BY Christopher Zara | December 19 2012 2:34 PM
When
Time magazine named Charles Lindbergh its first Man of the Year in 1927,
superlative journalism was still a fresh concept.
The Oscars weren’t born yet.
And the notion of “Best Of” still promised to serve an untapped niche.
But
at a time when media consumers are inundated with listicles at every turn (a
quick look on BuzzFeed’s homepage yielded “10 Faces You Make When You’re Stuck In
A Bad Relationship”), it’s fair to question the relevance of Time magazine’s
time-honored practice.
The idea -- some would use the word conceit -- of
choosing a single person to sum up a year’s worth of events seems trite at best.
And the staleness of the concept was only underscored on Wednesday morning when
the magazine announced that it had chosen President Barack Obama as its Person of
the Year for 2012, his second time making the list.
The
choice brought its usual share of cheers, jeers and yawns, but not more so than
in past years. Ultimately, though, it could hardly be seen as a surprise. Many
presidents, including FDR, Reagan, Clinton and even Gorbachev, have made the
list twice. Not that Obama isn’t fully deserving of the honor, but couldn’t the
magazine that once chose Adolf Hitler as its man of the year shake things up
once in a while?
It’s worth pointing
out that Time changed the name of its list to the gender-neutral “Person of the
Year” in 1999, but it hasn’t chosen a woman since 1986, when it bestowed
Philippine President Corazon Aquino with the title. (Women have since shared
the spotlight with men in years when multiple people were chosen for the
cover.) That glaring omission could have changed this year if Time had gone
with the bolder choice of naming either Malala Yousafzai, the teenage Pakistani
activist, or Marissa Mayer, the CEO of Yahoo, as its person of the year. Both made
the short list of
possibilities, and according to Wednesday morning’s announcement on the “Today”
show, Yousafzai was a favorite -- a crusader shot in the head by the Taliban
simply for speaking out in favor of better girls’ education.
For Time’s part, it’s clear
that the Person of the Year is extremely valuable to its brand. It’s the one
day out of the year when everyone is talking about Time magazine, a publication
whose dedication to habitual general-interest coverage has come to symbolize
the folly of the Old Guard. Newsweekly magazines, as evidenced by the imminent demise of
Newsweek this year, have been among the media segments hardest hit by the
digital migration. Struggling to buck that trend, Time has proved somewhat
resilient, posting a 6 percent increase in single-copy sales in 2011, according to the
Pew Research Center. But that’s after a 20 percent decline the year before.
Overall, its circulation has been flat, which doesn’t offer much wiggle room
for risk taking.
And in the end, this month’s nicely designed cover featuring
a pensive Obama bathed in bluish grays and browns is likely to offer a nice
boost for newsstand sales. Time magazine’s parent company, Time Warner (NYSE:
TWX), could use it. Judging from its recent quarterly earnings report,
the company’s publishing unit -- which makes up an estimated 12 percent of its
total stock price -- suffered an 8.8 percent decline from the same period last
year. In an October research note, Marci Ryvicker, a senior analyst at Wells
Fargo, wrote that “management will remain focused on cost controls” for the
foreseeable future.
That
means outside-the-box thinking is probably being put on hold for a while.
Time’s brand-defining listicle is here to stay, and it isn’t likely to get more
interesting any time soon. In fact, the last time Time’s Person of the Year
caused any extended chatter was in 2006, when it heralded the age of
user-generated content by giving the honor to “you.” Though controversial at
the time, it was a daring choice, complete with a novelty cover that featured a
working mirror. But one can only guess how much extra it cost to print.
http://www.ibtimes.com/time-magazines-person-year-still-relevant-951716
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