NEW YORK — Although readers keep shifting to the Internet, Esquire magazine's editor is sure print isn't dying, and he aimed to prove it Monday by unveiling a 75th-anniversary issue with a cover that featured electronic ink.
"For the last couple of years I've been in search of ways to do something that shows that print is a particularly vital product," said Esquire's editor in chief, David Granger. "I really do think that print is the most exciting and rewarding medium there is."
A 10-square-inch display on the cover of Esquire's October anniversary issue flashes the theme "The 21st Century Begins Now" with a collage of illuminated images. On the inside cover, a two-page spread advertising the new Ford Flex Crossover features a second 10-square-inch display with shifting colors to illustrate the car in motion at night.
The displays, which Granger said had boosted advertising in the issue, were developed by E Ink Corp., a Cambridge, Mass., company that also supplied the electronic paper technology for the screen of Amazon.com Inc.'s Kindle e-book reader.
The technology for both products uses micro-capsules of ink that are controlled by an electric charge. Unlike the Kindle, the magazine's display is not linked to a wireless network, so it cannot be updated.
Scott Daly, a Dentsu America Inc. executive who oversees media buying for Canon Inc., Toyota Motor Corp., Aigdirect.com and other companies, said the concept was a needed shot in the arm for the newspaper and magazine industry.
"A lot of people will say that there isn't that much excitement in the magazine world, but this proves that there can be," Daly said.
In the first half of 2008, newsstand sales of U.S. magazines fell more than 6%, according to the Audit Bureau of Circulations. Meanwhile, the economic slowdown has exacerbated a decline in ad revenue for newspapers and magazines' print editions. The Publishers Information Bureau reported that magazines had about 8% fewer ad pages in the second quarter of 2008 than in the same period a year earlier.
Ad pages for Esquire, a general-interest magazine targeting higher-income men, were down 5.7% in the first half of 2008, according to the Magazine Publishers of America.
Esquire's circulation gained slightly compared with 2007, according to the Audit Bureau of Circulations.
"If we want to keep print vital, print advertising has to be just as vital as print editorial," Granger said.