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Jet magazine's most iconic covers 18 photos In 1951, Jet served as a weekly news digest for African-Americans. At 15 cents, the pamphlet-sized magazine could fit in a reader's pocket.
Jet Magazines owner, Johnson Publishing Company, will be moving the magazine to a largely digitized format starting in June, delivered through the companies website and paid subscription app.
NEW YORK • Jet magazine, which first hit newsstands at the dawn of the civil rights movement, is ceasing regular print publication and transforming into a digital magazine app. Johnson ...
Jet magazine, the weekly African American publication famous for chronicling the civil rights movement, is ending its regular print edition after more than six decades.
Jet magazine, the digest-size publication that has been a staple among African-American readers for 63 years, is getting out of the print business. Johnson Publishing announced Wednesday that Jet ...
Jet magazine will be bidding farewell to the newsstand, for the most part, moving forward with plans to transition into a digital magazine—available as an app—at the end of June, Johnson ...
Samir Husni took this one hard. Husni, founder and director of the Magazine Innovation Center at the University of Mississippi and the man who trademarked his nickname "Mr. Magazine," was doing ...
After printing its last issue in 2014, Black legacy publication Jet magazine is back with vegan phenomenon Pinky Cole as […] The post Jet magazine returns with cover star Pinky Cole appeared ...
Jet magazine, the digest-sized publication that has been a staple among African-American readers for 63 years, is getting out of the print business.Johnson Publishing announced Wednesday that Jet ...
Jet, the nation’s third-largest magazine aimed at an African-American audience, is going from an every-third-week print edition to digital only. The magazine, launched 63 years ago by John ...