- WomenSports magazine
Infobox Magazine
title = womenSports
image_size = 200px
image_caption =
editor = Rosalie Muller Wright (1974-1975) Cheryl McCall Cutler Durkee
editor_title = Editor-in-Chief
frequency = monthly
circulation =
category =Women's magazine
company =
publisher = womenSports Publishing Company (1974-1978) Women's Sports Foundation (1979-1998) Condé Nast Publications (1998-2000)
firstdate = May1974
country = Flag|US
language = English
website =
issn ="womenSports" magazine was the first magazine dedicated to women in sports. It was launched in close conjunction with Billie Jean King's
Women's Sports Foundation and each issue of the magazine contained a two page article written by the executive director of the Foundation.History
womenSports
Billie Jean and Larry King acted as publishers, while Jim Jorgensen was the company president. Rosalie Wright from "Philadelphia" magazine was hired as the magazine's editor-in-chief and brought on writers
Anne Lamott ,Jon Carroll and Greg Hoffman. During its design and launch phase, "womenSports" received help from "Ms. Magazine " publishers Pat Carbine andGloria Steinem as well as celebrity PR executivePat Kingsley .The inaugural issue of "womenSports" (ISSN|0095-0661)in May 1974 featured
Billie Jean King on the cover. Shortly after launch, "womenSports" reached a monthly circulation of 200,000. "womenSports" won a J.C. Penney-Missouri Award in 1974. [ [http://www.aasfe.org/rosalie-muller-wright.html American Association of Sunday and Feature Editors - Rosalie Muller Wright] .] (The J.C. Penney-Missouri Awards became the Missouri Lifestyle Journalism Awards in 1994.)Turnover began in 1975 when editor Wright was fired and replaced by Cheryl McCall from the "
Detroit Free Press ". "womenSports" was sold to the Charter Company, then owner of "Redbook ", in 1976 [" [http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,912083,00.html The Belles' Toll] ". "Time". January 09, 1978.] and the company’s offices were moved to New York from San Francisco. Then-editor McCall stayed with the magazine, but soon left to become an editor at "People" magazine. Cutler Durkee moved with the magazine to New York, then from "womenSports" to "People" where he became its executive editor.Women's Sports and Fitness
After Charter ceased publication of "womenSports", the Kings reclaimed ownership of the magazine and began publishing it through the Women's Sports Foundation as "Women's Sports" (ISSN|0163-7428), publishing it monthly from 1979 through 1984. In 1984 the magazine moved to bimonthly publication and subsequently changed its name to "Women's Sports and Fitness" (ISSN|8750-653X). [Dougherty, Philip H (1986-06-30). "Advertising; New Name, New Hope For Women's Sports". "New York Times": D11.]
Condé Nast Publications acquired "Women's Sports + Fitness" in 1998 and rolled its monthly "Condé Nast Sports for Women" into it to form bimonthly magazine titled "Condé Nast Women's Sports and Fitness" (ISSN|1099-6079) [Pogrebin, Robin (1998-01-13). "THE MEDIA BUSINESS; Conde Nast Buys a Magazine; Will Alter Sports for Women". "New York Times": D7.] . The magazine continued under that tile through 2000, when Condé Nast closed the magazine.References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.