831 lines
36 KiB
Plaintext
831 lines
36 KiB
Plaintext
======================================================
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CROPDUSTER -- Issue 1
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Copyright 1992 by Steven Meece and Chris Woodill
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======================================================
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This is the ASCII version of the zine. It contains everything you would
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receive in the real zine except for pictures and the feel of authenticity. If
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you would like to receive the paper edition, send $1.10 for the United States
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or 86 cents for Canada to:
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Cropduster
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79 O'Hara Avenue
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Toronto, Ontario
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M6K 2R3
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All other enquiries should be directed to that office as well. The editors are
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also available by international e-mail at:
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ad522@freenet.carleton.ca (Steven Meece)
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cwoodill@epas.utoronto.ca (Chris Woodill)
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Naturally permission is granted to distribute Cropduster in any way you would
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like, but please leave it as it is so that others can see our mistakes as
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well. If you have a problem, don't take it out on a text file: Tell us.
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==============
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Editor's Words
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Steven Meece
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==============
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Cropduster was born as a summer make-work project by the
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editor. Why teeny mags? We have found them to be very
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entertaining, because they are meant to be. They really try
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too hard to be constantly entertaining without providing a
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single break from the action. Maybe this is the way life
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really is in the United States. Reading one of these
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magazines is like watching television or eating food. They
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also let us know of what we are missing because we are not
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female, and because of the sad-but-true fact that the
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readers of these magazines would have nothing to do with us.
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We decided to not critique Sixteen, Tiger Beat, Superteen,
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Smash Hits, and so on, because they cover the personal lives
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of Luke Perry and not the personal lives of grade niners.
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'Teen magazine was also absent from reviews because it is
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slipping into this category. We reviewed only American
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magazines because to our knowledge, there are no Canadian
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equivalents. Wanting girls in this country will have to
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borrow their mother's Chatelaine.
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This issue was electronically produced. The articles were
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composed on Appleworks v2.0, and the layout and construction
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was the domain of First Publisher vx.x. The Apple platform
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was an Apple IIc, and the MS DOS platform was a clone named
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"COM Micro Computer". The files were transferred using Talk
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Is Cheap v2.03 on the Apple side and Telix v3.44 on the MS
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DOS side.
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Apologies and rights reverted to YM, Sassy, Seventeen, and
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all others where necessary. The publishers and/or authors
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are not responsible for any of the content printed within.
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The concept and most of the writing was undertaken by Steven
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Meece, while the introduction, layout and dogsbody was the
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responsibility of Christopher "cw" Woodill. Steven Meece is
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attending Carleton University in Ottawa in the religion
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programme, and cw is attending the University of Toronto in
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the philosophy & semiotics programme.
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Produced using grants from Gary Woodill and Heather Meece,
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who are always more than pleased to bankroll the creativity
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of their children.
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Comments, questions, anecdotes, lawsuits to:
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Crop Dusters
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79 O'Hara Avenue
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Toronto Ontario
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M6K 2R3
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This publication is dedicated to the memory of the Neopsychedelic Underground.
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==========================
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Pop Culture: An exposition
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Chris Woodill
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==========================
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As an issue, pop culture has various definitions. It can be
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defined by various things, including the clothes people wear, the
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attitudes they hold, and the music to which they listen. It
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seems that our generation (everyone born after about 1970) has
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yet to discover its own pop-culture, for unlike our baby boom
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parents, we have yet to spread our wings.
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Cropduster revolves, as perhaps everything does, around the
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substance that one calls pop-culture. With various jargon thrown
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around including: post-modernism, nihilism, etc. in an attempt
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for one generation to understand the next, people forget what the
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essence of pop-culture really is - a collection of somewhat
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useless artifacts which are given exceptional value by groups of
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people. What we hope to show is not the trends but rather the
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idols of pop-culture. We hope to convey the simplicity of
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everyday life through the icons which lead generation upon
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generation onwards. In this way, perhaps one reading this can
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make a subjective interpretation of the trends of culture; but
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this is not our own objective. Rather, we hope to portray the
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post-boomer child as he or she really is, by critically examining
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the icons in which the child is represented.
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As member of the post-boom generation, the authors must
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include themselves in their ridicule, praise and examination. I
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think that this is perhaps necessary in any endevour, for only
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self-reflection leads true results. Thus, this journal is not
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intended to be rigourous, for lack of rigour is one of the
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characteristics of the pop-culture in which we reside.
