The publication was founded in 1952 by editor Harvey Kurtzman and publisher William Gaines, but it was Al Feldstein, who took over for Kurtzman and led the magazine for almost 30 years, who brought the outlet to national -- and international -- prominence, especially in the 1970s.
It peaked at 2.8 million subscribers in 1973, but had just 140,000 left as of 2017.
As news of the magazine's closure trickled across the internet, several contributors eulogized the publication. David DeGrand, a writer and artist who contributed to the magazine, was one of the first to confirm on Twitter the magazine was ending as rumors began to grow.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday July 05 2019, @04:37AM
I think they went out of business couple decades ago. I thought they were "charming" - you know us Americans think the British are quirky cute and all that shit.
Magazine is dead. All hail the new ...
Actually, if vinyl records can make a comeback, why not magazines? Maybe because magazines don't have an accomplice like SL1200?