
37 episodes

The magCulture Podcast magCulture
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- Arts
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5.0 • 8 Ratings
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Podcast by magCulture
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Episode 36 • Gail Bichler, The New York Times Magazine • Rob Orchard, Delayed Gratification
This episode features major players from two different areas of magazine publishing.
First, Rob Orchard, co-founder of Delayed Gratification, discusses reaching the landmark 50th issue of the original slow journalism indie.
Then Gail Bichler, creative director of The New York Times Magazine and one of the most successful and influential editorial designers of our time, shares her thoughts on collaboration, team chemistry and the digital-first direction of her award-winning magazine as it approaches a redesign.
We’re grateful to our friends at Park Communications for their support of the magCulture Podcast. Find them online at www.parkcom.co.uk
www.slow-journalism.com
www.nytimes.com/section/magazine
Audio produced and edited by Sam Williams -
Episode 35 • Ernst and Kirsten, MacGuffin • Alison Branch, Park • Jonathan Simons, Analog Sea Review
Ernst van der Hoeven and Kirsten Algera, the creative team behind MacGuffin talk to Jeremy Leslie as their 12th issue, The Log, arrives in shops; Alison Branch, managing director of Park Communications, discusses a new book designed to help clients print sustainably, and we hear an excerpt from a recent shop event featuring Jonathan Simons of Analog Sea Review.
Before we meet our guests, Jeremy Leslie gives a quick update on magCulture news, and introduces some exciting new arrivals at the magCulture Shop including The Paper, Pact, Vestoj, Printed Fashion and Backstage Talks.
MacGuffin quickly established itself as an indie benchmark with its 2016 launch. The 12 issues to date provide a perfect example of the vitality and innovation that is possible in the indepdendent sector when a strong idea is expertly executed in terms of all the basic aspects of a magazine: story research, commissioning, art direction, design and production. Ernst and Kirsten discuss the magazine’s roots, its role as an anti-design magazine, and the new issue, revealing the combination of big idea and detail required to make MacGuffin tick.
London printer Park Communications have supported our Podcast for several years. They have just published ‘Sustainable Print Design’, a guide to making sure your print project is as environmentally friendly as possible. MD Alison Branch joins us to explain more about the the project, which is available as a free download from their website, or in print from the magCulture Shop.
The final segement of the episode is an excerpt from our recent magCulture Meets Analog Sea Review event. Founder Jonathan Simons explains his anti-digital position, reading from the introduction to the latest issue of ASR, and revealing his initial obsession with his iPhone 1.
We’re grateful to our friends at Park Communications for their support of the magCulture Podcast. Find them online at www.parkcom.co.uk
https://www.macguffinmagazine.com
Analog Sea Review does not have a website.
Audio produced and edited by Sam Williams -
Episode 34 • Andrew Diprose, Soho House & Superstore Wilderness • Nicola Hamilton, Issues shop
Jeremy Leslie meets editorial creative director Andrew Diprose at the magCulture Shop, and also trades magazine retail experience with Nicola Hamilton, who opened the magazine shop Issues in Toronto six months ago.
A passionate advocate for magazines and print, Andrew Diprose was creative director at the UK edition of Wired for fourteen years, leaving last year to lead Soho House group’s editorial creative department. While at Wired he also published his own magazine, The Ride Journal (2007-2017), a defining magazine of the then nascent indie scene.
After a look at some current magazines plucked form the magCulture shop shelves, he discusses working at Condé Nast (publisher of Wired) and the differences between that environment and producing you own publication. He also reflects on the shift from working on a major magazine brand to developing an editorial identity for a private member’s club brand, before revealing plans for his new side project, Superstore Wilderness.
Nichola Hamilton shares Andrew’s passion for print, and also has a background in editorial design. In 2022 she decided to translate that passion into opening a magazine shop, Issues, in her home city, Toronto. Jeremy catches up with her to see how the retail experience is going as she celebrates six months trading.
We’re grateful to our friends at Park Communications for their support of the magCulture Podcast. Find them online at www.parkcom.co.uk
https://www.sohohouse.com/house-notes/issue-006/film-and-entertainment/introducing-the-new-soho-house-magazine
http://theridejournal.com/
https://www.instagram.com/andrewdiprose
https://issuesmagshop.com
Audio produced and edited by Sam Williams -
Episode 33 • David Uzquiza & Adrian Gonzalez-Cohen, Buffalo Zine • Louise Long, Linseed Journal
This episode features two magazines, the long established Buffalo Zine and new launch Linseed Journal.
Buffalo Zine co-founder David Uzquiza joins Jeremy Leslie at the magCulture Shop to discuss a few recent magazines (Real Review, Baroness, Epoch, Safelight Paper and Elephant) before the two are joined via Zoom from Paris by David’s Buffalo Zine partner Adrian Gonzalez-Cohen. The three discuss the shapeshifting fashion magazine as its 16th issue, Buffalo Hotel Chelsea, is published. For this issue the Buffalo team spent several weeks at New York’s famous Chelsea Hotel producing the magazine on site, interviewing and shooting current residents and many of the famous artists who helped build the hotel’s reputation as a cultural bolthole.
Then photographer/writer Louise Long joins Jeremy to introduce her beautiful new magazine Linseed Journal.
We’re grateful to our friends at Park Communications for their support of the magCulture Podcast. Find them online at www.parkcom.co.uk
www.buffalozine.com
www.linseedjournal.com
Final edit by Sam Williams -
Episode 32 • James Brown, Loaded • Francesca Gavin, Epoch
We hear from two very different magazine makers this episode.
As his book about launching nineties supermag Loaded is published, publishing entrepreneur James Brown joins Jeremy at the magCulture Shop to select his indie favourites, including Electronic Sound, The Square Ball and Whalebone. The two discuss how the Loaded phenomenon exploded, and James shares his passion for magazines. His book about Loaded, ‘Animal House’ is published this week by Quercus Books.
Then we jump to the present, as Francesca Gavin joins via Zoom to discuss her exciting new launch Epoch. This big, bold magazine seeks to link the new and old, and art and science using contenorary design and aesthetics.
We’re grateful to our friends at Park Communications for their support of the magCulturre Podcast. Find them online at www.parkcom.co.uk
Final edit by Sam Williams -
Episode 31 • Liv Siddall, WePresent • Dave Calhoun, Time Out • Natalia Rachlin, Mother Tongue
We welcome three very different voices for this episode: Liv Siddall (WePresent), Dave Calhoun (Time Out) and Natalia Rachlin (Mother Tongue).
First, ex co-host Liv Siddall joins Jeremy at the magCulture Shop for a quick look at some new magazines from our shelves. Hear their thoughts on Boys! Boys! Boys!, Plethora, A Profound Waste of Time and OOF.
Liv and Jeremy then talk about the new issue of WePresent magazine, a fascinating experiment that saw the same content designed by three very different designers: Chloe Scheffe from Seattle, Nejc Prah from Ljubljana, and Seri Tanaka from Tokyo. The resulting three magazines form a case study in how design and content interact. Liv also discusses the role of the branded print magazine today.
Following the recent decision to end printing the London edition of Time Out magazine, their head of content for UK and US Dave Calhoun tells us why.
And finally, listen to an excerpt from Mother Tongue co-founder Natalia Rachlin’s recent talk at magCulture.
We're grateful to our friends at Park Communications for their support of the magCulturre Podcast. Find them online at www.parkcom.co.uk
Final edit by Sam Williams
Customer Reviews
Bronwyn Cosgrave
This podcast is super-fascinating because while it is about magazines, it is more about contemporary culture. It is intelligent, fun and spontaneous.