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Many of the articles presented here are true in fact,
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without any changes in names, places, etc. We make no pretence
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that we represent our generation, nor do we make any pretence
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that has any objective value in it at all. For this is not a
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sociology textbook, nor is it a psychology journal. Rather, this
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appears at the moment to be a compilation of minor life
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experiences, which hopefully will give someone value.
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======================
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Young & Modern / Missy
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======================
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The dish:
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YM is supposed to stand for "Young and Modern." Until a few
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years ago it stood for "Young Miss," but the editors decided
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that the title was too prissy and waif-like for the gritty
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reality experienced by young girls today. It is theorized
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that girls would rather be modern than a miss, which seems
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to be like two coins with the same side.
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The pages are quite glossy, and the magazine has a
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particular smell to it. The pages don't feel like paper. The
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girlie on page twenty really looks like cw's half-sister
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Jacoba.
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The second thing we noticed about this issue and possibly
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this magazine is that its sole purpose seems to be the
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promotion of maquillage. The magazine is bulked up by
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advertisements for various-makeup products, many of the
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reader inquiries include queries about the proper kind of
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blush to use, and they themselves find that makeup is the
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central core of any young and modern girl's existence. Other
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things are delved into, but they are never treated with the
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same amount of respect.
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We tallied 32 of 104 pages consisting of full page singles
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advertisements, and four doubles (Cover Girl, Maybelline,
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"Caboodles" and Paul Mitchell Hair Products).
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BELIEVE IT: When your make-up looks this natural, you
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know it's Clean.
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One look says it all. Natural. Believable. Beautiful.
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That look is Cover Girl Clean Make-up (tm). So good to
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your skin. So clean. With pure Noxzema (r) ingredients.
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For healthy colour. Honest coverage. The look of great
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skin. That's the believable look of Clean Make-up.
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We found an oxymoron in the term "clean make-up". To be
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changed from the natural (which is to say, clean) you need
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to be made up into something different, and therefore you
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need something called "make-up" to do that.
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The girls in these advertisements had the particular quality
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of not resembling human beings at all. There is some heavy
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airbrushing going on here. They don't even look human
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anymore, of particular note is the girl squinting eyes,
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crunching paper and sticking out her tongue in the
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Maybelline double-ad. The girl for the Tampax one on page
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four looks like a real person, with a black turtleneck
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sweater and blue leggings with numbers on them.
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Doing anything for the first time can be tricky. But
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trust the makers of Tampax to come up with a tampon
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that's a total cinch for girls like you to...
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The curious thing about this girl is that she appears to be
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falling over backward for no discernible reason.
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"Say Anything" is a collection of reader-submitted
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embarrassing experiences and Freudian slips. The staff then
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rates these harrowing exploits with one to four stars, the
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four-star ranking being "Ultimate supremo humiliation". This
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section is in actuality the most titillating thing you'll
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see in YM. Hold onto your hats, this is heavy chick-talk:
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The reason you bought the mag, right? The next best thing to
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Peeping Tom-ing a slumber party. This month yielded three
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four-stars, the first being about a girl exposing her
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breasts during a school play, the second about a girl who
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had her clothes ripped off by a ski-lift, and the third
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involved a girlie having a tooth fall out during heavy
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petting and having Prince Charming swallow the thing. There
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were a few experiences at being ignored by a "guy" despite
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all intentions, and one about a girl's dad sitting on the
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crapper. Our favourite, although it was only given three
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stars, was about a girl who 'accidentally' bought a dildo.
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She thought it was a curling iron. Dr Freud would love these
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magazines almost as much as we do.
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The letter section found Jetha Marek from the Bronx
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questioning the real value of makeup, which went unanswered
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by Bonnie and crue. Crosstalk asked, "Should you stay with a
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boyfriend who pressures you for sex?" and no specific answer
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was given. Neither of the sides advocated that the victim
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"do it" with her boyfriend, but Kim Kaan of Tempe Arizona
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said that you should ignore him. The eponymous Jennifer Wise
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of Stockton, Kansas (the probable setting of Tony Parker's
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^Bird Kansas^, Knopf 1989) "will only have sex when I am
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ready for it," when-ever that may be. She gets into the
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Puritan ethic of ^The Cosby Show^ by getting steamed over
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the inevitable results of sex before the wedding night: "a
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damaged reputation, an unplanned pregnancy, or a sexually
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transmitted disease like AIDS". Kaan is in her second year
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at Arizona State University, but her arguments remain thinly
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veiled rants lacking in intelligence.
