Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Saturday Review (U.S. magazine)

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Frequency
  
Weekly

Publisher
  
various

First issue
  
1920 (1920-month)

Circulation
  
660,000 (1971)

Founder
  
Henry Seidel Canby

Former editors
  
Norman Cousins, 1940–71

Saturday Review, previously The Saturday Review of Literature, was an American weekly magazine established in 1924. Norman Cousins was the editor from 1940 to 1971.

Contents

At its peak, Saturday Review was influential as the base of several widely read critics (e.g., Wilder Hobson, music critic Irving Kolodin, and theater critics John Mason Brown and Henry Hewes), and was often known by its initials as SR. It was never very profitable and eventually succumbed to the decline of general-interest magazines after restructuring and trying to reinvent itself more than once during the 1970s and 1980s.

Publishing history

From 1920 to 1924, Literary Review was a Saturday supplement to the New York Evening Post. Henry Seidel Canby established it as a separate publication in 1924. Until 1952, it was known as The Saturday Review of Literature.

The magazine was purchased by the McCall Corporation in 1961.

Saturday Review reached its maximum circulation of 660,000 in 1971. Longtime editor Norman Cousins resigned when it was sold to a group led by the two co-founders of Psychology Today, which they had recently sold to Boise Cascade. They split the magazine into four separate monthlies, but the experiment ended in insolvency two years later. Former editor Cousins purchased it and recombined the units with World, a new magazine he had started in the meantime. Briefly it was called SR World before it reverted to Saturday Review. The magazine was sold in 1977 to a group led by Carll Tucker, who sold it in 1980 to Macro Communications, the owner of the business magazine Financial World. It was insolvent again in 1982 and was sold to Missouri entrepreneur Jeffrey Gluck. A new group of investors in 1984 resurrected it briefly. According to Greg Lindsay writing for Folio twenty years later, most people consider 1982 "the year Saturday Review died".

Penthouse publisher Bob Guccione acquired all properties in 1987 and used the title briefly from 1993 for an online publication at AOL.

Current revival

In December 2010, Philadelphia Inquirer business columnist Joseph N. DiStefano reported in his blog that John Elduff of JTE Multimedia planned to "revive" both Collier's and Saturday Review as print and online magazines —mainly print, "for Americans 55 to 90". Both would "have a liberal share of attention to research" and look like they did in the 1950s.

JTE Multimedia currently makes use of the Saturday Review name with its website, Saturday Review–Drug Trials, which reports on clinical drug research, focusing on inconclusive and negative trial results.

References

Saturday Review (U.S. magazine) Wikipedia