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Men's Health magazine, published by Rodale, Inc. in Emmaus, Pennsylvania, was the best-selling men's magazine on U.S. newsstands in 2006. [1] This is a list of men's magazines from around the world. These are magazines (periodical print publications) that have been published primarily for a readership of men.
The genre was popular from approximately the early 1950s until the mid 1960s. With the legalization and increased availability of gay pornographic magazines and videos in the late 1960s and 1970s, most physique magazines either evolved to include more explicit material or went out of business.
Country Journal, PRIMEDIA Consumer Magazines & Internet Group (1974–2001) Country Life in America (1901–1942) Country, The Magazine of the Hamptons, M. Shanken Communications Inc. (1998–2001) Country Song Roundup, Country Song Roundup Inc. (1949–2001) The Courier (1968–2005) Cracked (1958–2007) Crazy Magazine (1973–1983)
Science fiction magazines established in the 1960s (8 P) This page was last edited on 17 February 2019, at 11:48 (UTC). Text ...
The magazine was the source for a number of other books, including True, A Treasury of True: The Best from 20 Years of the Man's Magazine (Barnes, 1956), edited by Charles N. Barnard and illustrated by Carl Pfeufer, and Bar Guide (Fawcett, 1950) by Ted Shane and Virgil Partch.
Men's adventure is a genre of magazine that was published in the United States from the 1940s until the early 1970s. Catering to a male audience, these magazines featured pin-up girls and lurid tales of adventure that typically were promoted as true stories narrated in first-person by the participants or in an 'as told to' style.
Man About Town, later About Town and lastly Town, was a British men's magazine of the 1950s and 1960s. Press Gazette described it in 2004 as the "progenitor of all today's men's style magazines". [1] It was the customer offshoot of the well-established weekly trade magazine for tailors, The Tailor & Cutter.
From 1955 to c. 1971 the publisher was City Magazines, and the headquarters were in London. [5] It was known as Parade and Blighty for the final weeks of 1959, when it finally became Parade in 1960. [6] The magazine's tagline in 1960 was "The man's magazine women love to read." [4]