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The "Body Q&A" is not as erotic as you may hope. They
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discuss different types of soap (superfatted or emollient,
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transparent or glycerin, deodorant, french milled,
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synthetic, acne and cleansing lotion) and publish
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photographs of the tatoos of Julia Roberts, Jody Watley,
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Roseanne Barr, Cher, Stephanie Seymour and "Roshumba".
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The crue hit the beach, photographed nine surfpeople and
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asked them "If your surfboard were a girl, who would she
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be?" These questions were answered honestly. Three of the
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seven dudes picked one of several fashion models. One guy
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said his mom. Bud Struck wanted his surfboard to be a porno
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star. This article was a veiled excuse for publishing
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pictures of surf gods, with little erect boy-nipples.
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The guy thing continued without another survey, "What's the
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worst thing you've ever done to a girl?" Answers: three
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dumpings on prom night, physical assault, yelling derogatory
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comments from a car window, cheating, raping a drunkard,
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crank calls, and one guy who puked on a chack.
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YM also contains the now-obligatory ad for "Teen Spirit"
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which remains "the Only Anti-perspirant For Teens". This one
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pictures three happy-go-lucky girls whooping it up at a
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carnival and presumably stinking up the joint in the
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||
process. The girl in the middle looks like Lloyd's mom!
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The guy I'm going out with broke up with his girlfriend
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two weeks before we started dating. He swears they're
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just friends, but they flirt a lot, and he ignores me
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when she's around. Should I be worried?
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We took the quiz to see if we were in fact boring. I had
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long suspected that this was the case and the proof was
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given when I scored 24 out of a possible high of 30
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boringness points. cw, the freak that he is, was only 19.
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"My stepfather sexually abused me" was an article that
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seemed to be more geared as entertainment than information.
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It was presented in a voyeuristic tendency, viz. the
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first-page oversized sidebar quote "Just about every night,
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he'd get in bed with me after Mom had gone to sleep." These
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attempts at titillation belong on ^A Current Affair^, not
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for in a rag for 'teens.
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"Twenty-five ways to get a job this summer" was merely a set
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of guidelines on how one can be a pest to one's neighbours
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and parents by continually trying to weasel money from them
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for useless services that enrich neither party in any
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tangible way.
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cw was miffed by the bikini photo section, remarking that
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the girls were skanky little teenagers with little boobs
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trying to be grown-ups. I had to agree with him on this
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area. Swimsuits that are $70 US are too expensive for most
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babysitters anyway. He also found exception with the
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fat-busters article, which offered up low-fat substitutes
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for high-fat products. In his typical Newfoundlander
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common-sense attitude, he suggested that the dieter
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substitute wind and water for a Haagen Dazs ice-cream binge.
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"Why doncha just eat nothing?"
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The Tom Cruise interview was written in such a holy-shit
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manner that it isn't even worth the energy to type about it.
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This magazine is truly American trash, but like food fried
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up by Ronald McDonald, it sometimes gives a curious
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pleasure.
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Your best friend recently became part of a twosome, and
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your life has changed - for the worse. Forget about
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calling each other two or three times a week and
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getting together on weekends. These days you're lucky
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if you can even reach her on the phone, and whenever
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you see her, she's with him.
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The horoscopes were uniformly false. I told cw that he would
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meet "a cool guy with killer looks" on the fourteenth. He
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did not seem to be too anxious.
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The magazine is closed by four pages of postage-stamp
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advertisements for fly-by-night fat camps, modelling
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societies, correspondence highschools, and photo reprinters.
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Of all of the magazines reviewed in ^Crop Duster^, YM seems
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to paint the most pessimistic picture of youth today. YM
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worships at the trough of animated mannequins, offering up
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such notorious no-brains such as Linda Evangelista as role
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models for our sisters and daughters!
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It appears that being young and modern is not a very good
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condition for the soul. YM implicitly believes that the
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acquisition and sustaining of a boyfriend must be the
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central focus in the goals of a girl, yet YM itself
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showcases that most boyfriends are albatrosses at best, and
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eventually only cause trouble. YM does not see the
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contradiction of instructing its readers to pursue the
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romantic ideal while admitting that Prince Charming is most
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likely a goof.
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Someone who is young and modern must be a clothes horse,
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willing to apply massive amounts of varying kinds of makeup,
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able to spend extravagantly on clothes, diet, use the right
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kind of soap, wear a two-piece bikini and kowtow to a jerk
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boyfriend who may or may not be stolen by your best friend.
