LizzieMaine
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Another thing:
If I were born, let's just say 1950 or so, I would surely have been a fan of the "Life Magazine" and it's photo-reportages and the old days of Margaret-Bourke White, Andreas Feininger and so on.
It's just the way of the world is turning, that such magazines were probably outdated by the upcoming of entertainment-electronics around the 70's.
Life was still making money when Time Inc. killed it in 1972, but it had also lost a lot of its prestige by then -- its publisher and editor made public fools of themselves in the Clifford Irving "Howard Hughes Diary" fiasco earlier that year and that may well have been the last straw for Time. But even without that incident, it was far from being the magazine it had been at its peak -- it was giving more and more space to text articles, and it was also being printed on flimsier paper stock that didn't show off what photography it did feature to the best advantage. These were problems which also plagued the magazine in its revival run in the 80s and 90s.
Look had gone under a year or so before life, but unlike Life it had been bleeding money for years. It didn't have the big corporate parent that Life did, so it couldn't sustain losses for very long. The sad thing is that for a period in the early forties at least , Look was, from my point of view, the more interesting magazine -- while its photography wasn't the equal of Life's, its articles and its editorial point of view were much more provocative and willing to rock boats that needed rocking.