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Defunct American teen and lifestyle magazine From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Teen was an American teen and lifestyle magazine for teenage girls. The content of Teen included advice, entertainment news, quizzes, fashion, beauty, celebrity role models, and "real-girl stories".[1] The magazine was published between 1954 and 2009.[2]
Editor-in-chief | Jane Fort[1] |
---|---|
Categories | Teen, lifestyle[1] |
Publisher | Hearst Corporation Jayne Jamison |
First issue | 1954 |
Final issue | Winter 2009 |
Country | United States |
Based in | Santa Monica, California |
Language | English |
ISSN | 1934-5348 |
Teen was launched in 1954.
In 1999, the magazine — along with the Petersen Publishing Company's other titles — was sold by Peterson to Emap. Primedia acquired Teen in 2000, but it was shut down in 2002 (other than special issues like Teen Prom).[3] Hearst Magazines bought Primedia's teen magazine titles (including Teen and Seventeen) in 2003,[4] reviving Teen.
Following the closure of its Cosmogirl in October 2008, Hearst Magazines decided in December 2008[2] to end publication of Teen magazine. The winter 2009 issue was the last. A spokesperson said, “We will continue to publish the annual Teen Prom issue, but will focus our teen publishing efforts on the Seventeen brand.” The spokesperson also noted that teenmag.com would be absorbed into the Hearst Teen Network of sites over the next month.[5]
The magazine had nine sections: New Stuff, Tech Girl, Celeb Stuff, Celebs, Look, Fashion, Get Real, Absolutely You, and More:
The magazine released Teen Mag Music 2000 Volume 1, a compilation music CD.[7]
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