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If you cannot reach those levels, you are done like a
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dinner. This magazine portrays female adolescence correctly,
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as a series of banalities adding up to a tremendous
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omnipresent burden. They recognize the faults of this value
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system, but lack the conviction to attempt to bring about
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changes. Espousing of deviant philosophies (to burn your bra
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or your rouge) could cause what Jennifer Wise fears more
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than AIDS, which is "a damaged reputation". Young Miss
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readers cannot liberate themselves because they are too busy
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trying to condition themselves for social acceptance.
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=====
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Sassy
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=====
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The dish:
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If you have a ring through yr nose and believe that The
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Butthole Surfers speak directly to you, Sassy will be your
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bag. Witness this from the letters section:
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Dear Jane: I was going to send you this comic strip way
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before your "staff hate mail awards" ["Diary," April].
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I swear! My purpose was to show you that a way cool
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cartoonist like Lynda Barry has her comic strip
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character reading a way cool magazine like Sassy [only
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one panel shown below]. So I am glad that you're
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"spreading like the plague"!
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Complete with spelling errors, this is the handbook of the
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hippest home slices this side of Seattle. Hip though it may
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||
appear to be, the Kurt Cobain-meets-Frankie Avalon article
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||
on "Surf Punks" (p 46) features the grunge lady wearing $154
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worth of clothes (not even counting those big clunky boots)
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as she looks nihilistic. Anarchy in the USA? Not when you
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look like that.
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However, Sassy may be a victim of its demographic. In the
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hopes of hitting the mark, they constantly engage in
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overkill, as if their audience could never accept anything
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but affirmations of what they already are. Instead of giving
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the message that information on the cover photograph is on
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page fourteen, Sassy has to say
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For a veritable hoedown of info about our cover, fee fi
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fiddly-i oh-ver to page 14.
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This gets very boring very fast. Almost every other sentence
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has to have a few words of teen-lingo inside of it to keep
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||
the readers awake. Do the editors of Sassy wish to keep
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||
these people sassy forever? Honestly, this stuff sounds as
|
||
if it is being spoken in the next Bill and Ted sequel.
|
||
Because of this constant gee-whiz overtone, Sassy is unable
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to sound sincere when it deals with serious issues.
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Scorpio (Oct 23 - Nov 21)
|
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Partnerships are key to success this mo' (except for
|
||
hassle-causing bratty sibs on the 10th). Break with
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routine on the 12th - you need a change. On the 16th
|
||
you get what you ask for. Hang near water on the 21st
|
||
for serenity and Esther Williams-y exercise. Day to
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Savor [sic]: 11th. Scratch Off Your Calendar [sic]:
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||
29th.
|
||
|
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The "Cute Band Alert" further restricts Sassy readers into
|
||
this teenage pigeonhole. The Cute Band Alert is just that --
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||
"Alert! Here is a new band with a cute bass player!" and
|
||
they publish a picture. This kind of narcissism is taken to
|
||
a further extreme with the "Sassiest Boy in America" contest
|
||
held every winter, in which readers can nominate their
|
||
boyfriend or brother as the epitome of sass. Who is the idol
|
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figure of Sassy readers? Anyone who has sideburns,
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Lollapalooza tickets, a backward-turned baseball cap, and
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calls himself "a feminist".
|
||
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||
Sassy takes a different slant than the other three mags: It
|
||
supposedly includes the reader in the personal lives of the
|
||
editors. Editors and staff contributors refer to themselves
|
||
in the first person, and the reader is supposed to feel
|
||
chummy with Jane, Lew, Christina, Margie, Jacinta, Mary,
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||
Kim, Mary Kaye, Anne V, Andrea T, Janet, Mary Ann, and a
|
||
whole slew of others. They're supposed to be as familiar to
|
||
the readers as their cafeteria mates.
|
||
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Positively, Sassy does contain the most record and book
|
||
reviews of any of the three mags, but these are limited. The
|
||
books are always the latest released kid books, the music
|
||
the latest six-month shelf life stuff, and the "movies" are
|
||
always what's playing down at the mall. "Stuff You Wrote" is
|
||
a poetry-and-quip feature that is passable but is slowly
|
||
shrinking month by month. Most of the poetry is kinda the
|
||
same, and an attempt at therapy - the desire to get
|
||
something out of one's system and not so much to create work
|
||
that transcend the medium and develop relevance on several
|
||
different planes. Still, the concept is commendable and the
|
||
neglect of this feature is not so good.
|
||
|
||
Sassy is still the only magazine that mention the words
|
||
"vagina" and "penis" as if they are related to each other (p
|
||
26) but they are very careful when they do it. Sassy does
|
||
set itself apart from the other two, but this difference is
|
||
shrinking.
