Current affairs magazine The Week has closed its Australian edition after four years of publishing.
The title, which was launched in Australia by British publisher Dennis Publishing in 2008, has told its subscribers that the 12 October edition would be its last.
The message to subscribers read:
Unfortunately, The Week has ceased publication of its Australian Edition and Administrators have been appointed to its publisher. The final edition was the current issue of the magazine, which went on sale 12 October 2012. Subscribers will receive no further issues of The Week.
The Week’s Australian circulation was 28,004, according to the latest Audit Bureau of Circulations data.
The magazine was backed by considerable marketing support, with the slogan ‘You’re too busy not to read it’.
The Australian edition of The Week was also distributed in Singapore, Hong Kong and New Zealand.
When the title launched, David Salter, executive producer of Media Watch was editor-in-chief.
The title, which was launched in Australia by British publisher Dennis Publishing in 2008, has told its subscribers that the 12 October edition would be its last.
The message to subscribers read:
Unfortunately, The Week has ceased publication of its Australian Edition and Administrators have been appointed to its publisher. The final edition was the current issue of the magazine, which went on sale 12 October 2012. Subscribers will receive no further issues of The Week.
The Week’s Australian circulation was 28,004, according to the latest Audit Bureau of Circulations data.
The magazine was backed by considerable marketing support, with the slogan ‘You’re too busy not to read it’.
The Australian edition of The Week was also distributed in Singapore, Hong Kong and New Zealand.
When the title launched, David Salter, executive producer of Media Watch was editor-in-chief.
- 10/19/2012
- by Robin Hicks
- Encore Magazine
Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
Armed with my over-sized golf umbrella, I set off to see the last performance of “A Russian Play” written by John Thompson and directed by David Salter at the Giant Olive theatre above the Lion and Unicorn Pub in Kentish Town. I was shocked to find so many people in the pub on a rainy Sunday afternoon, but it was packed and not to see the rugby! The Lion and Unicorn Pub is a bit of a diamond in the rough. Just like the play it is set in dingy surroundings, Kentish Town has always had that knockabout appeal to me, but the interior is lovely , quaint and definitely worth a visit.
“A Russian play” is set in the very cold winter of 1916 in Petrograd. The war is not over with the Germans and people are hungry. In a tiny room we find a disheveled and freezing Fyodor,...
Armed with my over-sized golf umbrella, I set off to see the last performance of “A Russian Play” written by John Thompson and directed by David Salter at the Giant Olive theatre above the Lion and Unicorn Pub in Kentish Town. I was shocked to find so many people in the pub on a rainy Sunday afternoon, but it was packed and not to see the rugby! The Lion and Unicorn Pub is a bit of a diamond in the rough. Just like the play it is set in dingy surroundings, Kentish Town has always had that knockabout appeal to me, but the interior is lovely , quaint and definitely worth a visit.
“A Russian play” is set in the very cold winter of 1916 in Petrograd. The war is not over with the Germans and people are hungry. In a tiny room we find a disheveled and freezing Fyodor,...
- 3/6/2012
- by MJ Palleschi
- Obsessed with Film
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