announced wave of layoffs within the emblematic magazine “Sports Illustrated”

A real institution in danger. According to the American press union, the publisher The Arena Group, which is in the process of restructuring, plans to separate from the majority of the editorial staff of the emblematic magazine Sports Illustrated (IF).

“Sports Illustrated employees were informed today by The Arena Group that it plans to lay off a significant number, possibly all, of the company’s union employees. IF »wrote, Friday January 19, the New York branch of the press union, the NewsGuild.

This decision is the consequence of the revocation of a licensing agreement between Arena Group and the owner of the rights to Sports IllustratedAuthentic Brands Group (ABG), after the first missed a quarterly payment deadline at the end of December.

Requested by Agence France-Presse (AFP), The Arena Group and Authentic Brands did not respond. A source close to the matter nevertheless said that some of the employees of Sports Illustrated would keep their jobs, without giving further details.

“Significant reduction” of workforce

In a press release, The Arena Group confirmed a “significant reduction” of its workforce, which amounts to just over 100 people, without specifying what fell under Sports Illustrated. The company also manages the financial information site TheStreet And Parade, dedicated to entertainment. In a statement sent to AFP, Authentic Brands Group assured that Sports Illustrated would continue its activities. Asked about the method, ABG did not respond.

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It is a new stage, perhaps the last, in the descent into hell of Sports Illustratedpassed from hand to hand in recent years as its commercial trajectory followed that of the moribund paper press. Sports Illustrated and its parent company, Time Inc, were first separated from the Time Warner empire in 2014, before being bought by the Meredith Corporation press group in 2018. The latter then sold SI to Authentic Brands in 2019 for 110 million dollars (approximately 100 million euros).

Launched in 1954, Sports Illustrated was the first American magazine to reach the threshold of one million copies sold per week, a circulation which would rise to around 3.5 million at its peak in the early 1990s. It is famous beyond the world of sport for its famous annual “Swimsuit Issue”, which features models and professional sportswomen in swimsuits.

Competed by the emergence of the Internet, in particular from the giant ESPN (television, radio, news site), Sports Illustrated saw its diffusion and influence inexorably decrease. Formerly weekly, Sports Illustrated became biweekly in 2018 and monthly in 2020, with several additional special editions.

“We call on ABG to ensure the continued publication of SI and allow it to serve its readership as it has for nearly 70 years”urged the union.

The World with AFP

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