Juice (Australian magazine)Juice was an Australian music magazine which was published between 1993 and 2003. HistoryJuice was launched by Toby Creswell and Lesa-Belle Furhagen, who had previously worked at Rolling Stone Australia.[1] The two magazines would become rivals in the youth market, as they covered similar topics and music.[2] The first issue of Juice was published March 1993, with 13 issues published each year. The magazine was monthly, the thirteenth issue being a yearbook.[3] It occasionally reproduced content from American magazine Spin.[3] The magazine featured musicians on its cover, and one featuring a near-nude Angie Hart became infamous as the singer sought to change how she was perceived at the time.[4] John O'Donnell was founding editor, leaving in 1994 for Sony Music Australia's alternative record label Murmur.[5][6][7] His final issue was June 1994.[2] Craig Mathieson took over as editor and was later replaced by Lisa Anthony, and Ben McKelvey.[8][9] Toby Creswell remained editorial director until 2002.[10] The magazine won several awards, including Magazine of the Year, Magazine of General Excellence, and Best Feature Story for a Magazine at the 1998 Australian Society of Magazine Editors awards. At the time it was considered Australia's "leading music-lifestyle title".[11] In 1999 Juice launched their website juice.net, which was updated daily with music news, videos, and reviews, aimed at 15-25 year olds. The website received 60,000 visitors on its first day, and Lesa-Belle Furhagen announced they would offer a free email service, message boards, and chat channels. It was expected to earn money through advertising and ecommerce.[12] Juice was published in the Sydney suburb Darlinghurst by Terraplane Press until it was sold to Pacific Publications at the beginning of 2003.[13] After being relaunched in March,[14] on 10 July 2003 Juice was closed, with its publisher citing low circulation numbers which had dropped from 25,000 to 6,000.[13] Juice published its final issue in July 2003, number 123.[3] CollectionsThe Arts Centre Melbourne, National Library of Australia, State Library of New South Wales and State Library Victoria hold complete sets of Juice.[15] References
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