|
||
|
||
The ads in Sassy are largely those of YM, primarily
|
||
disposable haircare products, and disposable music products.
|
||
May of the exact same ads appear in all three magazines.
|
||
Again - the ads, like the magazine itself, never leave the
|
||
realm of the day to day distractions of a fifteen and a half
|
||
year old.
|
||
|
||
Was it always like this? This short-sightedness is a new
|
||
development. Sassy is the newest of the magazines profiled
|
||
here, having made it's debut in March of 1988 (compared to
|
||
1941 for Seventeen and 1952 for the original Young Miss),
|
||
and therefore determined to take a new approach in order to
|
||
defeat the giants. This was a very ribald approach indeed --
|
||
they mentioned sex honestly and reflected teenage life for
|
||
what it really is. Someone also once let the cat out of the
|
||
bag that women, especially young women, actually look better
|
||
without makeup than with it. A flap arose by the end of the
|
||
year, and a group of "concerned parents" expressed their
|
||
outrage that their daughters were being told about dirty
|
||
subjects. Maybelline and Tampax were scared, expressed their
|
||
fears to Jane, and Jane buckled under. Sassy now is just as
|
||
flighty as the other magazines, and it actually spreads lies
|
||
in order to keep the status quo intact of the legions of
|
||
daughters that read the magazine.
|
||
|
||
A further slide happened late in 1991 when Sassy changed the
|
||
physical size -- from an oversized square to a regular
|
||
notebook size. Soon after, the magazine underwent yet
|
||
another layout overhaul and now is as active as an MTV
|
||
commercial with mixed-font headlines and text, and dingbats
|
||
by the dozen.
|
||
|
||
Weather or not it loses in editorial quality is irrelevant,
|
||
as long as it can keep a number of girls interested enough
|
||
to read it. For magazines are essentially trojan horses for
|
||
getting the reader to look at advertisements, just as the
|
||
only purpose of commercial television is use the guise of
|
||
entertainment to round up an audience to sit through the
|
||
commercials. Why do magazine articles break up after two
|
||
pages, to be "continued on page 132"? To get the reader to
|
||
turn through the next sixty pages, all while looking at the
|
||
ads.
|
||
|
||
It is a well-known marketing maxim that nothing should be
|
||
changed unless it is not working in its current incarnation.
|
||
The only thing that matters in the magazine publishing
|
||
business is to deliver the market to the advertisers. If
|
||
they are able to do this, everything else will soon fall in
|
||
line. Sassy needs to get girlies and keep them interested in
|
||
the product in order to survive. Constant changes in the
|
||
style of the magazine seem to indicate that Sassy can not
|
||
seem to get it right. Is Sassy stumbling? It could very well
|
||
be. The reduction in size was a cost-saving measure, as the
|
||
copy price did not decrease. Sassy is the shortest of the
|
||
profiled magazines (88 pages at a cover price of $2.50
|
||
equals 2.84c per page) while YM and Seventeen deliver more
|
||
product at a cheaper price (104 pages, $2.75, 2.64c per page
|
||
and 120 pages, $2.50, 2.08c per page respectively). Free
|
||
enterprise keeps the newsstand prices to within twenty-five
|
||
cents of each other, but Sassy is producing the least amount
|
||
of magazine for that price -- a full thirty-two pages less
|
||
than Seventeen. Naturally there is no such thing as
|
||
frugality, and if Sassy could have sold an extra thirty
|
||
pages of ads, they would have done it.
|
||
|
||
Sassy has the lowest 12 month subscription cost, at $10, in
|
||
comparison to $14 for Seventeen and $18 for Young Miss. This
|
||
translates to less than 50% of the potential newsstand
|
||
costs. While subscriptions eliminate many of the
|
||
distribution channels and therefore are cheaper for the
|
||
reader, this still translates to a net loss in sales revenue
|
||
for the Sassies. Then why pump up subscriptions?
|
||
|
||
To increase the readerbase to make the magazine more
|
||
attractive for advertisers. It is hoped that many people
|
||
will commit to twelve issues at a cheaper price, which
|
||
provide for a greater circulation figure to present to
|
||
potential advertisers, which hopefully translates to more
|
||
advertising funds to offset the loss in sales revenue.
|
||
|
||
Sometimes this method works, and often it doesn't. This
|
||
ponzi scheme killed the original incarnation of ^Ms^ after
|
||
it sold a tonne of subscriptions at a dirt cheap price but
|
||
could not translate those figures into more advertisements.
|
||
It is a very risky gamble, and is often a last-ditch attempt
|
||
made in desperation and fear and trembling. It will be
|
||
interesting and informative to see if the subscription price
|
||
for Sassy continues to deflate.
