10 Years: Hey, How Do You Decide What We See in New York Each Week, Adam Moss?
New York's EIC delves into how the magazine's weekly lineup takes shape
October 4, 2007
To celebrate mediabistro.com's 10th anniversary, we spoke with our Golden Boa honorees about their achievements in media. Check back throughout the week for Hey How'd You Do That features showcasing these media pros.
Since taking over as editor-in-chief of New York in March 2004, Adam Moss has transformed the magazine from a struggling book into a vibrant, Ellie-dominating franchise with a robust Web site. The former New York Times editor spoke with us about the difficulties of putting out a weekly magazine, the frantic scramble when "stories fall apart," and how he chooses each issue's content. What are your top criteria for the ideas that may become features in New York? What do you ask yourself/tell your editors to evaluate about every topic, before you/they assign a story on it? There are dozens of questions we ask ourselves, consciously and unconsciously, but the top ones are probably: Is it interesting? Will it be interesting to anyone but us? Will it still be interesting by the time we can publish it? And then, of course, does it belong in New York magazine -- or is this really a story for American Ammo?
The August 20, 2007 issue
included a feature about New Yorkers living longer than people
elsewhere in the country, one about adoption, and another about a Long Beach
surfer. How did each of these make it into that specific issue? What was
your thinking in terms of how they complemented one another editorially,
and which segments of New York's readership they would appeal to? Clive Thompson's story was prompted by an intriguing study about the life expectancy of New Yorkers; we wanted Clive to investigate its truth and argue with it. The adoption story, which was about blended families and was written by Emily Nussbaum, who happens to be Clive's wife, was a reaction to the public circus around blended families created by celebrities like Madonna and Angelina Jolie; we were interested in reporting on what happens to the family dynamics of non-celebrities who adopt kids from other cultures. As for the surfer, he just seemed like a gnarly subject, though I'm not actually sure what gnarly means. We rarely make a mix based on demographic considerations. We just try to publish a well-rounded picture of New York that all segments of our readership will appreciate.
Walk us through the planning process for an individual issue of New
York: If there's no specific peg (i.e. Fashion Week, Fall Preview), how
do you choose which features that will appear in that issue? What
meetings/conversations occur between you and your staff, and when
(relative to issue date) do they occur?
What's a recent example of a change to an issue's story lineup extremely
close to deadline? When did that occur (date and time), and what spurred
the sudden change?
With a feature that isn't pegged to a specific event, do you have a
specific run date in mind at the time you assign it, or do you aim to
have multiple 'evergreen' features in the works so that you can slot
them into non-time-specific issues when there are slots needing to be
filled?
Three tips for finding the correct editorial mix 1) Don't get hung up on doing what's "right" for the magazine. "If a story excites you, you should probably find a way to publish it," Moss says. 2) Be wary of listening to advice from the likes of people like Moss who have been doing this for a long time. "If you're an editor as long as I've been an editor," says Moss, "you get too used to saying no because you've been hardened by the experience of too many small disasters." 3) Sometimes inexperience helps. "The best ideas come from people who don't know what hasn't worked before," Moss explains. Noah Davis is mediabistro.com's associate editor. He can be reached at Noah AT mediabistro DOT com. [This interview has been edited for length and clarity.]
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