Elle Girl

Elle Girl was the largest older-teen fashion and beauty magazine brand in the world with twelve editions . Launched in August 2001,[1] it was the younger sister version of Elle magazine, and similarly focused on beauty, health, entertainment and looking at bold fashion—its slogan: "Dare to be different".[2] The magazine was published monthly and was based in New York City.[2]

Its staffers were informed in early April 2006 that Elle Girl (USA)'s final issue would be its June/July 2006 Summer Issue, while they were already in the middle of working on the August 2006 issue, which is traditionally the largest issue of the year-covering fall fashion and back-to-school topics. The company intended to continue updating the Elle Girl website, and create new media in conjunction with Alloy.com, as well as publishing bi-annual special issues.

Hachette Filipacchi CEO Jack Kliger, who was also responsible for closing three other Hachette magazines—George, Mirabella, and Travel Holiday,[3] commented on Elle Girl's future on the internet, stating: "When teen girls are not on the Web, they are on their cells. The company will keep the website and work on Elle Girl ringtones, wallpaper mobile pages and projects in the mobile blogging area."

ELLEgirl.com relaunched in early 2008 after parting ways with Alloy. The new version included a blog, more simple navigation, and a strengthened association with ELLE.com under Executive Editor Keith Pollock. Hearst Magazines bought the website in 2011. As of May 2014, the ELLEgirl website redirects to the main Elle website.

International editions

The UK edition of Elle Girl magazine closed for business shortly before the American version. As of August 2005, international editions continued to be published in South Korea, the Netherlands, Canada, Taiwan, Japan, Russia, France, Germany, and China.[4] Elle Girl USA provided most foreign editions 60% of their content, yet it was not announced whether all of the foreign editions would also fold.[5] Sarra Manning, author of YA novels Guitar Girl and Let's Get Lost, was on the launch team of Elle Girl UK and edited the magazine for a short period.

gollark: But you would have to pay for that.
gollark: (The alternative of paying per middle node... fixes some problems and introduces exciting new ones)
gollark: (Although that breaks horribly too, since you're incentivized to run 10000 middle nodes which funnel money to you for your own connection)
gollark: (I'm assuming that you pay a fixed amount per packet or something which is split between all the nodes participating in sending that)
gollark: If I am paid for being a middle node, I would get money for going between A and B with a jammer, so that B can't connect with A directly, and providing a new node.

References

  1. Casey Lewis (August 1, 2014). "The Tragic History of Fallen Teen Magazines". The Hairpin. Retrieved October 26, 2015.
  2. "Elle Girl". Fashion Model Directory. Retrieved February 23, 2016.
  3. "Celeb Weeklies Still Sell". Reporter. April 6, 2006. Retrieved May 18, 2014.
  4. "Christina Kelly to Replace Brandon Holley at 'ELLEgirl'". Gawker. August 19, 2005. Archived from the original on May 18, 2014. Retrieved May 18, 2014.
  5. "Floating in ElleGirl's Wake". Mediabistro.com. April 5, 2006. Retrieved May 18, 2014.
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