Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Motor Trend Magazine

Motor Trend

by William J. McGee , Wednesday, October 29, 2008
 
In John Updike's "Rabbit is Rich" -- set during one of our previous gas crises, way back in 1979 -- a Toyota salesman muses on the good old days: "Gasoline...Didn't we used to burn it up? I had an Imperial once with twin carburetors and when you took off the filter and looked down through the inlet valve when the thing was idling it looked like a toilet being flushed."

Few magazine markets put the consumption in "consumer" quite like the automotive enthusiast field. So now that our long-term love of the internal-combustion engine is destroying our economy, our foreign policy, and even our planet, how does a car mag celebrate the machines that threaten to strangle us all?

Motor Trend still seems to be adjusting to such seismic shifts. On the one hand, the November issue's cover photo touts the 2010 Fiesta, "The 40-MPG Ford in Your Future." Yet many of the features still focus on Performance Über Alles. The gushing road test of the Cadillac CTS-V heralds a transmission that "tops out at a reported 193 MPH in sixth" (that is not a typo), but you need to dig down into the stats box to find a less impressive figure: 13-14 city MPG.

For those of us who grew up loving cars, MT was must reading. Since its inception in 1949, the Los Angeles-based magazine always celebrated car culture, long before Tom Wolfe was hip to kandy-kolored tangerine-flake streamline babies. And there was valuable expertise as well: Black-and-white photos always depicted guys in bow ties and lab coats jotting furiously on clipboards as Detroit behemoths fishtailed past traffic cones with fifth-wheel electric odometers strapped to rear bumpers.

Today the Motor Trend brand truly has become multimedia, as it boasts sister publications, a nationally broadcast TV program, syndicated radio show, multiple Web sites, and auto shows. The magazine is probably best known for its coveted Car of the Year Award, which has expanded to include Truck of the Year and Sport Utility of the Year as well.

However, it still seems MT remains more about MPH than MPG, and other articles underscore this trend. Take "Veni Vidi Veci," a feature highlighting the European tour of a fire-engine-red Dodge Challenger, and illustrated by a close-up of a digitalized 173 MPH glowing on the dashboard. Surely it's no coincidence the Challenger itself is an exhumed retro-vehicle literally designed to make baby boomers time-travel back to the muscle cars of their 25-cents-per-gallon youth.

Meanwhile, this article folds back to reveal... a three-page ad spread from Dodge, flaunting a fire-engine red Challenger: "Born in America. Celebrated in Europe." With MT, advertorials seem... well, seamless. It's worth noting there are a slew of magazines out there (not to mention Web sites, books, and TV shows) advising you how to buy your next car. But MT's coziness with the folks who build and sell those cars seems to raise an editorial cautionary flag.

The most interesting section of the entire issue is an extensive, detailed Buyer's Guide, in this case for SUVs, trucks, and minivans. It runs across no less than 40 pages and is stocked with statistics. Yet what's striking is this layout's resemblance to Consumer Reports -- even the fonts and colors seem to have been lifted from that publication. Full disclosure here: I'm a frequent contributor to CR, though never on automotive issues. But you don't need me to remind you that advertising-free CR -- unlike car magazines -- anonymously buys the vehicles it tests, rather than accepting hand-picked loaners from the manufacturers.

Then again, the consumer-protection movement never sat well with many automotive magazines. (It's no secret many car enthusiasts hate Ralph Nader more than they hate Al Gore.) MT's real roots are on display in the Archive section, which in this issue highlights the very first Car of the Year -- a 1949 Cadillac complete with fat whitewall tires and the new overhead-valve V-8. A sidebar pines for the January 1968 cover spread that showcased muscle cars like the Mustang and Camaro in their halcyon era.

No question, those were good old days, when American cylinders were unchallenged in tearing up the asphalt. But these days it's hard to get excited about cars that still suck gasoline like flushing toilets. About all the "enthusiasts" can say in response is... drill, baby, drill.

MAG STATS

Publisher: Source Interlink Media Inc.
Frequency: 12 times per year
Web site

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William J. McGee is a freelance journalist who writes a monthly travel column for USAToday.com. 

Magazine Rack for Wednesday, October 29, 2008:
http://blogs.mediapost.com/magazine_rack/?p=533

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Saturday, October 04, 2008

Form-Free Phone Books Announced

Phonesbook.com Announces Form-Free Phone Books for Over 280 Regions

Innovative new directory navigation performed only by clicking. No more typing in names and numbers; point and click navigate this directory down to the person you need.

San Francisco, CA, October 03, 2008 -- Phonesbook.com becomes the first free white pages directory service for locating people by name, address or phone number on-line with absolutely no keyboard typing required. Instead, users select which region from a list of 280 metropolitans ordered by city and state, and then using a "refine search" dynamic link, are able to simply click their way through pages in order to find the exact people search results they are looking for.

Directory listings within phonesbook.com are updated on a monthly basis from only the very best sources. This provides an extremely compelling and comprehensive set of names, addresses, and phone numbers for people in the United States.

Phonesbooks.com is dedicated to continuing it's "form free" web services. This novel approach grants the Internet at large the greatest breadth of available listings in a simple "point and click" interface. Try it today at www.phonesbook.com

Contact Information
Phonesbook.com
Julie Lyons
+1-425-974-6100
phonesbook@gmail.com
www.phonesbook.com/


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Full Color Self Published Books

Xlibris Announces the Addition of Landscape Format for Full Color Self Published Books

Xlibris' new printing facility enables them to add landscape format to their options for full-color book publishing services.

Philadelphia, PA, October 02, 2008 -- Xlibris, the self-publishing industry leader, has announced the addition of a new format for books published in full-color. With the most comprehensive range of full-color publishing services available on the market today, this latest addition has given them an additional edge over the competition.

Xlibris was the first print on demand publisher to offer full-color book publishing, and continues their tradition of being a pioneer in the industry with this latest offering. Now with six publishing packages to choose from, all specifically designed for full-color books, and three different book formats, no one can question their dominance of the industry.

The new landscape format is 11.5" wide and 9.2" high, and is available in both paperback and case-bound (hardback) formats. This is in addition to the existing formats of 8.5" by 8.5" and the portrait orientation of 8.5" wide by 11" high.

More information about Xlibris' Full-Color Publishing Packages can be found at www.xlibris.com. The Xlibris Customer Service Hotline is available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week by phone at 1-888-795-4274, or e-mail at publishtoday@xlibris.com.

About Xlibris
Xlibris was founded in 1997 and, as the leading publishing services provider for authors, has helped to publish more than 20,000 titles. Xlibris is based in Philadelphia, PA and provides authors with direct and personal access to quality publication in hardcover, trade paperback, custom leather-bound, and full-color formats.

For more information, please visit www.xlibris.com, e-mail pressrelease@xlibris.com or call at 1-888-795-4247, to receive a free publishing guide.

Contact Information
Xlibris Corporation
Michael McCain
1-888-795-4274 ext 7111
pressrelease@xlibris.com
www.xlibris.com
International Plaza II, Suite 410


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