News came yesterday from former Anime Insider editor Rob Bricken that the magazine’s current editorial staff has been fired (found via Anime Vice) and the magazine has ceased publication. The April issue, #67, is its last and is currently on sale at newsstands and magazine racks.
While it is easy to point at the availability of news on the Internet and young people’s desires for instant gratification as main reasons (which they are), there is another contributing factor: decreasing advertising revenue across the board for newspapers and periodicals. Along with Anime Insider, it was announced that that same day that Blender would no longer be produced in print form but still maintain its website. Unfortunately, the complete divestment of AI’s staff combined with sluggish online updates rule out a web-only avenue for the brand.
I don’t have many personal feelings toward Anime Insider except for being something I occasionally bought when I saw it on newsstands. They did have interviews and a manga preview in each issue but not much beside that appealed to me on a consistent basis. I will admit that the Flash in Japan made me aware of Flame of Recca (or was it Animerica?) and Kaze no Stigma — FUNimation will release Part 1 of the latter on DVD June 30th. A coupon screw-up by Best Buy in issue #50 happened to provide fuel for a post back in Nov. 2007.
The magazine will be missed as part of a shrinking magazine market (only Otaku USA and Protoculture Addicts, both bi-monthly, remain) but I will not mourn its absence, partly because their final issue is very video game focused. I do wish that the writers are able to find work elsewhere, either in print or online.
Tags: anime insider, magazines, the death of print






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