Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

The Reader Magazine

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Editor
  
Christopher Theodore

Total circulation
  
390,000

Frequency
  
quarterly

Year founded
  
November 2000

Categories
  
local news, global news

Founder
  
Christopher Theodore Hajnalka Hogue

The Reader Magazine is a free, printed, quarterly magazine based in Redlands, California containing public interest journalism. It has a circulation of 390,000 by mail. In 2011 the magazine was accused of plagiarism by Columbia Journalism Review, which it denied.

Contents

History

The Reader Magazine was founded by Christopher Theodore in November 2000 and originally called The Redlands Community Coupon Book. The first issue appeared January 2001. The first issue was a twelve-page coupon magazine with four-pages of community news mailed to 30,000 households. From 2002 to 2004, the publication was called The Redlands Reader during which time The Yucaipa Reader was launched, which increased the circulation to 60,000 households.

In 2005, the name of the publication was changed to The Reader Magazine and circulation doubled to 120,000 households by including the cities of: Banning, Beaumont, Colton, Grand Terrace, Loma Linda, Highland, and San Bernardino. As of 2015, the largest Reader Magazine of the four regional publications is 40-pages, half news content and half local advertising. The four Reader Magazines are mailed to a total of 390,000 persons in San Bernardino and Riverside counties.

Controversy

In 2011, The Reader Magazine was described in the Columbia Journalism Review as employing a business model based on plagiarism, when they identified a number of cases of suspected plagiarism in the publication. These accusations were denied by The Reader. The Columbia Journalism Review subsequently reported that The Reader appeared to have reformed. The Reader undertook legal action against the Columbia Journalism Review and the article's author.

References

The Reader Magazine Wikipedia