As our ideas begin to turn into reality - mark this date in the history books - we also have to be careful to take a deeper notice of the messages and connotations behind the front covers of successful publications. What do the established names use to their reach to say? How do they speak our for or against the issues of the day? Can two words say as much as a galaxy of hi-tech pictures? Well as you can see below, less can be more and bigger can be better, in our magazine front cover review.
This is a good example of extreme minimalism from an
established, notable magazine supplement. While simple, the extreme black and
white colour contrast provides an added emphasis to the editorial opinion,
which nearly all of its readers will be accustomed. The fact that the masthead
has also changed its colour code to reflect the mood – which is one of despair,
as shown by the majorly black full cover.
Another magazine supplement, The New York Times Magazine,
shows a strong example of how a visual metaphor can be used to create a cover
that would be massively considered to be out of the ordinary about a major
political figure - in their infamous Planet Hilary cover.
The presentation of Clinton as a “planet at the centre of a
her own political universe – see this initial mockup below along with man-in-the-moon
image from the 1902 silent film “Le Voyage Dans la Lune – can be seen as an
endorsement from the magazine of her political standing, a connotation towards
it’s readership that can be seen to endorse it’s own political standing through
it’s front cover.
The portrayal of the political process through a solar
system with galaxies and nebulas alongside Clinton as a “sun” like figures can
also be seen to pass comment upon the political working of a run for president;
It is generally the sign of a long standing publication when such opinion is
communicated through the page layouts.
Another example of overt audience communication through the
front cover weekly magazine in the same vein, The New Yorker. See here their
two covers on Obamacare, the medical insurance program that has so divided American
opinion.
Above, the classical caricature republication politicians –
note that just enough of John Bohener’s face is in picture for him to be
recognised having swallowed the medicine’ – of Obamacare, given in kind by the
president himself. Mitch McConnell’s and Ted Cruz’s expressions have been turned
from their classic media poses (see below) into those of toddlers thanks to the
reddening of cheeks with simple pencil.
But when the initial exchange launched, with online issues
turning the much-anticipated launch into a farce, the boot was totally on the
other foot as the same visual style – nothing more than a hand-drawn front
cover with a caricature style of the main players – was used to mock the
technological failure of the operation, with to be fired healthcare secretary
Katherine Sebelius standing with her fingers crossed as a ‘tech guy’ puts a
floppy disk into a clearly outdated computer while President Obama holds a
classical retro phone in the top hand corner. The outdated equipment is a clear
mocking of the inefficiency of the operation while Sebelius crossing her
fingers connotes a lack of control and incompetence regarding the situation.
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