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Subject: "Dear Ahmir, please pull together some friends and buy this (swipe):" Previous topic | Next topic
Castro
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50751 posts
Fri Jan-23-15 10:31 PM

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"Dear Ahmir, please pull together some friends and buy this (swipe):"


  

          

Ahmir, can you convince Kanye, Jay-Z and some other money having young guns to buy this before this ignorant ass child of one of my heroes sells off a significant piece of our history just so she can go shopping in Dubai????????


Johnson Publishing to sell historic photo archive

http://www.chicagotribune.com/business/ct-johnson-publishing-archives-sale-0126-biz-20150123-story.html#page=1


A picture is worth a thousand words. You know that.

Measured in dollars, Johnson Publishing is hoping 5 million of them will fetch closer to $40 million.

Looking to raise cash, the Chicago-based publisher of Ebony magazine has put its entire photo archive up for sale. The historic collection spans 70 years of African-American history, chronicling everyone from Martin Luther King Jr. to Sammy Davis Jr.

Johnson Publishing has had its collection appraised and recently hired a consultant to shop its wealth of iconic images, including a 1969 Pulitzer Prize winning photo of King's widow and child, taken at his funeral.

"It's just sitting here," said Johnson Publishing CEO Desiree Rogers. "We really need to monetize that in order to ensure growth in our core businesses."


Ebony, a monthly lifestyle magazine targeting African-Americans, was first published in November 1945. It came of age during the Civil Rights movement, with Ebony staff photographer Moneta Sleet Jr. producing some of the most important images of that turbulent era.

Sleet followed King from the 1955 Montgomery bus boycott to the 1965 Selma march. And he was there in April 1968 for King's funeral, capturing his widow, Coretta Scott King, with their 5-year-old daughter, Bernice, pressed forlornly against her lap. The powerful and poignant image earned Sleet a Pulitzer Prize, the first awarded to a black journalist. Sleet died in 1996 at 70.

Putting a price on his body of work will fall to the newly retained consultant.

"This is an incredibly important archive." said Mark Lubell, executive director of New York's International Center of Photography. "It is the definition of the African-American experience in the latter half of the 20th century, and it's an amazing, valuable asset."

cComments
So; you sell your entire photo archives to "monetize your position"? Exactly WHAT position does Johnson Publication believe it will have "left". Do they really expect to capture 70 years forward of priceless Pictorial History?
QUEENBEE5
AT 7:24 PM JANUARY 23, 2015
ADD A COMMENTSEE ALL COMMENTS
1

Raising capital is crucial for the company, which is facing declining revenue and a rocky transition from print to digital under Rogers, the former social secretary for President Barack Obama, who has been steering the legacy African-American media company since 2010.

Her moves have included taking on a minority partner for the family-owned company, redesigning Ebony, its flagship magazine, and taking the money-losing weekly digest Jet out of print circulation.

Rogers inhabits a spacious 21st floor perch overlooking the lake along South Michigan Avenue.

The views from the small, unmarked archive room in the back are even more remarkable, and may be the key to keeping the privately held company on solid financial ground.

Winding through conference rooms and past cubicle stations, a short hallway leads to a white door. Behind it are 70 years of history documenting the African-American experience.


Alphabetized vaults are opened by hand cranks, revealing shelves of photos in manila folders stacked floor to ceiling. The fireproof room is kept cool to preserve the collection, with white gloves at the ready for the few allowed to examine the specimens firsthand.

Linda Johnson Rice, chairman of Johnson Publishing and daughter of founder John Johnson, recently leafed through her family's legacy, now for sale.

In addition to King's funeral, she offered a glimpse of other memorable Ebony photos including Jackie Kennedy consoling Coretta Scott King, Muhammad Ali and Floyd Patterson's first fight in 1965, glamorous shots of jazz singer Billie Holiday, and some less famous subjects, such as New York limousine owner Roosevelt Zanders posing proudly in front of his fleet of 1950s-era Cadillacs.

"This is just a tiny piece of what's in the Johnson Publishing archives," Johnson Rice said. "It's not just celebrities. There are many human interest stories here."

In 2011, JPMorgan Chase's Special Investments Group took a 40 percent stake in Johnson Publishing to infuse much needed capital into the historic but struggling media company. Rogers said selling the photo archive is a much bigger deal for the company, which has seen declines in its ad revenue outpace that of the magazine industry at large.

Ebony has a total average circulation of 1.26 million, according to the Alliance for Audited Media, topping rival Essence, which is published by Time Inc. Advertising revenue at Ebony was down 24 percent last year, while Essence declined 7.5 percent, in line with the industry, according to Standard Media Index. Standard Media Index monitors ad spending through data obtained from media buying agencies.

Rogers, who would not disclose revenue, said the ad decline at Ebony was 8 percent last year. She added that Ebony is raising ad rates for 2015 and that 60 percent of sponsors have agreed to pay more to stay in the magazine, bucking industry trends.

Still, Johnson Publishing faced a uniquely challenging 2014.

In April, Amy DuBois Barnett, editor of Ebony since 2010, left the magazine to join ESPN, where she is helping launch a website focused on African-American sports and culture.

