Jalouse was a French youth fashion and culture magazine created in 1997 by Éditions Jalou which ceased publication in 2020.
History
On 24 April 1997, Jalouse was launched with a circulation of over 100,000 after its first three issues.[1] The magazine targeted women aged 18 to 30 and the first issue had 170,000 issues printed, with 44 pages of advertising and 120 pages of content which was a mix of fashion and travel.[2]
Jalouse USA launched in early 2001 based in New York City and edited by Stephen Todd. The magazines first issue had 100,000 copies printed.[3] In October 2001 the magazine was reported to have ceased publication however it was confirmed that the magazines frequency was being changed.[4]
In 2002, Jalouse USA folded citing a drop in advertising following the events of the September 11 attacks.[5] In late 2002 it was announced that the magazine would relaunch in a partnership with Empire Media, however the relaunch never eventuated.
In 2005 the magazine launched a different light weight format which was cheaper than the normal version of Jalouse and aimed at attracting younger readers.[6]
The December 2005 issue featured a free vibrator as a gift which came with 40,000 copies of the magazine available on newsstands.[7][8]
It was announced in May 2013 that by the end of the year the magazine would launch Chinese and Russian editions.[9] The Chinese edition was launched in late 2013 as Jalouse 艺术时尚 however it ceased publication in 2014.[10]
Anne Sophie Thomas left the magazine in 2014 and became editor-in-chief of Marie Claire.[11]
The magazines publisher and parent company Éditions Jalou was placed into receivership in 2015 after being ordered to pay €4.2 million to the former licence holder to L'Officiel in Russia.[12]
The Chinese edition was relaunched in 2019 as Jalouse China.[10] The first issue had a variety of covers featuring Blackpink, Z.Tao and Zheng Shuang.[13] The magazine ceased publication in 2020 after only two issues.
It was reported by WWD (Women's Wear Daily) in 2020 that freelancers for the magazine had not been paid.[14]
After the magazines Spring 2020 issue it ceased publication, it became digital-only before closing in 2021. Jalouse China also ceased its print edition in 2021 and continues digitally with a presence on Chinese social media platforms (as of 2024).
Circulation
Total Circulation (France and internationally)[15]