DC.ModernLuxury.com

Modern Luxury Media is the premier luxury lifestyle publisher in the United States. With titles in the most influential major cities, Modern Luxury excels in capturing the urbane metropolitan lifestyle.

Whether it's a revealing celebrity profile, a special feature on the chicest trends in design, cutting-edge fashion spreads or an in-depth review of the city's hot spots, our magazines consistently engage the affluent reader. Choose from more than 30 publications in 13 major markets and view most of them, interactively, with our digital editions.

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Girlfriend is Australia's best teen girls magazine. It is independent, smart, a little bit naughty and pretty damn cool. It is still familiar, comfortable and trusted like a good friend but it also likes to shock you with its honesty, surprise you with its innovation, engage you with its quality and impress you with its creativity.

The new Girlfriend is confident, fun, loud, and pretty. She's the leader, the trouble-maker, she tells it like it is, she's the one that can make anything happen. She's the kind of girl that everyone teenager wants to be. Girlfriend understands the importance of youth culture and gives it a home. No girl can get by without her Girlfriend.

Country: Australia
City: Sydney
SKP

Arena was a British monthly men's magazine. The defunct magazine was created in 1986 by Nick Logan, who had started The Face in 1980, to focus on trends in fashion and entertainment. British graphic designer Neville Brody, who had designed The Face, designed Arena's launch appearance. On March 3, 2009 Bauer Consumer Media announced that Arena would be suspended from publication. The last edition was sold on March 12 2009.

The magazine featured articles on food, movies, fitness, sex, music, toys, and books. It was pitched at a similarly upscale audience to GQ, attempting to offer a more adult read than lad mags like Maxim and FHM, and gearing itself specifically towards the "black collar worker".

Arena launched the careers of several prominent British media professionals, among them Dylan Jones, the editor of GQ UK who had served as Arena's editor in the late 1980s.

In July 2006, facing competition from the internet, the editorial team behind Arena launched a team blog which features regular posts from its contributors.

In spite of this, magazine circulation continued to fall and in 2007, Giles Hattersley, chief interviewer at The Sunday Times was brought in as Editor. Hattersley oversaw a revamp of the publication and in November 2007, the magazine relaunched with a new design and new palate of content, featuring David Beckham on its cover.

Hattersley returned to The Sunday Times in March 2008 and was replaced in the interim by deputy editor Mat Smith. Smith left in August 2008 to take over as features director at Esquire UK.

As of April 2009, international editions of Arena outside the UK continue to be published. These editions include Ukraine, Turkey, Korea and Thailand. Arena Singapore, the first English language edition outside the UK, was launched on October 27, 2006 by the publishing division of Mediacorp. Mediacorp had announced on 30 April 2009 that it was closing the Singapore edition of ARENA.

Country: United Kingdom
City: London
QP
Country: United States
City: Los Angeles
My
Country: Denmark
City: Copenhagen
Country: Italy
City: Milan
Country: Poland
City: Warsaw

Missbehave was a Brooklyn-based women's magazine that covered fashion, music, art and pop culture. Columnists included Kelis, Matt Goias, Gavin McInnes, Sarah Morrison and Lesley Arfin. The magazine stopped publication in March 2009.

Country: United States
City: New York
Country: Portugal
City: Lisbon
Country: Brazil
City: São Paulo

TRACE is a TRANSCULTURAL Styles and Ideas magazine, a new expression in culture documenting the impact of the interconnected worlds of music, fashion, film, art, politics on today's multiethnic youth.

Established in London in 1996 by Claude Grunitzky, only 25-years-old at the time, TRACE was first materialized in the form of a magazine. Originally entitled TRUE, changing its name to TRACE a year later, the publication quickly became a big success and built a significant fan base around the world. After moving TRACE's headquarters to New York in 1998, Grunitzky sought to expand the company's scope. Since, the company has grown to become a multi-platform international company, encompassing TRACE Magazine US, TRACE Magazine UK, TRACE Television, web environments www.trace212. and www.trace.tv and regular art exhibits and monthly fashion and music events.

Country: United States
City: New York
Country: China
City: Shanghai

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