She was replaced at Ebony by Mitzi Miller, her counterpart at sister publication Jet. The next month, Johnson Publishing announced plans to replace the print version of Jet with a new digital app. The digest-size weekly had been a staple among African-American readers for 63 years but a source of red ink for its publisher in the digital era.

Jet had a circulation of 720,000 and an annual subscription rate of $19.99 when it published its final print edition in June. The digital app rolled out in July, with promises of fresh content on a weekly basis, video interviews, 3-D charts and archival photos.

By October, it was essentially shelved, despite an unknown number of users who "mistakenly," as Rogers describes it, paid $19.99 for an app that was promoted as free on an introductory basis.

As of last week, Apple's App Store still offered a 30-day free trial with any subscription deal and featured dozens of negative reviews from paid Jet Digital subscribers. Rogers said Jet notified Apple in October that they had decided to offer the app for free, but a complaint dated as recently as Jan. 5 carried the headline "Waste" and said, "I'm constantly billed ... but I can't access the magazine."

Rogers said Apple informed the company Thursday that they had processed all of the Jet Digital refunds, but would not disclose how many subscribers had paid for the app.

"The process to get here has been a little choppy," Rogers said.

Also looming is a $5 million defamation lawsuit against Johnson Publishing and a freelance writer filed in August by a Georgia FBI agent and his wife, claiming a series of articles that ran in Ebony magazine falsely implicated their sons in the death of a high school classmate.

That case is working its way through the U.S. District Court in Georgia.


Rogers is hoping for better things in 2015, calling it a "key year" for Johnson Publishing, banking in large part on the sale of the photo archive.

In 2012, Johnson Publishing began offering select photos for sale from its collection, and also has pursued licensing to other media on a limited basis. An outright sale of the images could be the best way to monetize the assets.


Getty Images, a 20-year-old company that licenses its library of 170 million assets to businesses and media outlets, is the leader in the space. In 2012, private equity firm Carlyle Group bought Getty Images in a $3.3 billion deal. Rogers said Johnson's archives could be the "black Getty," but only in the right hands.

"One of the things that we've learned is we need to stick with what we're good at," Rogers said. "We're writers, we're creative folks, we produce a magazine ... geared toward that African-American experience. Let's stick as close to that as we can."

rchannick@tribpub.com

Twitter @RobertChannick

------------------
One Hundred.

  

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Dear Ahmir, please pull together some friends and buy this (swipe): [View all] , Castro, Fri Jan-23-15 10:31 PM
 
