enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Reader service card - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reader_service_card

    Before the World Wide Web was invented, reader service cards relieved consumers (as well as business executives with purchasing authority) of the inconvenience of having to separately contact each advertiser in a particular magazine by mail, fax, telex or telephone to express interest. Instead, they would just mail a reader service card back to ...

  3. Entertainment journalism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entertainment_journalism

    Entertainment journalism is any form of journalism that focuses on popular culture and the entertainment business and its products. Like fashion journalism, entertainment journalism covers industry-specific news while targeting general audiences beyond those working in the industry itself.

  4. Wikipedia : WikiProject Magazines/Writing guide

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:WikiProject...

    Magazines often like to list well-known or prestigious authors, or to include them on their editorial board to add to their reputation. While magazines are free to do whatever they want on their websites, authors have little impact on the daily operations of the magazine, just like most of the editorial board.

  5. Disclaimer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disclaimer

    In patent law, a disclaimer identifies, in a claim, subject-matter that is not claimed. [2] By extension, a disclaimer may also mean the action of introducing a negative limitation in a claim, i.e. "an amendment to a claim resulting in the incorporation therein of a "negative" technical feature, typically excluding from a general feature specific embodiments or areas". [3]

  6. Magazine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magazine

    A magazine is a periodical publication, print or digital, generally produced on a regular schedule, that contains any of a variety of subject-oriented textual and visual content forms. Magazines are generally financed by advertising, purchase price, prepaid subscriptions, or by a combination of the three. They are categorised by their frequency ...

  7. Tabloid journalism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tabloid_journalism

    Display rack of British newspapers during the midst of the News International phone hacking scandal (5 July 2011). Many of the newspapers in the rack are tabloids. Tabloid journalism is a popular style of largely sensationalist journalism, which takes its name from the tabloid newspaper format: a small-sized newspaper also known as a half broadsheet. [1]

  8. Fan magazine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fan_magazine

    A fan magazine is a commercially written and published magazine intended for the amusement of fans of the popular culture subject matter that it covers. It is distinguished from a scholarly, literary or trade magazine on the one hand, by the target audience of its contents, and from a fanzine on the other, by the commercial and for-profit nature of its production and distribution.

  9. Hemmets Journal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hemmets_Journal

    The first issue of Hemmets Journal was published in 1921. [3] It was a Swedish version of the popular Danish magazine Hjemmet that was first published in 1904.Hjemmet was printed by the Danish publishing company Gutenberghus (which later became Egmont) and the Swedish version was published by its own subsidiary of Gutenberghus, Hemmets Journals Förlag.