List of magazines in the Netherlands explained
The Dutch Association of Publishers categorizes the magazines in the Netherlands into four classes: (1) general-interest magazines, (2) opinion magazines, (3) TV and radio guides, and (4) professional and scientific magazines.[1] The listing here is topical, without making a value judgment if, for example, a music magazine is professional or not.
Car and motorcycle
- Auto Review
- Autovisie
- Autoweek (since 1958)
- Carros
- Formule1.nl
- De Kampeerauto
- Mercedes magazine
- Moto 73
- Motor
- Porsche Scene Live
- Promotor
- Top Gear (Dutch version)
- Truckstar
Career
Children and young adults
- Betsalel (1928-1935), defunct Dutch Jewish youth magazine
- Donald Duck (since 1952)
- Eppo (1975–1999; since 2009)
- Mad (1965–1995; 2011–2012)
- Tina (since 1967)
Families
Film
- De Filmkrant (since 1981)
- Skoop (1963–1993)
- Skrien (1968–2009; 2010–2011)
Food
Inflight
Literature
Men
Music
- Akkoord Magazine (since 1993)
- Heaven Magazine
- Hitkrant (since 1977)
- Luister (since 1952)
- Mens en Melodie (1946–2012)
- Oor (since 1971)
News and opinion
Quackery and New Age
- A. Vogel's Gezondheidsnieuws (1963–2004)[2]
- Bres (1965–2006)
- Leef met Elixer (Leef 1979–1983, Elixer 1980–1983,[3] combined 1983-1984)[4]
- Onkruid (since 1978)
Science and technology
Sports
- 1900, bimonthly (since 2012)
- Ajax Magazine (1986–2007; continued online as Ajax iMagazine since 2011)
- Ajax-nieuws (1917–1987)
- ELF Voetbal (since 1982), soccer monthly
- Voetbal International (since 1965), soccer weekly
- Voetbal Magazine (since 1986), soccer monthly
- De Waterkampioen (since 1927), sailing and other surface water sports
Women
- Avenue (1965–1995; 2001)
- Beatrijs (1939–1967), a Catholic woman's weekly
- Beau Monde, Dutch glamour magazine
- Cosmopolitan, Dutch version of an American magazine
- Elle, Dutch version of a French magazine
- Esta (2004–2013)
- Grazia, Dutch version of an Italian magazine
- Jan
- Knipmode (Madeleine since ?, Knip since 1969, Knipmode since 199?)[5]
- Libelle (since 1934)
- Margriet (since 1938)
- Moeder (1934–1974), Catholic women's magazine
- Opzij (since 1972)
- Privé
- Viva (since 1972)
- Vriendin (since 1997)
- Vrouw
Public broadcaster magazines
- Televizier (since 1967)
- VPRO Gids (since 1974)
- VARA Gids (since 1928)
- TROSKompas (1964-2014)
- miKRO Gids (since 1988)
- Veronica Magazine (since 1974)
- NCRV Gids (since 19??)
- VPRO Achterwerk (1976-2016)
- TV Magazine (1988-2008)
- AVROBode (197?-2014)
- MijnKRO (since 2015)
- MijnNCRV (since 2015)
- EO Visie (since 1976)
See also
External links
Notes and References
- Web site: Jacco Hakfoort. Jürgen Weigand. Magazine Publishing - A Quiet Life? The Dutch Market for Consumer Magazines. https://web.archive.org/web/20141102005927/http://www.centraalplanbureau.nl/sites/default/files/publicaties/download/magazine-publishing-quiet-life-dutch-market-consumer-magazines.pdf. live. 2 November 2014. Centraal Plan Bureau. 1 November 2014.
- Web site: A. Vogel's Gezondheidsnieuws. kb.nl. 7 April 2015.
- Web site: Elixer. kb.nl. 7 April 2015.
- Web site: Leef. kb.nl. 7 April 2015.
- Web site: bladen / Zelfgemaakt en toch glamoureus. TROUW. 7 April 2015.