Dec. 7 - Dec. 13, 2001

Asiaweek Magazine Closes
     
Furthering hard times in Hong Kong media
By Dirk Beveridge/AP
Adding to the gloom in Hong Kong's battered media industry, the publisher Time 
Inc. on Nov. 29 shut down its magazine Asiaweek, eliminating 80 jobs and one of 
the region's two big English-language newsweeklies. 

Asiaweek President Peter Brack said a difficult market had been made even worse 
by the financial fallout from the Sept. 11 terror attacks, forcing the closure 
that follows other rounds of job losses in the news business here. 

At Asiaweek's corporate parent, Time Inc., Chairman and Chief Executive Don 
Logan said in a statement that the decision was made after reviewing Asiaweek's 
"performance and its long-term business prospects." 

Logan's statement gave no details on the magazine's finances and a spokeswoman, 
Anna Soellner, said she could not provide "an exact number" for any losses. 

Asiaweek said the issue released on Nov. 29 would be its last, leaving Asia 
with just one big regional newsweekly, the Far Eastern Economic Review (FEER), 
which recently saw its editorial staff merged with the daily Asian Wall Street 
Journal for a loss of 36 editorial jobs. 

Asiaweek had been the main competitor for FEER, published by Dow Jones & Co. 

Time Inc. said the Asiaweek staff will be paid through the end of December and 
then offered help finding other work, possibly including jobs elsewhere in Time 
Inc. or AOL Time Warner. 

Asiaweek was launched in 1975 and the company had attempted earlier this year 
to rejuvenate the magazine with a new focus on business news. 

Asiaweek ended with a circulation of 120,000 but was closed along with other 
Time Inc. magazines that have been hit by hard times in the global advertising 
industry. 

"Our staff's passion, dedication and enthusiasm, which succeeded in creating a 
far better magazine earlier this year, have been truly impressive - and 
certainly made the decision even more painful," Brack said in a statement 
issued after he met with the magazine's employees.

Several Asiaweek journalists, reached by telephone, declined to comment. About 
half of the jobs being lost were editorial positions, Soellner said. 

The recent bad economic times have prompted other job cuts in the Hong Kong 
media business, including 18 positions at the English-language daily South 
China Morning Post, and 100 jobs at its rival, the tabloid Hong Kong iMail.


  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: radityo djadjoeri 
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] ; [email protected] 
  Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  Sent: Monday, December 11, 2006 5:34 PM
  Subject: [mediacare] Asiaweek?



  Kalau tak keliru, majalah Asiaweek sudah mati bertahun-tahun lalu. Namun, 
sepertinya Asiaweek belum pernah terbit dalam bahasa Indonesia. Mungkin yang 
Anda maksud Business Week? Nah, kalau yang ini, seminggu lalu saya masih baca. 


  Asiaweek 
  Posted by: "Ardas, Arlina Veralda" [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  Sun Dec 10, 2006 7:50 pm (PST) 
  Dear all

  Mo tanya dong... denger2 majalah Asiaweek (baik yang bhs Indonesia & bhs
  Inggris) udah mati ya?

  Mohon pencerahannya 

  Thanx

  Lily




------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Access over 1 million songs - Yahoo! Music Unlimited.

   


------------------------------------------------------------------------------


  No virus found in this incoming message.
  Checked by AVG Free Edition.
  Version: 7.1.409 / Virus Database: 268.15.15/581 - Release Date: 12/9/2006

<<attachment: biz_asiaweek.jpg>>

Kirim email ke