![]() In March 2014 announced that Nuts might soon cease publication after a 30-day consultation with staff.ĭigital monthly sales of 8,776 suggested to industry observers that the magazine was not making a successful transition to an online platform the magazine's last issue was published on 29 April 2014., a regular model for Nuts, appeared on the cover of the last issue the Independent journalist Ella Alexander wrote at the time: 'The magazine stayed true to its ethos right until – passive, with women for everyone.' Lad culture Official web site. Smith withdrew the publication in response to the Co-op's request for publishers to put their'lads' mags' in modesty bags to mask their explicit front covers.The Co-op said. On 8 August 2013, the magazine's editor, announced that their publication would no longer be sold by Co-op supermarkets. The average number of copies sold in the second half of 2013 was 53,342, whereas the magazine had sales of 306,802 at its peak in 2005. Other magazines in competition with Nuts were Zip and men's monthly publications such as FHM and Loaded the circulation of the magazine declined from 2007 onwards. However, since the start of the respective magazines, Nuts always outsold Zoo, with the sales figures for the half of 2013 showing a gap of nearly 25,000 copies per week. Nuts' main rival magazine was, aimed at much the same demographic, 18–30 year old men, had similar content. Nuts' marketing campaign at its launch in 2004 used the slogan, 'When You Really Need Something Funny' the magazine closed in April 2014. Nuts is a defunct British lads' mag published weekly in the and sold every Tuesday. Jackson, Peter Stevenson, Nick Brooks, Kate (2001).Ĭambridge, UK Malden, Massachusetts: Polity Press Blackwell Publishers. Pin-up mania!: the golden age of men's magazines, 1950-1967. ![]() 'Health and the social construction of masculinity in ' Men's Health' magazine'. 'Ironic discourse: evasive masculinity in men's lifestyle magazines'. ![]() 'Male gossip and language play in the letters pages of men's lifestyle magazines'.ģ4 (4): 19–33. Oxford, UK Malden, Massachusetts, USA: Blackwell Pub./Sociological Review. Masculinity and men's lifestyle magazines. And specifically men's magazines in North America) contain or bare- at most, accompanied by articles about the woman that is pictured (usually models, actresses or other celebrities) supplemented with consumer stories about men's fashion, cars, tools, toys, music, TV and film, sports, foods, or 'guy tales' of sexual encounters.International. ![]() See also:Men's lifestyle magazines ( lads' mags or laddie mags in the U.K. ![]()
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