Subject Author Message Date ID
This archive is priceless- its OUR history from our perspective.
Jan 23rd 2015
1
The problem is they aren't that accessible now
Jan 24th 2015
44
don't do it
Jan 24th 2015
2
Have you seen the app? Its beyond terrible.
Jan 24th 2015
3
      you are misunderstanding
Jan 24th 2015
4
           *looks at camera* I forget where I was.
Jan 24th 2015
5
           *looks at my camera*
Jan 24th 2015
6
                Pardon me, Queen of media. I'll resume my analog posts.
Jan 24th 2015
7
                     Stop being stubborn. she actually knows that industry
Jan 24th 2015
8
                          What the fuck does the industry have to do with it?
Jan 24th 2015
13
                               I wonder if Desiree knows/thought about/even cares about this...
Jan 24th 2015
14
                                    I wonder as well.
Jan 24th 2015
15
                                         Now this makes you wonder why Obamas cut her loose.
Jan 24th 2015
17
                                              I don't think it is her decision, I think its Linda Johnson-Rice
Jan 24th 2015
18
                                                   William H. Cosby Jr. should buy them and donate them to Spelman
Jan 24th 2015
22
           hmmm....
Jan 24th 2015
12
           people wanting things free doesn't mean they should be free.
Jan 24th 2015
21
                I am not saying they should be free. Not at all.
Jan 24th 2015
24
                Yeah but I think you're kind of misunderstanding lfresh
Jan 24th 2015
28
                I am so not misunderstanding her.
Jan 24th 2015
30
                     I don't think she's disagreeing with that
Jan 24th 2015
32
                          Yes ma'am
Jan 24th 2015
33
                My bad; I meant to reply to lfresh's post.
Jan 24th 2015
42
                duh
Jan 25th 2015
72
who is Ahmir?
Jan 24th 2015
9
RE: who is Ahmir?
Jan 24th 2015
10
Dude
Jan 24th 2015
27
      Yall niggas rather throw shade than educate.
Jan 24th 2015
40
           ?uestlove.
Jan 24th 2015
43
           Thanks.
Jan 24th 2015
51
           you needed to be educated on that...
Jan 26th 2015
95
                I guess.
Jan 28th 2015
100
                     You been here ten years and don't know who Ahmir Thompson is?
Jan 30th 2015
105
                          Sorry I didnt know buddy real name. Not like he says it in songs.
Jan 30th 2015
106
                               do Ahmir even speak on Roots tracks?
Jan 30th 2015
107
sucks that this even needs to be done...but i get it
Jan 24th 2015
11
The business pov is myopic. These are "our" images.
Jan 24th 2015
16
      The business POV is unfortunately the real.
Jan 24th 2015
20
           It's reality.
Jan 24th 2015
29
Hey bro....
Jan 24th 2015
19
2/3 of the names you mentioned sold dope or are rappers...
Jan 24th 2015
23
      RE: 2/3 of the names you mentioned sold dope or are rappers...
Jan 24th 2015
25
if you think the public agrees with you, why not ask them to join you?..
Jan 24th 2015
26
Has anyone ever crowdfunded $60 million dollars?
Jan 24th 2015
31
there's a 1st time for everything...
Jan 24th 2015
38
      that's alotta bread to save some pics when aunt shirley is being evicted
Jan 24th 2015
39
folks aren't even getting a Jet or Ebony subscription
Jan 24th 2015
34
They don't even have all their magazines digitized
Jan 24th 2015
35
Google Books (sort of quietly) has all of the JETs
Jan 24th 2015
46
      All the time I get requests through my website for Jet mag research
Jan 25th 2015
59
           Not sure. If they go to Google Books search
Jan 25th 2015
62
it'd be great if those photos end up in the DuSable Museum.
Jan 24th 2015
36
yall will find a way to argue about any damn thing
Jan 24th 2015
37
^^^^^
Jan 24th 2015
41
why couldn't they find a digital partner and license these images
Jan 24th 2015
45
Bc as lfresh said, there needs to be a demand for it
Jan 24th 2015
53
      I would ask if they've accessed the financial demand if monetized.
Jan 25th 2015
61
      $40m valuation implies there must be some demand
Jan 25th 2015
68
      its not <no> demand
Jan 25th 2015
71
      the magazine isn't even in big enough demand
Jan 25th 2015
74
           do u think they will get an offer for $40M?
Jan 26th 2015
80
           but a collection of quality stock images and
Jan 26th 2015
92
                they should, but if there's no demand for it
Jan 26th 2015
94
      is there even a demand for Ebony or Jet?
Jan 26th 2015
82
           now this thinking I agree with
Jan 26th 2015
83
okay fir further perspectve
Jan 24th 2015
47
we really need to do more of this
Jan 25th 2015
60
      it would be nice
Jan 25th 2015
67
look up Deborah Willis
Jan 24th 2015
48
Her sister also runs the archive at temple univ
Jan 24th 2015
54
      *salutes*
Jan 24th 2015
56
The company that digitized the Time-Life collection
Jan 24th 2015
49
again to Cyrens point
Jan 24th 2015
50
this post has it all.
Jan 24th 2015
52
Why you think any of them would do right by these images?
Jan 24th 2015
55
schomberg def can't afford it
Jan 24th 2015
57
J.P. Morgan owns a 40% stake in Johnson Publishing. It's a wrap.
Jan 25th 2015
58
Awesomely Luvvie has some great ideas about what they should do (swipe)....
Jan 25th 2015
63
Unless there's something I'm missing...
Jan 25th 2015
64
Agreed
Jan 25th 2015
73
please logoff.
Jan 25th 2015
75
      Nah. I'm good.
Jan 25th 2015
76
           Nothing else to offer other than I am being 'fucking disrespectful'?
Jan 25th 2015
78
Why cant we get an app for the Jet BOTW
Jan 25th 2015
65
Jet used to have fully nude yearly calendars
Jan 26th 2015
81
      Somebody gonna fck around and stumble on a pic of their Auntie
Jan 26th 2015
86
I don't think it matters whether the images stay in black hands
Jan 25th 2015
66
RE: I don't think it matters whether the images stay in black hands
Jan 25th 2015
77
      A corporation only interested in money? Impossible!?!?!
Jan 26th 2015
84
      no institution will buy it soley for preserving the legacy
Jan 26th 2015
93
           There are institutions that could do it. Smithsonian, rich PWIs
Jan 26th 2015
97
                read up top where i mentioned institions that could do it
Jan 26th 2015
98
meanwhile, nbc announces NBC BLK
Jan 25th 2015
69
related- king bros still want to sell bible & Nobel peace prize
Jan 25th 2015
70
Former JPC employee speaks out (swipe):
Jan 25th 2015
79
can you link the article please?? I'd like to see the photos....
Jan 26th 2015
87
      RE: can you link the article please?? I'd like to see the photos....
Jan 26th 2015
96
           ROFLMAO!!! CASE AND MOTHERFUCKING POINT!!
Jan 26th 2015
99
So basically they took a box of pics to Pawn Stars and got told they
Jan 26th 2015
85
$40M is absurd for something that isn't a private collection
Jan 26th 2015
88
Also....
Jan 26th 2015
89
Cosby would've bought this...
Jan 26th 2015
90
How did Desirée Rogers end up the CEO of JPC?
Jan 26th 2015
91
Michael Jordan needs to buy this
Jan 28th 2015
101
look like this company handles the archives:
Jan 30th 2015
102
Thank you for this.
Jan 30th 2015
103
Oprah will probably buy it up
Jan 30th 2015
104

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