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Comments   (11)

Posted by Troy on Tue Dec 8, 2009 at 03.46 pm

#2
Thanks for this. Best article I've read in a while. Recently left a mag that has lost the majority of its talent because everyone was so miserable...

Posted by anonymous on Thu Dec 10, 2009 at 01.14 pm

#3
I can no longer read about George Lois without questioning many of his claims. Has anyone else heard Act One of this American Life piece?

Posted by Rod Shone on Thu Dec 10, 2009 at 02.48 pm

#4
A very interesting article. Curiously the best designed print media in the UK today is The Guardian newspaper. Wonderful pictures and use of pictures, good use of illustration, understated design but very functional and judicious use of white space. A tendency to too many supplements is a slight problem though.

Posted by anonymous on Thu Dec 10, 2009 at 06.08 pm

#5
Perfectly said, profanities and all. Magazine design helps sell publications, more so then lots of mindless tiny tidbits filing up the page.

Posted by anonymous on Thu Dec 10, 2009 at 06.48 pm

#6
You are soooooooo right.

Posted by anonymous on Tue Dec 15, 2009 at 04.24 pm

#7
I agree. Design helps sell. And designers never get credit. It's always: Words by so-and-so, Images by such-and-such. Then the editors are the ones that get credit when a title earns an achievement. Bull. Yeah? But who made it inviting to read?

Posted by vanderleun on Wed Dec 16, 2009 at 09.21 pm

#8
The degree and the depth to which Graydon Carter's essential assholiness extends cannot be overstated.

Posted by EnergonCube on Thu Dec 17, 2009 at 06.01 pm

#9
And suddenly, I love this man. So, so right!

Posted by tal on Thu Dec 17, 2009 at 10.11 pm

#10
I admire Lois' work as much as anyone, but the truth is lack of aesthetics or excessive content has NOTHING to do with the lack of white space in magazine design today. It has everything to do with packing magazines with as many ads as possible. MORE WHITE SPACE=LESS AD REVENUE. If a magazine designer went up to a publisher and said, "We need more white space and less ads," I'd expect the publisherr to say, "Okay. who should we fire first?" Because that's what it would come down to.

Posted by Jake on Thu Jan 7, 2010 at 04.30 am

#11
what was the last project lois worked on? He is a man I admire much, but in all his interviews he talks a big game, I would like to see Esquire hire him to do some covers and see if he has what it takes to do a knock out cover.

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