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Jet magazine final print serial#
(See our criteria for listing serial archives.) This page has no affiliation with the serial or its publisher. This page is maintained for The Online Books Page. Just last summer, Jet announced it was undergoing a redesign of its print edition, presumably in an attempt to revitalize flagging appeal. This is a record of a major serial archive. The Jet website has the current content of the online publication.1951-2008: Google Books has most of the print run of this magazine.( More details) The magazine ended its print run in 2014, but continues online. No issue or contribution copyright renewals were found for this serial. (There is a Wikipedia article about this serial.) Publication History Kimberly Foster is the founder and editor of For Harriet.Jet is a magazine for young adult African Americans founded by the Johnson Publishing Company, publishers of Ebony. New York magazine moved from a weekly to a biweekly print edition last month. If you’re looking to cop a piece of black history for your archives, keep an eye out for the final print issue of JET Magazine, which hit newsstands today, Monday June 9th. Last month, Ladies’ Home Journal announced it would be moving to a quarterly newsstand-only print schedule and otherwise would be digital. Jet magazine, the digest-size publication that has been a staple among African-American readers for 63 years, will release its final. The historically revered Jet Magazine (pictured) that has been a staple in the Black community since its inception nearly 63 years ago released its final print. In moving to digital, Jet joins a number of magazines that have recently reduced or eliminated their print publications after sharp drops in print advertising revenue. The cover of the final issue of Jet magazine, due out Monday. We are not saying goodbye to Jet, we are embracing the future as my father did in 1951.” There is more news and far less time to read it,’ “ Ms. “Almost 63 years ago, my father, John Johnson, named the publication Jet because, as he said in the first issue, ‘In the world today, everything is moving faster. Linda Johnson Rice, chairwoman of Johnson Publishing, which also owns the cosmetics line Fashion Fair, positioned the move as a way to bring Jet into the modern age. Now there will only be an annual “best of Jet” print issue. Last year, to cut costs, Jet reduced the weekly publication schedule of the digest-size magazine to every three weeks.


Its owner, Johnson Publishing Company, will move Jet to a largely digital format starting in June, delivered through its website and a paid subscription app.

The New York Times - Jet, the pioneering African-American weekly magazine that rose to prominence covering the civil rights movement, is expected to announce Wednesday morning that it will no longer publish a regular print edition, the latest in a growing list of periodicals avoiding print in favor of digital publications.
