An online magazine article is the same as an article in a paper magazine except you can find it online, usually through the magazine's own website or through an article aggregation site. You can find an example through the given link.
To cite an online magazine article in APA format, include the author's last name, first initial, publication date, article title, magazine name, URL, and access date. For example: Smith, J. (2021, January 15). "How to Cite Online Articles." Magazine Name. Retrieved from www.magazinewebsite.com/article. Accessed on February 1, 2021.
Some magazines have websites and accounts, where if you are subscribed to the magazine, you can access a limited amount of the magazine's material, but usually you can't access any article if you're just some Joe Schmo.
Forbes Magazine has a good article on Annuity Options. It is educational and lists their recommendations. The article can be found online. It was in the May 1st, 2009 magazine. The name of the article is 'How to Buy Annuities".
Here is the link to it (it wouldn't let me put it in the question) http://www1.yadvashem.org/about_yad/magazine/data6/Sobibor.html
TIME Magazine ran a cover story entitled "Mormons, Inc." in their August 4, 1997 issue. The entire article can be read online at this link: http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,986794,00.html
You can access the article on the Woodstock festival by searching for it on the Time Magazine website archives or by visiting a local library that carries past issues of Time Magazine. It may also be available through online databases or archives that specialize in historical publications.
Smithsonian
the magazine Living Without
Scanning magazine images and articles helps to convert them into digital format for archiving, sharing online, or creating backups. It also allows for easy editing or manipulation of the content if needed.
No.
It is in the American Girl magazine 20th edition that has the room refresher article.
Single in the City was a magazine article about Denver's 24 "hottest catches" - singles looking for love. The magazine that ran it was the magazine 5280, a local Denver periodical.