Originallly published in Black Enterprise, September, 2004
Copyright 2004 Earl G. Graves Publishing Company, Inc.
LONELY AT THE TOP
BY: Carolyn M. Brown, Additional reporting by Joyce Jones and Christina Morgan, EDITED BY MALIK SINGLETON
When BLACK ENTERPRISE did its insider review of the
magazine industry ("Changing the Face of the Magazine Industry," August
1995), the number of African American
chief editors at the largest titles could be counted on one hand.
Almost a decade later, the top editorial makeup remains unchanged.
The
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission reports that the magazine
industry is less diverse than other media. Blacks are 6.7% of officials
and managers in the newspaper business and 7.8% of those in radio and
television broadcasting yet constitute only 5.4% of officials and
managers in periodicals. And that number is for the entire industry;
the numbers in editorial management are worse. Jacklyn Monk, assistant
managing editor of Real Simple, is compiling a list of African Americans
in top magazine editorial roles for the National Association of Black
Journalists. Monk has found only nine top editors -- defined by the
American Society of Magazine Editors (ASME) as chief editor, executive
editor, or managing editor -- among hundreds of mainstream, nonethnic,
nonurban titles from major publishing houses.
Although
more people of color appear in ads, and celebrities like Halle Berry
and Beyonce Knowles land the covers of top fashion magazines, the
mastheads remain predominantly white. According to findings in Success in the Magazine Industry,
a recent study commissioned by the Magazine Publishers of America
(MPA), management's approach to diversity is not in race, gender, or
ethnicity but in a diversity of perspectives, knowledge, and styles.
Moreover,
the study finds that publishers aren't recruiting aggressively at
historically black colleges and universities or minority professional
associations such as NABJ. Ella L.J. Edmondson Bell, who conducted the
MPA study, notes most hiring is still done through word of mouth,
thereby reinforcing the status quo. "The rationale persists [that
there] just are not enough people of color in circles of 'smart
people,'" says Bell, an associate professor at Tuck School of Business,
Dartmouth College, in the survey findings.
For
years, MPA and ASME have encouraged publishing companies to promote
diversity in their organizations and in the products they create. In
May, ASME elected Newsweek Editor Mark Whitaker as its president.
Whitaker is the second African American to hold the position; the
first, George Curry, was elected in 2000, when he was editor-in-chief
of Emerge. Today, Curry is editor-in-chief of the National Newspaper
Publishers Association News Service.
While
achieving parity for minorities in magazines will be a focus, Whitaker
says the main argument for diversity is not just equity. "For magazines
to be relevant, they have to keep up [with the country's demographic
changes,] and you have to see the voice and ideas of people of
different backgrounds reflected in magazines," he says.
Whitaker's reasoning would seem to make sense given that industry
readership profiles show 84% of African Americans, 80% of Asians, and
75% of Latinos are magazine readers. Still, Whitaker is among a small
group of top editors at major publishing houses (see table).
WHO'S AT THE TOP AND WHO'S NOT
Note: This table may be divided, and additional informationon a particular entry may appear on more than one screen.
|
| NO. OF |
---|
MAGAZINE | NO. OF | TOP BLACK |
---|
PUBLISHER | TITLES* | EDITORS |
---|
Conde Nast | 18 | 0 |
Vanity Fair, GQ, Glamour |
|
Fairchild | 6 | 1 |
Details, Jane, W Magazine |
|
Hachette Filipacchi | 17 | 0 |
ELLE, Metropolitan Home |
|
Hearst | 18 | 0 |
Cosmopolitan, Seventeen |
|
Reader's Digest Association | 13 | 1 |
Backyard Living, Quick Cooking |
|
Time Inc. | 40 | 6 |
Time, People, Fortune |
|
|
|
|
|
The Washington Post Co. | 2 | 1 |
Newsweek, Budget Travel |
MAGAZINE |
---|
PUBLISHER | NAME / POSITION |
---|
Conde Nast | -- |
Vanity Fair, GQ, Glamour |
|
Fairchild | Carla Shackleford / Deputy Managing Editor |
Details, Jane, W Magazine |
|
Hachette Filipacchi | -- |
ELLE, Metropolitan Home |
|
Hearst | -- |
Cosmopolitan, Seventeen |
|
Reader's Digest Association | Donna Banks / Assistant Managing Editor |
Backyard Living, Quick Cooking |
|
Time Inc. | Amy Barnett / Managing Editor |
Time, People, Fortune | Sheryl Hilliard Tucker / Executive Editor |
| Angela Burt-Murray / Executive Editor |
| Jacklyn Monk / Assistant Managing Editor |
| Roy Johnson / Assistant Managing Editor |
| Janice Simpson / Assistant Managing Editor |
|
The Washington Post Co. | Mark Whitaker / Editor |
Newsweek, Budget Travel |
MAGAZINE | MAGAZINE |
---|
PUBLISHER | TITLE |
---|
Conde Nast | -- |
Vanity Fair, GQ, Glamour |
|
Fairchild | Jane |
Details, Jane, W Magazine |
|
Hachette Filipacchi | -- |
ELLE, Metropolitan Home |
|
Hearst | -- |
Cosmopolitan, Seventeen |
|
Reader's Digest Association | Reader's Digest |
Backyard Living, Quick Cooking |
|
Time Inc. | Teen People |
Time, People, Fortune | Money |
| Teen People |
| Real Simple |
| Sports Illustrated |
| Time |
|
The Washington Post Co. | Newsweek |
Newsweek, Budget Travel |
* DOMESTIC, CONSUMER PUBLICATIONS ONLY.
SOURCE: JACKLYN MONK, B.E. RESEARCH.
Almost a decade since BE's
report, Time Inc. still appears to be the main recruiter and retainer
of black talent, having six top black editors among its titles. Before
the demise of Vanguarde Media, which published Savoy, Honey, and Heart
& Soul, Honey Editor-in-Chief Amy Barnett was hired as managing
editor of Teen People, and Savoy Co-Founder and Editor-in-Chief Roy
Johnson returned to Sports Illustrated as assistant managing editor.
Top
black talent remains scarce at Hearst and Conde Nast, two of the
nation's leading magazine publishers. Cathleen Black, president of
Hearst Magazines and former MPA chairman, was unavailable for comment,
as was Ruth Diem, senior vice president of human resources. Letena
Lindsay, senior public relations manager, openly communicated that
Hearst has six "senior-level" African American
editors, though five of them don't meet ASME's definition of a top
editor and the sixth is at an ethnic/urban publication. When asked
about its diversity recruitment efforts, Conde Nast's human resources
representative said, "That information is kept personal and
confidential."
"Many major magazine
publishers say they want more diversity," says Curry, "but . . . they
have to start encouraging people early, at the junior high school
level, that this is a career that welcomes them."
Bell,
however, finds that there are no incentives for publishers to recruit
people of color, and that there are fewer opportunities in the present
economy for younger people to be mentored. Outreach efforts may get
minorities in at entry level roles, but those efforts haven't changed
the landscape at the top.
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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