

Paid ad traffic management portal launched by BC publisher

[This post has been updated]Media Hill Publications Inc. of Burnaby, B.C. has announced the launch of AdSupplier.com an integrated online ad traffic management application designed to fit the needs of the small to mid-size magazine publisher.Billing itself as an “ad traffic management portal” AdSupplier’s features include: automated insertion order confirmations; email reminders of approaching

Launch party for Vancouver's Sad Mag will be anything but

This Thursday, in Vancouver, there's a launch of a brand new local arts and cultural magazine called Sad Mag, which seems to be a misnomer.In fact, it seems like a joyous celebration of the writers and artists of Vancouver. Here's what could well pass for the magazine's mission statement:We wanted to tell beautiful stories in rich, vibrant language that made Vancouver’s most interesting

Why staffers at Condé Nast have good reason to worry

People are magazines' most important asset and their most expensive element, which is why there has been significant nervousness in the hallways of Condé Nast (Vogue, New Yorker, W, GQ, Self, Glamour, Brides, Gourmet, Wired, Vanity Fair etc. etc.) The company, which publishes among the most prestigious magazines around, last summer brought in the consultants, McKinsey and Company, to nose around

Finalists named in Canadian Online Publishing Awards

The 75 finalists in each of 10 categories in two divisions have been announced in the first annual Canadian Online Publishing Awards, produced by MastheadOnline. Among magazines in the consumer, custom, religious, public association category:Overall best magazine websiteBC Business OnlineCanadian LivingGreen LivingHouseandhome.comThe Hockey NewsThe United Church ObserverTorontolife.comUp Here

Parsing Ontario's legal aid boycott

This Magazine's blog has published a post by Kim Hart Macneill about the Ontario legal aid boycott that told me some things I didn't know, or may have missed elsewhere. One was making the comparison between the 15% fee increase that legal aid had received over the past 22 years and the fact that Crown attorneys have received a 57% wage increase in the past 10 years. Another was the huge number of

Global Brief magazine finds new home, renewed hope

The reports of the death of Global Brief magazine were exaggerated, it seems. The world affairs magazine's very first issue was caught up in a welter of rumour when, right after it published, kabillionaire Jim Balsillie pulled the plug on it.An article in the Globe and Mail suggested that the Canadian International Council, which Balsillie chairs, was startled by the cost of producing the lavish

Those staffers? They'll be gone by Christmas

The brutality of the magazine business these days is evidenced by the way in which BusinessWeek staff found out about massive layoffs -- they read about it in a story in the New York Times, based on an offering memorandum from the magazine's owner McGraw-Hill to potential buyers. According to a post on the Silicon Valley Insider, Stephanie Clifford of the Times got her hands on the memo from

Maclean's AD Dewairy takes over Canadian Business, MoneySense & Profit

The recent consolidation of management and staff dismissals at Rogers Publishing's news and business consumer group proceeds apace, as Christine Dewairy, the art director of Maclean's, takes over responsibility for Canadian Business, MoneySense and Profit magazines. This means the four publications share one publisher and one art director. According to a story in Mastheadonline, Dewairy will do

Tim




On his pan in Santa Monica a couple of years ago.