Waterloo Region Record

Rolling Stone magazine up for sale

Founder Jann Wenner will “explore strategic options” for future growth

- Mike Snider

Rolling Stone co-founder, editor and publisher Jann Wenner is looking to sell the iconic music magazine, which is celebratin­g its 50th anniversar­y this year.

Wenner Media, which also owns video game news site Glixel, has initiated a process “to explore strategic options” as a way to “best position the brand for future growth,” the privately-held company said in a statement Monday.

Wenner and son Gus, president and chief operating officer of Wenner Media, said the company had hired bankers to explore a sale in an interview with The New York Times, which first reported the developmen­t.

Jann Wenner, 71, told the Times he hoped to sell the magazine to a buyer who has “lots of money” and understand­s Rolling Stone’s mission. “I think it’s time for young people to run it,” he said.

He founded the magazine, characteri­zed by the Times as “the countercul­ture bible for baby boomers,” in San Francisco in 1967 with music journalist Ralph Gleason.

The magazine became the home of writers such as Hunter S. Thompson, who provided gonzo journalism pieces including “Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas,” and Tom Wolfe, whose early Rolling Stone stories on NASA’s space program evolved into “The Right Stuff ”. During more than 10 years at Rolling Stone, photograph­er Annie Leibovitz shot 140plus covers including one of John Lennon and Yoko Ono just hours before he was shot Dec. 8, 1980.

Wenner has pared down Wenner Media’s holdings recently. In April, the publisher sold Men’s Journal to American Media, owner of the National Enquirer and OK! weeklies, just a month after also selling Us Weekly to American Media.

In September 2016, Wenner Media sold 49 per cent of Rolling Stone to social music company BandLab Technologi­es of Singapore as part of its strategy to expand the brand’s digital business.

Industry shifts have hurt Rolling Stone, just as it has other magazines with print advertisin­g declines and circulatio­n struggles. Still, Rolling Stone’s paid circulatio­n has remained at about 1.5 million since 2014, according to Alliance for Audited Media.

But the magazine took an additional hit to its reputation when it retracted a 2014 story about a purported gang rape on the campus of the University of Virginia. A jury awarded the college’s administra­tor $3 million last year in a defamation suit.

Rolling Stone reaches more than 60 million each month across its print and digital platforms and has increased its digital traffic nearly 50 per cent over the last three years, the company says. “We have made great strides transformi­ng Rolling Stone into a multiplatf­orm company, and we are thrilled to find the right home to build on our strong foundation and grow the business exponentia­lly,” Gus Wenner said in a statement.

Both Jann and Gus Wenner say they plan to stay at Rolling Stone, but a potential new owner could have some say in that.

“I love my job, I enjoy it, I’ve enjoyed it for a long time,” said Jann Wenner, 71. However, seeking a new owner, he said, was “just the smart thing to do.”

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 ?? JESSE DITTMAR, NYT ?? From left, Jann Wenner, founder of Rolling Stone magazine, and his youngest son, Gus Wenner, at the magazine’s New York headquarte­rs.
JESSE DITTMAR, NYT From left, Jann Wenner, founder of Rolling Stone magazine, and his youngest son, Gus Wenner, at the magazine’s New York headquarte­rs.

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