|
||
|
||
The Sass-meisters seem to be caught in a delicate circle.
|
||
Sassy was forced away from its old positions that made it
|
||
quirky, interesting, daring, and worth looking forward to
|
||
each month. However, there is no demand for a Young & Modern
|
||
clone, which is the direction that Sassy may have to drift.
|
||
Sassy is an entity at sea in search of a demographic, which
|
||
is a very perilous thing to be.
|
||
|
||
=========
|
||
Seventeen
|
||
=========
|
||
|
||
The dish:
|
||
|
||
Seventeen is the oldest of the group here, and in both the
|
||
literal and figurative senses it remains the mother of all
|
||
teenage mags. It is still the most professional, most
|
||
entertaining, and most professionally produced of the
|
||
magazines. But this is a small market, and ^The New Yorker^
|
||
it aint. The fashion features of Seventeen are the best
|
||
photographed, and the ads go beyond the norm a few times.
|
||
|
||
But even Seventeen has seen better days. The June 1992 was
|
||
weighing in at a rather svelte 120 pages, while as recently
|
||
as April 1986 it was 216 pages. A perusal of that issue
|
||
finds several ads for General Motors, Rice-a-roni,
|
||
"Chadwicks of Boston," and a feature film. This is an
|
||
indication that Seventeen, at that time, was almost a
|
||
"general interest" magazine, the two biggest of this genre
|
||
being Time and People. Certainly that is not the case any
|
||
longer. There are only a few ads in this category. The
|
||
remainder of the magazine is bulked up with YM-style ads for
|
||
Clearsil, Cover Girl, and Caboodles (a neon-coloured makeup
|
||
lunchbox). One thing hasn't changed, though, and that is the
|
||
last pages are ripe with postage-size black and white ads
|
||
for mail-order firms specializing in bust growing schemes,
|
||
photo enlargement operations, Groucho Marx glasses &
|
||
moustache ("fool your friends"), and fat camps. There's a
|
||
send-in application to "The Art Institute of Pittsburgh, Ft
|
||
Lauderdale Campus."
|
||
|
||
Well. It appears that every girly magazine is suffering in
|
||
one way or another, and for what reason? The time-frame of
|
||
six years is too brief to suggest a shrinking age bracket
|
||
and a smaller supply of young girls interested in beauty and
|
||
boyfriend tips. It is also too McLuhan to suggest that the
|
||
magazine concept is becoming obsolete and out-of-date. It is
|
||
a curious situation.
|
||
|
||
LONG-DISTANCE LASHES: The mascara that lasts as long as
|
||
you do.
|
||
|
||
Marathon Mascara really goes the distance. Keeping
|
||
lashes long, dark and beautiful, no matter what you do!
|
||
So go ahead, put it to the test. Marathon looks just
|
||
put on, 'til you take it off. MARATHON MASCARA
|
||
|
||
COVER GIRL Renee Jeffus is wearing Soft Black.
|
||
|
||
R E D E F I N I N G B E A U T I F U L
|
||
|
||
But it would be premature to jump the gun and label
|
||
Seventeen as YM trash. The editorial slant does not suffer
|
||
from the laugh-track style happiness that infects Sassy.
|
||
Seventeen, after all, is the rag that published Sylvia Plath
|
||
in 1950. (She was also published in the Ladies Home Journal
|
||
and the Pi Delta Gamma Review, but ignore that.) The issue
|
||
reviews carried a very good fiction piece, actually worthy
|
||
of reading. It wasn't promoted very much, and appears in the
|
||
contents page as "FICTION: Leftovers by Cathi Hanauer". You
|
||
can't have too much, and this is a passing barb at best. She
|
||
also wrote the "Relating" column, which is an advice column
|
||
to the lovelorn.
|
||
|
||
The letters page was semi-interesting. Seven of the ten
|
||
letters were feedback regarding some kind of self-abuse or
|
||
suffering happening at the hands of the readers. One letter
|
||
was concerning school-leavers, three about eating
|
||
disorders, two about the persecution of the small-boobed,
|
||
and one about being stuck in the wrong corner of a love
|
||
triangle. Maybe it is only here that these girls are able to
|
||
admit that they are real people, and that is all they are.
|
||
Because if the girls can't admit that, they're lying to
|
||
themselves. Only then will they believe what the advertisers
|
||
say.
