Jann Wenner
National Book Awards Tries to Glam Things Up; Who Invited All the Fancy People, Publishing Peons Wonder?
At around 1 o'clock Thursday morning, Morgan Entrekin decided it was time to extract himself from the dance floor at Socialista and head home. "I'm having an excellent time!" he said, half empty beer in hand. "I wish I were 20 years younger! I could dance all night."
The reason he couldn't: "I have a 3-year-old! I'm tired, man. I'm old."
Mr. Entrekin used to party. Hasn't in a while. Mostly focused now on running his publishing house, Grove/Atlantic, and hanging with the wife and their little boy.
He seems genuinely fulfilled, a fact he was forced to forget last night when his colleagues in the publishing industry turned to him to reinvigorate the annual dinner known as the National Book Awards and make it fun again. read more »
The New F.O.B.'s

In mid-October, about three weeks to go before election night, Barack Obama found himself in the classy old Metropolitan Club on 66th Street with a group of his top New York fund-raisers.
He told them there was “extraordinary expertise” in the room. “Who knows?” he said. “There might be some of you who decide that you want to spend a little time in government.”
Perhaps. But there’s something better: The New Yorkers who had the prescience and stamina to support Mr. Obama when Hillary Clinton was the dominant Democrat now carry Barack Platinum Cards; if he wins on Nov. 4, their credit limit will be high. read more »
Morning Memo: Chace Crawford Digs Palin; Lydia Hearst Soldiers On; Lauren Conrad Becomes an Author
Chace Crawford is no East Coast elitist! The Gossip Girl star told reporters that Sarah Palin is "quite attractive" before refusing to "talk politics." [US Weekly]
Lydia Hearst is expected to continue with Fashion Week, despite being sent to the hospital for kidney stones on Tuesday. [P6]
Reality show queen Lauren Conrad will be writing a series of three young adult novels for HarperCollins about "a girl who moves to LA and stars in a reality show." Hopefully the kids don't take it too seriously. [People] read more »
Brushing Aside 'Nostalgia,' Wenner's Rolling Stone Will Reformat
On Octobser 17th Rolling Stone will be 8-by-11 inches instead of 10-by-11 3/4 inches, The Times' Richard Pérez-Peña reports today.
Last month, when we reported that the magazine was considering a redesign, we asked a few people on the street what they thought. "I’d feel less cool reading the new one," said one young guy on his uptown ride on the 4 train. "It just seems like it would be a Fortune or a Newsweek."
What does Jann Wenner have to say about that to The Times? "All you’re getting from that large size is nostalgia," he said.
You hear that, subway guy? Jann Wenner says you're living in the past.
'Like Fortune or Newsweek'; Readers Uneasy About Proposed Rolling Stone Redesign
Yesterday, we told you that Rolling Stone publisher Jann Wenner was considering a major redesign of his magazine. He sent out a test copy to subscribers and asked them to participate in a survey to tell him what they thought.
Media Mob hit the streets of Manhattan to do a survey of its own. Judging by the responses of eight people, Mr. Wenner’s proposed change might be akin to passing a kidney stone in the minds of Rolling Stone's old-school fan base.
"You cannot go—you can’t—you cannot move away from this format," said David Peebler, a 46-year-old options strategist and trader at Park Ave and 22nd Street. read more »
Mulling Major Redesign, Rolling Stone Asks Readers for Opinions
"We are considering a major change in the format of Rolling Stone from its current look to one more like the enclosed test issue," wrote Jann Wenner, founder of Rolling Stone in a note to select subscribers.
Enclosed in a manila envelope from Rolling Stone, which Media Mob has acquired, is Mr. Wenner's letter with a tighter, smaller, glossier version of the current issue of Rolling Stone featuring Barack Obama on the cover. (A larger version is currently on newsstands). The test issue is the same size as your Vanity Fair, your Gourmet, your Lucky. It's glossy and perfect-bound (goodbye, staples!), and the spine has all sorts of type on it making it perfect for your bookshelf: the dates, the issue number (RS 1056/1057), and a peek of what's inside: BARACK OBAMA/BONNAROO/ AMY WINEHOUSE / RUSH / GREENLAND. read more »
Us and She: Wenner Might Sell But Fuller Cashes In
In today's New York Post, Keith Kelly reports that Jann Wenner may be trying to sell US Weekly to Condé Nast for $750 million.
That's a lot of scratch for pictures of Katherine Heigl getting Starbucks, but according to Kelly, the magazine is not only "lucrative" (he uses the term twice), but profitable as well:
With weekly paid circulation of more than 1.8 million—and the lucrative newsstand accounting for 1 million of that total—Us Weekly is highly profitable, with an operating profit last year estimated to be around $75 million.
"Us Weekly is one of the more remarkable success stories in recent publishing history," Mr. Kelly writes. read more »
Santafreude!
Wenner Queer for Homo Oater
According to a Wenner Media source, the magazine was scheduled to put the American Idol piece on the cover, but boss Jann Wenner decided to switch to Ledger just before Friday's close. "He pulled it for Heath," the source said.
The Oscar voters many not have agreed with the last-minute decision. But Wenner--who knows his way around the movie's emotional terrain--has been a big fan of the cowboy-and-cowboy movie all along, according to Wenner Media sources. In a December 1 review, Rolling Stone film critic Peter Travers gave the movie four stars. "Ledger's magnificent performance is an acting miracle," Travers wrote. "He seems to tear it from his insides."
A Wenner source said Jann has also tried to pressure Us Weekly to cover Brokeback stars Ledger and wife Michelle Williams in the magazine.
--Gabriel Sherman
Jann Wenner Gathers Moss, Boss
A Wenner spokesperson declined to comment on the party. read more »
--Gabriel ShermanTom Foster is Men's Journal's New Man
Wallace Walks From Wenner
Wallace had headed Wenner Books since 2003, when it was founded as on outlit for publishing titles inspired by Wenner magazines. Among Wallace's offerings are the poker title Aces and Kings, the romance chronicle Brad and Jen: The Rise and Fall of Hollywood's Golden Couple, and Bling Bling: Hip-Hop's Crown Jewels. Wallace could not be reached for comment; his Wenner phone extension was disconnected. A Wenner spokesperson said: "Wenner books is alive and well with a full catalogue for 2006 including titles from Us Weekly, Rolling Stone, and Men's Journal. Bob Wallace, who has had a long, esteemed career with Wenner Media, left his position on Friday and will pursue other opportunities. The departure was amicable." read more »
--Gabriel Sherman



















