¶ … worlds they create for us: The similar yet different worlds of female and male fitness of "Shape" for women and "Men's Health"
In answering the question, what worlds do magazines create for their readership, one must first ask, whom is the readership? In an increasingly niche-specific and targeted market base, through the use of direct mail, the Internet, and a better ability to target specific and desirable segments of the population, it may seem anachronistic to speak of what is simply a women's magazine or a men's magazine. The most fair way thus to compare male and female magazines thus may not be to speciously complain that a magazine such as "Good Housekeeping," targeted at stay-at-home women with children, does not present as many helpful suggested bits of career and 'going out on the town' advice such as "Esquire." Rather, it is to take two parallel magazines, such as "Shape" and "Men's Health," with similar market bases that target women and men with similar interests and from similar lifestyles and age groups and to compare the different ways the magazines conceptualizes its readership and the magazine's advertising attempts to influence the targeting reading populations, despite the mutual parallel between the target audiences in its interests in living a fit lifestyle.
Both magazines discuss fitness, nutrition, going out, and what to wear when working out and going out on a monthly basis, in both male and female incarnations. One of the most pernicious stereotypes that cling to women's magazines, as noted by Mary Kay Blakely, in her essay, "Help or Hindrance? Women's Magazines Offer Readers Little Fear, Failure" is that such women's-targeted magazines...
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