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The Australian Women's Weekly, sometimes known simply as The Weekly, is an Australian monthly women's magazine published by Are Media in Sydney and founded in 1933. [2] [3] For many years it was the number one magazine in Australia before being outsold by the Australian edition of Better Homes and Gardens in 2014. [4]
The segment was so popular he expanded it and the following year launched Josh Earl vs. the Australian Women's Weekly Children's Birthday Cake Book, [17] a show that continued through to 2015. [18] In 2016 all 107 cakes were baked and sold for a Canberra charity to raise money to support women with post-and ante-natal depression.
The Australian Women's Weekly was started in 1933 by Frank Packer and Ted Theodore with George Warnecke as the first editor. The newspaper's features were designed to be topical, Australian and to appeal to all Australian women. Warnecke hoped The Weekly would be a sign that Australia finally was coming out of the Depression. [3]
In June 2006, the magazine was ranked 3rd in Australia in circulation, with an audited circulation of 433,176; it ranked ahead of Reader's Digest. [3] The magazine's readership in 2004 was in excess of 2 million [ 4 ] and had increased to 2.364 million in 2005/6; [ 5 ] that is the magazine is read by more than 10% of Australia's population.
Dorothy Drain (16 August 1909 – 31 May 1996) was an Australian journalist, columnist, war correspondent, editor and poet. She worked as a journalist with The Australian Women's Weekly for 38 years, with the final five years being as its editor. [1] [2] She was "one of Australia's best-known journalists". [2]
The Australian Women's Weekly Fashion: The First 50 Years. Canberra: National Library of Australia. Thomas, Deborah (March 2014). "Fifty Years of Fashion : The Australian Women's Weekly". The National Library of Australia Magazine. 6 (1): 2– 5. Archived from the original on 26 May 2015
Keys joins fellow Americans Coco Gauff (No. 3), Jessica Pegula (No. 6) and Emma Navarro, who slipped one place to No. 9, in the women's top 10. Australian Open champion Madison Keys back into ...
Susan Elizabeth Duncan (1951 – 30 November 2024) was an Australian author, journalist and editor of The Australian Women's Weekly and New Idea. [1] Life and career