From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Pacific Magazine
Staff writersGiff Johnson
David Miho
Fili Sagapolutele
Alex Rheeney
Categories Current events
Culture
News
Politics
Pacific Island issues
FrequencyBi-monthly until July 2008,
e-zine until January 1, 2009
Founded1976
Final issue2008
CompanyTransOceanic Media
CountryUSA
Based in Honolulu
LanguageEnglish
Website pacificmagazine.net
ISSN 1533-3183

Pacific Magazine was a regional news and current affairs magazine and online news agency specializing in coverage of the Pacific Islands region, including Melanesia, Micronesia, and Polynesia. The magazine was headquartered and published in Honolulu, Hawaii.

Pacific Magazine was published bi-monthly from 1976 until July 2008, when it transitioned to a completely online magazine. [1] The magazine remained the oldest continuously published regional magazine in the Pacific Islands region [1] at the time publication was suspended on January 1, 2009. [1] The magazine's readership grew to include subscribers outside of the Pacific Islands region including Asia, Australia, Europe, North America, and the Middle East. [2]

History

Pacific Magazine was founded in Honolulu in 1976. The magazine was purchased by TransOceanic Media, a subsidiary of the AIO Group, from its former publisher, Bruce Jensen, in May 2000. [2] Pacific Magazine distributed approximately 7,500 copies throughout the Northern Pacific region, [2] and an additional 7,500 copies through a former competitor based in Fiji as of July 2001. [3]

TransOceanic Media expanded the magazine's monthly readership to a circulation of more than 35,000 after its acquisition. [2] TransOceanic Media also launched Pacific Magazine's web-based news service. [2] The Pacific Magazine site published news stories from across the Pacific Islands and Asia-Pacific region. [2] The site published news from other Pacific news services, such as Tahitipresse and Oceania Flash, as well as from regional or national newspapers from across the Pacific.

Pacific Magazine published its last print edition in July 2008. [2] The magazine's editors and staff began focusing exclusively on its web site, [2] which included an archive of past stories and an almanac of important Pacific Island people. Giff Johnson, the magazine's foreign correspondent who was based in Majuro, Marshall Islands, was named the interim managing editor in 2008 to supervise Pacific Magazine's transition from print to a strictly online magazine. [1] The Pacific Magazine web site drew over 50,000 unique visitors per month in 2008. [2]

On October 1, 2008, Fijian journalist Ulamila Kurai Wragg was appointed the new managing editor of Pacific Magazine. [1] She replaced the interim editor, Giff Johnson. [1] Wragg, who was previously the Cook Islands correspondent for Pacific Magazine, worked as the managing editor from her home base in Rarotonga in the Cook Islands. [1]

As part of the 2008 editorial leadership shake-up, Pacific Magazine publisher Floyd Takeuchi became the magazine's "publisher-editor", working in conjunction with Wragg to develop the magazine's new editorial direction. [1] The senior management team which Wragg joined also included Florence Betham, the magazine's associate publisher who is from Tafuna, American Samoa. [1]

Still the global financial crisis of 2008–2009, which hit hardest towards the end of the 2008, apparently continued to decrease the advertising revenue earned by Pacific Magazine. [2]

Suspension of publication

Pacific Magazine suspended all operations on January 1, 2009, after 32 years of continuous publication, both in print or online. [2] The magazine's publisher, Floyd Takeuchi, cited the ongoing global financial crisis for the suspension. [4] Takeuchi said that he expected the financial crisis to continue for the foreseeable future, making the company unable to continue publication "at the same level of quality." [4] Pacific Magazine's correspondents and journalists, who are based throughout the Pacific Islands region, were informed of the magazine's planned suspension in early December 2008. [4] The suspension of operations left open the possibility that Pacific Magazine could be relaunched in the future once economic conditions improve.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Ulamila Kurai Wragg Named Managing Editor Of Pacific Magazine". Pacific Magazine. October 1, 2008. Retrieved January 24, 2009.[ dead link]
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Pacific Magazine shuts down". Pacific Business Magazine. January 6, 2009. Retrieved January 25, 2009.
  3. ^ Engle, Erika (July 31, 2001). "Hawaii Business owner buys Honolulu magazine". Honolulu Star-Bulletin. Retrieved January 25, 2009.
  4. ^ a b c "Honolulu-based, Pacific Magazine, suspends all operations". Radio New Zealand International. January 4, 2009. Retrieved January 24, 2009.

External links