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- <text id=91TT0075>
- <title>
- Jan. 14, 1991: Black, White And Green All Over
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Jan. 14, 1991 Breast Cancer
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PRESS, Page 47
- Black, White and Green All Over
- </hdr><body>
- <p>A freshet of ecopublishers reaches out to the mainstream
- </p>
- <p> Most environmentalists espouse recycling, but Andre
- Carothers, editor of the bimonthly Greenpeace, implores his
- readers to pass the magazine on to friends or institutions
- before letting it go to the shredder. Now Carothers himself is
- looking for a wider audience for Greenpeace, which normally
- serves as a bonus house organ for 2 million members of its
- eponymous environmental organization. Last week he started to
- put some 20,000 copies of the publication on national
- newsstands and in bookstores, hoping to attract new readers with
- </p>
- <p>movement and the planet."
- </p>
- <p> Carothers is not alone. Suddenly, a freshet of environmental
- publications--some old, like Greenpeace, some new--is
- striving for a mainstream audience, feeding on the growing
- awareness of a planetary threat. "The world is going to hell,
- and people are reading about soap operas," scolds Doug Moss,
- founder of E, a year-old bimonthly (circ. 75,000), who sees his
- competition as "fluff magazines that I wish would go away." New
- titles like Garbage, Buzzworm and Design Spirit--all aimed
- at general readers--have joined Audubon, Mother Earth News
- and other more established journals that have recently increased
- their emphasis on environmental concerns.
- </p>
- <p> Greenpeace is the most opinionated of the new group. The
- current issue attacks Senator Richard Lugar and Congressman
- Kika de la Garza for allegedly helping allow imported
- vegetables to be treated with chemicals banned in the U.S. and
- derides U.S. News & World Report for promoting the views of a
- nuclear-industry coalition. Redesigned to enhance its appeal
- to general readers, the 28-page journal, which sells for $1.95,
- still resembles a house organ more than a slick consumer
- magazine. It is packed with reporting on the politics of
- nuclear testing, firsthand accounts of Greenpeace nautical
- confrontations with the Soviets and surprisingly attractive
- graphics. But it suffers from an overreliance on unnamed and
- Greenpeace-connected sources for its allegations and opinions.
- </p>
- <p> Garbage, a Brooklyn-based bimonthly that has increased its
- circulation 50%, to 150,000, in its first year of publication,
- generally limits its advocacy to environmental consumerism.
- Articles focus on practical topics like designing kitchens for
- recycling and gardening without pesticides. Publisher Patricia
- Poore says she provides "tips and tools" for readers who "want
- to get off the consume-it, then trash-it treadmill." E, a
- bimonthly based in Norwalk, Conn., publishes a mixture of
- opinion and news articles and openly encourages political
- activism. At the end of a story about whale hunting, for
- instance, readers are invited to lobby for legislation that
- would protect the endangered mammals. By contrast, Buzzworm,
- a Boulder-based bimonthly (circ. 75,000), shies away from
- editorializing. "We're the only magazine that doesn't take a
- stand," boasts publisher Joseph Daniels. Instead the magazine
- specializes in photo spreads of wildlife and exotic locations.
- </p>
- <p> In line with their high-minded mission, almost all the
- ecomagazines are printed on recycled paper. Greenpeace accepts
- no advertising, and E takes ads only from makers of such
- products as cotton grocery bags and organic popcorn. Some of
- the other magazines are less restrictive, so long as an
- advertiser's message is judged to be environmentally sound.
- "Even a little bit of good from a bad company is good," says
- Daniels. None of the new titles have yet produced anything but
- red ink. Still their publishers are optimistic. Says Poore:
- "Given the information, people tend to do the right thing." So
- far as she and the other ecopublishers are concerned, green is
- the color of the future.
- </p>
- <p>By Leslie Whitaker.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-