At the start of 2011,
magazine sales figures proved putting Lady Gaga on the cover of your magazine
is a sure-fire way to guarantee blockbuster sales, while featuring Taylor Swift
front and center is an almost certain bust. Now that numbers from the February
2011 issue of Vanity Fair starring Justin Bieber are in, we know how the
17-year-old heartthrob ranks amongst pop-star cover models and it is not good
-- in fact, for Vanity Fair, the numbers are nearly horrifying. Bieber's issue
is going to have the dubious distinction of being the Conde Nast monthly's
worst-selling in 12 years.
According to Women's Wear Daily, who
cites results from the Audit Bureau of Circulations' Rapid Report (preliminary
newsstand sales figures reported by magazines but not yet confirmed by the
Bureau), Bieber's VF issue sold 246,000 copies, 28 percent below the magazine's
average of 342,000 for the first half of the year. Since editor Graydon Carter
took over the magazine in 1992, only two other covers have performed this
poorly -- a 1999 Will Smith issue and a 1993 Harrison Ford one.
More shockingly, the
Vanity Fair bomb actually wasn't an anomaly. According to WWD, Bieber also
appeared on an October 2010 Teen Vogue cover that sold 121,054 issues, 12
percent below the magazine's 2010 average. His April 2010 People cover sold
961,762 copies, 25 percent below the weekly's average, making it the
publication's third-worst seller of the year.
"Worst" and
"seller" and not words commonly found in stories about megastar
Bieber, who has the highest-grossing concert film in U.S.
history and the fourth-best-selling album
of 2010 with 2.3 million copies. So what's the blame for the singer's lack of
traction at the newsstand?
The answers vary by the
publication: Vanity Fair isn't geared toward the teens and tweens who usually
snatch up every piece of Bieber memorabilia. The other stories featured on the
February 2011 cover include the words "Warren Buffett," "Wikigate,"
and "The Kennedy Inauguration" -- not exactly kiddy catnip. Scans of
the issue likely hit the web as soon as the first Belieber got his or her hands
on it, proving that the story itself wasn't actually all that revealing.
Bieber talked about loving Michael Jackson and being a regular kid -- the kind
of uncontroversial topics he usually tackles.
The Teen Vogue story was
likewise not filled with earth-shattering gossip, and the People cover got more
attention for its goofy photo than
anything else. Bieber's most talked-about magazine cover in recent memory is
certainly Rolling Stone's February 2011 profile in
which writer Vanessa Grigoriadis tried to quiz the singer on topics like
abortion and politics. Sales figures for the Rolling Stone issue have not yet
been reported.
In general, Bieber keeps
his fans updated on his everyday doings via Twitter, so unless a magazine story
includes extra sexy photos or the promise of never-before-heard tales, Justin's
followers just don't need to shell out the extra cash. And while he's still a
bona fide superstar, there have been a few chinks in Bieber's usually pristine
armor recently -- in May he was pelted with eggs while performing in
Australia and last month he had a particularly icy cameo on David Letterman's
show.
For the record, Lady
Gaga is still pretty darn good at selling magazines. Per AdWeek, Vogue's March
Lady Gaga cover sold an estimated 445,000, well above the magazine's average of
370,000 for the first five months of 2011. The secret to her newsstand success?
Always being ready with a wacky quote and an even wackier outfit.
Source: Yahoo Music
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