New York Post

Time, Meredith in ‘bookazine’ legal brawl

- By KEITH J. KELLY kkelly@nypost.com

PRINT magazines may be a struggling business, but a recent cease-and-desist aimed at Time magazine suggests the business of churning out highpriced special issues, known as “bookazines,” is still hot.

Meredith sold Time magazine to Salesforce founder Marc Benioff and wife Lynne in September 2018 and for the past 2½ years, the nation’s biggest publisher has continued to produce high-priced newsstand special issues — cranking out dozens of titles a year under the Time brand.

In an effort to get better terms for its bookazines, Time now has a contract to transfer that part of its business to Bauer Media

Group, which is trying to get more aggressive in the special-issues category.

That’s where Meredith, which pocketed $190 million when it sold Time to the Benioffs, comes in.

Sources tell Media Ink that Meredith lawyers recently fired off a “cease and desist” letter to Time magazine editor-in-chief Edward Felsenthal, claiming that pulling the highly profitable specials business from Meredith is a violation of the contract.

It’s demanding Time put the brakes on any deal to publish these issues via a competitor.

“We are perplexed by Meredith’s letter,” Time said in a statement. “We provided them the opportunit­y to continue to be our partner on bookazines, but ultimately decided that the best business decision was to partner with Bauer going forward. We understand that they would be disappoint­ed that this did not work out as they had hoped.”

Bookazines are a cross between books and magazines, with few if any ads but a cover price that is close to a paperback book, usually above $10 a copy. They are usually focused on narrow topics, like a celebrity death, and are booming in an otherwise struggling industry.

“It’s the biggest cornerston­e of the magazine industry today,” said Professor Samir Husni, director of the Magazine Innovation Center at the School of Journalism at the University of Mississipp­i.

Last year, Meredith produced 330 bookazine issues that sold 18 million copies at retail and grossed more than $235 million. Now even Meredith’s newest magazine, The Royals, a quarterly being launched out of its People brand, will carry many of the earmarks of a bookazine, including few ads in a 100-page debut edition that hits March 5. Cover price: $12.99.

Meredith claims to have 42 percent of the premium-magazine publishing market and controls 1.3 million pockets at retail. Close to 10 percent of those titles revolve around the Time magazine brand, sources estimate. Bauer declined to comment. In 2020 Meredith produced bookazines for Time on history, politics, science and pop culture. One of its top sellers was a bookazine on the pop band BTS. It also produced a top-selling title about D-Day on the 75th anniversar­y of the epic World War II battle.

Science-oriented titles were also big sellers.

“If you go to any newsstand, they are crowding out regularfre­quency magazines,” said Husni. “It’s now three-to-one bookazines to regular-frequency magazines.

“Hearst is beefing up their bookazine business, as well,” said Husni.

The company last year produced 80 bookazines and more are in store for 2021, including the revival of its shuttered Quick & Simple magazine.

On March 1, the company also plans to introduce Delish, a print bookazine based on its food Web site, to appear four times a year.

Bauer — which sold its celebrity magazines like Ok!, In Touch and Life & Style to American Media (now A360 Media) — is still in the game with Woman’s World and First for Women, and it’s been stepping up its custom-publishing operation. Last year, it produced more than 60 bookazines, primarily in the healthand-diet realm. Bauer was hoping to step up markedly this year with the addition of the Time titles. While there were 60 new magazines launching with a regular frequency, there were more than 700 new bookazines, with most appearing only once. A big advantage is the titles are often evergreen so don’t have to come off the newsstand as stale every week or even every month. Some stay on as long as three months. “A lot if it is archival material that magazines already have in-house,” noted Larry Hackett, a former People editor-in-chief who most recently consulted for 10Ten Media, which specialize­s in bookazines. “The only cost you have is printing and delivering. You can sell very few copies and break even — and after that, it’s pure gravy.”

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