Honey (magazine) explained

Previous Editor:Jean McKinley
Glenda Bailey
Staff Writer:Eve Pollard, Catherine Bennett
Category:Teen and young women's magazine
Frequency:Monthly
Publisher:Fleetway/IPC
Total Circulation:250,000
Founder:Audrey Slaughter
Country:United Kingdom
Based:London
Language:English

Honey was a monthly magazine for young women in the United Kingdom[1] which Fleetway Publications launched in April 1960.[2] Audrey Slaughter (later wife of Charles Wintour and stepmother of Anna Wintour) founded it, with Jean McKinley as editor. Honey is regarded as having established the teen magazine sector in the UK. At its height, Honey sold about 250,000 copies a month.

Staff on Honey included Eve Pollard and Catherine Bennett.[3]

Publication history

A cover tagline, introduced in October 1960, read "For the teens and twenties"; by 1962 this had become "Young, gay and get-ahead."

In 1964, Honey absorbed its fellow magazine Woman & Beauty.

Sales slid in the 1980s; in 1986, IPC Media (which had been formed by the merger of several companies, including Fleetway), installed editor Glenda Bailey to give it a new direction. Internal dissension and a continued lack of sales, however, forced IPC in September 1986 to merge Honey with another teen magazine, 19. (19 lasted until 2004.)[4]

Notes and References

  1. Janice Winship. 'A Girl Needs to Get Street-Wise': Magazines for the 1980s. Feminist Review. Winter 1985. 21. 25–46. 10.2307/1394838 . 1394838.
  2. Book: Ann Gough-Yates. Understanding Women's Magazines: Publishing, Markets and Readership. 2003. Routledge. London and New York. 82. 22 September 2015.
  3. Web site: Tony Quinn. Women's monthly magazines at. Magforum. 22 July 2011.
  4. http://www.magforum.com/glossies/19.htm "Women's monthly magazines: 19 to Cosmopolitan,"