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Take, for example, the now infamous photo of Emmett Till’s mutilated body, taken by a Jet magazine staff photographer. It was the magazine’s Sept. 15, 1955, cover, but white publications ...
A Black media mogul. Together, Ebony and Jet, founded in 1945 and 1951, respectively, were presented to the late-20th century Black world by Johnson Publishing Company (JPC), whose owner and ...
Every time I open up that Jet magazine, that Ebony magazine, every time I read the words Black people had during that moment and what was really going on, I'm reminded that I'm a part of a larger ...
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.
Jet magazine re-launches to capture fresh, new audiences. theGRIO REPORT - From the mailboxes of African-American homes and company waiting room tables to underneath the dryers in beauty shops ...
Johnson Publishing Co. plans to address Jet magazine's ... Why have black people in ... * In the second of a three-part series of interviews with Essence Editor-in-Chief Constance C.R. White, ...
Jet and Ebony’s award-winning photographers captured iconic images of Black celebrities and leaders, from Ray Charles and Muhammad Ali to Rosa Parks and Billie Holiday.
“Jet is like family, and people tell me frequently that they miss Jet coming to their house every week. But because of technology, the weekly print magazine business model doesn’t make as much ...
Remember “Beauty of the Week,” Jet magazine’s famous page 43, which featured Black women college students, actors, nurses, and everyday girls in swimsuits?
Chicago-based Jet magazine announced that after 63 years as a cultural mainstay and chronicler of black life in America, it will cease its print edition and adopt an online-only format starting in ...