| Editor in Chief | Joe Levy |
|---|---|
| Frequency | 10 times per year |
| Publisher | Alpha Media Group |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
| Website | Blender.com |
Blender was an American music magazine that billed itself as "the ultimate guide to music and more". It was also known for sometimes steamy pictorials of celebrities.
It compiled lists of albums, artists, and songs, including both "best of" lists and "worst of" lists. In each issue, there was a review of an artist's entire discography, with each album being analyzed in turn.
Blender teamed up with VH1 to create the "50 Most Awesomely Bad Songs", of which "We Built This City" by Starship was, at number one, the very worst.
Blender was published by Dennis Publishing. The magazine began in 1994 as the first digital CD-ROM magazine by Jason Pearson, David Cherry & Regina Joseph, acquired by Felix Dennis/Dennis Publishing, UK it published 15 digital CD issues, and launched on the web in 1997. It started publishing a print edition again in 1999 in its most recent form. Blender CD-ROM showcased the earliest digital editorial formats, as well as the first forms of digital advertising. The first digital advertisers included: Calvin Klein, Apple Computer, Toyota and Nike.
Owner Alpha Media Group closed Blender magazine March 26, 2009, going to an online-only format in a move that eliminated 30 jobs and reduced the company's portfolio of titles to Maxim alone. Blender's final print issue was the April 2009 issue.[1][2] Subscribers to the magazine are being sent Maxim magazine to make up for the unsent Blender issues.
References
- ^ Jason Fell, Blender Folds: Music magazine latest to succumb to recession, Folio, March 26, 2009
- ^ Stairway to Hell, New York Post, March 30, 2009
External links
| This article about a music publication is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)