|
||
|
||
The cover girl was Samantha Mathis, which would be reason
|
||
enough to buy the whole thing. Yet, you don't get what you
|
||
pay for, because the cover feature translated to two
|
||
decent-sized pictures and 1/3rd of a page of text. cw (a
|
||
crack semiotician) called attention to the smaller picture
|
||
of the girl on a Californian beach. She appears to be
|
||
crouching down, and the shorts she is wearing have pulled up
|
||
a bit at the back, exposing a little bit of her ass. cw
|
||
pointed to the spot on the picture and smirked.
|
||
|
||
The girl on page 17 looks quite a bit like Lisa Habib from
|
||
Miz Laroche's history class at the Streetsville highschool.
|
||
That was where all the girls lived. It was the total
|
||
re-definition of egregiousness for me, I'll tell you that.
|
||
At lunches I'd go behind the portables with my walkman and
|
||
listen to Son House's 1965 recording of Death Letter Blues.
|
||
I'd have to jack up the volume to the deafness range so that
|
||
the steel-bodied National guitar would drown out the
|
||
blup-blup-blup of Camaroes tearing through the parking lot.
|
||
|
||
Page 24 finds a page on specialized swimsuits, and how to
|
||
use them to accentuate your body features. Also included is
|
||
a group of exercises YOU can use to trim unsightly soft
|
||
bits.
|
||
|
||
Batter down the hatches for the "Sex & Your Body" column.
|
||
It's hot stuff. The sub-title is "Are You Experienced?":
|
||
|
||
There's generally a sort of hierarchy of experiences,
|
||
with hand-holding and kissing at the bottom and
|
||
intercourse at the top. But in between the list gets
|
||
pretty blurry. When everyone you know talks about
|
||
everything they do and grill you about everything you do,
|
||
you may ot be able to avoid having your sexual
|
||
experience (or lack of it) be public knowledge... the
|
||
trick is too respect your body and your beliefs enough
|
||
to always protect yourself, first and foremost, and to
|
||
do what's truly right for you.
|
||
|
||
Then they pick four letters dealing with this topic. The
|
||
first two are of average level, but after that it gets
|
||
pretty hairy. The final two letters, printed verbatim:
|
||
|
||
I am a virgin and I intend to stay a virgin until I get
|
||
married. Instead of having sex, my boyfriend and I do
|
||
everything else. The other night he used his fingers. I
|
||
know it sounds gross, but I don't know how else to put
|
||
it. Well, afterward, I started to bleed. Does this mean
|
||
I'm not a virgin anymore? Did he pop my cherry?
|
||
|
||
and:
|
||
|
||
My best friend Stacy lied to her boyfriend and told him
|
||
that she wasn't a virgin. Now she's afraid that if she
|
||
has sex with him he'll know she's a virgin because
|
||
she'll be tight or it'll hurt. She's afraid to tell him
|
||
the truth because she thinks he'll hate her for lying.
|
||
If a guy's experienced, can he tell if a girl is a
|
||
virgin?
|
||
|
||
Pretty crazy stuff, better not let Mom see it. Seventeen is
|
||
coming perilously close to reality. The former letter
|
||
affords an opportunity for moralizing: The Young Lady should
|
||
take Debra Kent's advice and do some thinking for herself,
|
||
and maybe then she will shed some of her hypocrisy. She is
|
||
trapped between two conflicting desires: To "just do it,"
|
||
and to preserve the sanctitude of what she calls "my
|
||
cherry". The unpoppable cherry has nothing to do with it,
|
||
because virginity is not a biological label, but a state of
|
||
mind. This girl is running the gamut of "his fingers" and
|
||
many Latin terms and what-have-you, and certainly it is
|
||
stretching it a bit to call her an untouched virgin bride,
|
||
which is the way she would prefer to exist.
|
||
|
||
She owes honesty to the mythical husband-to-be. If she wants
|
||
to be a virgin bride, more power to her, but she should see
|
||
to it that she *is* untouched. Obviously this appears to be
|
||
beyond her means. If she wants to do these deeds with the
|
||
boyfriend, more power to her. This girl has to learn that
|
||
she has to take responsibility for her actions, and that she
|
||
cannot deliver the goods and still claim her virginity.
|
||
|
||
But again, Seventeen usually redeems itself enough to make
|
||
it worth the $2.50 cover price. (BTW: North-west
|
||
Mississaugeans can find the latest copy of Seventeen in the
|
||
magazine rack of the Streetsville Public Library @ 132 Queen
|
||
St South.) There was a little bit of truth in this issue,
|
||
too. It was found in the article by Ann Patchett with the
|
||
yuk title "How to Survive a Breakup":
|
||
|
||
If this guy is still the centre of every conversation
|
||
you're having six months after the big B, you've got to
|
||
ask yourself if you're really trying to get over him.
