Magazine Management
Magazine Management
Magazine Management
Template:OldInfobox company Magazine Manage- pany the parent company of all the acquired Goodman
ment Co., Inc. was an American publishing company concerns. Goodman remained as publisher until 1972.
lasting from at least 1947 to the early 1970s, known Perfect Film and Chemical renamed itself Cadence In-
for mens-adventure magazines, risque mens magazines, dustries and renamed Magazine Management as Marvel
humor, romance, puzzle, celebrity/lm and other types of Comics Group in 1973, the rst of many changes, merg-
magazines, and later adding comic books and black-and- ers, and acquisitions that led to what became the 21st cen-
white comics magazines to the mix. It was the parent tury corporation Marvel Entertainment.[4][5]
company of Marvel Comics.
Founded by Martin Goodman, who had begun his career
in the 1930s with pulp magazines published under a va- 2 Culture
riety of shell companies, Magazine Management served
as an early employer of such sta writers as Rona Bar- As writer Dorothy Gallagher reminisced in 1998,
rett, Bruce Jay Friedman, David Markson, Mario Puzo,
Martin Cruz Smith, Mickey Spillane, and Ernest Tidy-
At Magazine Management, magazines
man.
were produced the way Detroit produced cars.
Subsidiaries of Magazine Management included I worked on the fan-magazine line. On the
Humorama, which published digest-sized magazines of other side of a ve-foot partition was the
girlie cartoons, Marvel Comics, and black-and-white romance-magazine line. And across a corri-
comics magazines such as Vampire Tales, Savage Tales, dor were the nancial staples of the organiza-
and Unknown Worlds of Science Fiction. tion, the mens magazines Stag, For Men
Only, Male for which, at one time or an-
other, Mario Puzo, Bruce Jay Friedman, David
Markson, Mickey Spillane and Martin Cruz
1 History Smith wrote, until they became too exalted and
rich to do it anymore. I'm almost forgetting the
Founded by Martin Goodman, who had begun his ca- comic-book line, where Stan Lee [co-]created
reer in the 1930s with pulp magazines published under Spider-Man, known to every connoisseur of
a variety of shell companies, Magazine Management ex- classic comics. ... [Th]e decor was insurance-
isted as of at least 1947.[1] By the early 1960s, the com- company blah: grayish white walls and foam-
pany occupied the second oor at 60th Street and Madi- tile ceilings, overhead uorescent xtures, gray
son Avenue.[2] It published mens-adventure magazines metal desks. Except for the executive oces,
with such writers as Bruce Jay Friedman, David Mark- which faced Madison Avenue and had carpets
son, Mario Puzo, Martin Cruz Smith, Mickey Spillane, and windows, the space was divided into jerry-
and Ernest Tidyman; lm magazines with writers includ- built bull pens with head-high partitions. Edi-
ing Rona Barrett, and humor publications, among other tors got a glassed-in area in each bullpen.[2]
[3]
types. By the late 1960s, its mens-adventure magazines
such Stag and Male had begun evolving into mens maga-
Author Adam Parfrey, in his book about mens adventure
zines, with pictorials about dancers and swimsuit models
magazines, described how,
replaced by bikinis and discreet nude shots, with gradu-
ally fewer ction stories, and eventually into pornographic
magazines. Most scribes laboring for Martin Good-
mans Magazine Management rm and other
One division of the company was the Marvel Comics repositories of adventure magazines spoke of
Group. As one-time Marvel editor-in-chief Roy Thomas feeling like well-compensated slaves of a very
recalled, I was startled to learn in '65 that Marvel particular style ('man triumphant') that was not
was just part of a parent company called Magazine their own. This was not the style with which
Management.[3] editor Bruce Jay Friedman felt most comfort-
In late 1968, Goodman sold all his publishing busi- able, and when editing publications for Martin
nesses to the Perfect Film and Chemical Corporation, Goodman he unsuccessfully tried to talk him
which made the subsidiary Magazine Management Com- out of running advertisements for trusses, an
1
2 3 TITLES PUBLISHED
3 Titles published
[8] Evanier, Mark (June 15, 2005). The Marvel Age of Huge
Breasts. P.O.V. Online (column). Archived from the
original on July 23, 2010.
Movie World
4 References
[1] Bell, Blake; Vassallo, Michael J. (2013). The Secret His-
tory of Marvel Comics. Seattle: Fantagraphics Books. p.
39. ISBN 978-1606995525.
[3] Stan the Man & Roy the Boy: A Conversation Between
Stan Lee and Roy Thomas. Comic Book Artist (2). Sum-
mer 1998. Archived from the original on November 14,
2009.
5.2 Images
File:CelebrityMag-LyndaCarter.gif Source: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/2/2d/CelebrityMag-LyndaCarter.gif License:
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File:Male_vol26n3-1976.jpg Source: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/d/dd/Male_vol26n3-1976.jpg License: ? Contributors:
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