|
||
Maybe you think that you'll be closer to him if you
|
||
live in the past or that he'll see your love as true if
|
||
you refuse to let go. Calling his house and hanging up,
|
||
waiting around in the school parking lot to catch a
|
||
glimpse of him, hounding his friends for information,
|
||
-- none of this is going to help you get better. Nobody
|
||
knows the answers to all the questions, but one thing
|
||
is clear: He would be with you if he wanted to be with
|
||
you, and he's not.
|
||
|
||
So Seventeen comes through in the end. Ninety-five percent
|
||
of it is shit, but the other five percent gives the reader a
|
||
glimpse into what matters in the lives of these girls,
|
||
beyond the day-to-day distractions. It is also the only
|
||
magazine that can hold the attention of someone outside of
|
||
the target group. Unlike the other magazines, Seventeen is
|
||
worthwhile, and it would be a loss to see it cease to exist.
|
||
|
||
=============
|
||
Three Bitches
|
||
=============
|
||
|
||
Age of actual audience:
|
||
|
||
YM 13
|
||
Sassy 15 (and a half, ha ha)
|
||
Seventeen 17
|
||
|
||
Short-term goals:
|
||
|
||
YM Lose ten pounds
|
||
Sassy Get the latest Chili Peppers CD
|
||
Seventeen Senior prom
|
||
|
||
If it was a University:
|
||
|
||
YM Western
|
||
Sassy York
|
||
Seventeen Ottawa
|
||
|
||
If it was food:
|
||
|
||
YM Quarter pounder and shake
|
||
Sassy Haagen-dazs with nuts
|
||
Seventeen Spaghetti and to-mat-oe sauce
|
||
|
||
If it was a philosopher:
|
||
|
||
YM Machiavelli
|
||
Sassy Ghi-jac or St Augustine
|
||
Seventeen John Stuart Mill
|
||
|
||
If it had a citizenship:
|
||
|
||
YM American
|
||
Sassy American
|
||
Seventeen American
|
||
|
||
If it had an aura:
|
||
|
||
YM Violet
|
||
Sassy Magenta
|
||
Seventeen Mental Tan
|
||
|
||
If it was someone that the editors know:
|
||
|
||
YM Coby
|
||
Sassy Fiona
|
||
Seventeen JM
|
||
|
||
If it were sodapop:
|
||
|
||
YM Cream soda
|
||
Sassy Pepsi
|
||
Seventeen 7-up
|
||
|
||
If it was part of Mississauga:
|
||
|
||
YM Meadowvale
|
||
Sassy East Cooksville
|
||
Seventeen Lorne Park
|
||
|
||
In one paragraph:
|
||
|
||
YM
|
||
|
||
Keep cheek colour low key - applying a few strokes of powder
|
||
blush on the apples of your cheeks is enough to give your
|
||
face a healthy, sun-kissed glow...
|
||
(p 75)
|
||
|
||
Sassy
|
||
|
||
Did you know that women hold only 2 of 100 US Senate seats,
|
||
the same number as in 1971? When I hear things like this, I
|
||
get so mad I could spit. Enter The Women's Voting Guide.
|
||
All these totally powerful women (like Pat Schroeder and
|
||
Gloria Steinem) worked on this book to help you and moi
|
||
understand that perplexing electoral process we've been
|
||
hearing so much about...
|
||
(p 36)
|
||
|
||
Seventeen
|
||
|
||
Before I worked at McDonald's, Collie and I ate White
|
||
Castles. We'd drive in and order like fifteen - ten or
|
||
eleven for him, a few for me. I'd feed them to him while he
|
||
was driving. Then we'd go to Dunkin' Donuts [sic] for
|
||
chocolate creme-filleds and Munchkins...
|
||
(p 100)
|
||
|
||
=============
|
||
Epilogue
|
||
Chris Woodill
|
||
=============
|
||
|
||
This is the first edition of Cropduster, and it is I suppose
|
||
a "labour of love," although such a phrase is exactly what would
|
||
be said in any of the three mags examined.
|
||
|
||
We make no promises in terms of future issues, and as this
|
||
particular issue took about three months to produce, I wouldn't
|
||
hold your breath. Future issues may or may not surface as they
|
||
come down the pike, depending on how busy or lazy the authors get
|
||
in their real lives.
|
||
|
||
cw - August 30th, 1992.
|
||
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
roasleen:ac174
|
||
|
||
|