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New York Magazine Launches Politics Channel 'Early & Often'

Frank Rich Adam Moss

First Posted: 12/04/11 08:06 PM ET Updated: 12/04/11 09:35 PM ET

NEW YORK -- On Nov. 21 New York magazine hit newsstands with dueling pieces, one titled "How the GOP Went Mad," by former Bush speechwriter David Frum, and the other titled "The Self-Loathing of Liberals," by contributing editor Jonathan Chait. The cover also teased a Frank Rich essay on JFK, a profile of Arianna Huffington, and a column on Mayor Michael Bloomberg's handling of Occupy Wall Street and the Zuccotti Park raid.

It was a politics-packed print edition, joined by an online scoop that afternoon detailing how Fox News chief Roger Ailes scolded Sarah Palin for announcing she wouldn't run for president on Mark Levin's radio show instead of the cable network that pays her salary. Those stories helped bring in 800,000 unique visitors on Nov. 21, the magazine's highest web traffic day of 2011.

So it makes sense that editor-in-chief Adam Moss would want to better showcase the magazine's increasing national political coverage online during the 2012 campaign season. On Monday, New York will launch a new politics channel, "Early & Often," that bundles together each issue's political content, along with daily posts, a feature called "number of the day," videos, and pieces culled from the magazine's archives by writers like Slate's Jacob Weisberg, Time's Joe Klein, and Ms. magazine co-founder and feminist icon Gloria Steinem.

"The national political scene has seeped through our own New York sensibility," Moss said in an interview with The Huffington Post. "By New York, I don't mean the city, really. I mean a certain way of looking at the world."

"We think we have something to contribute to the political dialogue," Moss added, describing New York's writing as "serious, but also playful and very contentious."

While New York, like other city-specific magazines, runs its share of service-y covers -- "Where to Eat," "Best Doctors," and "Best of New York" -- the magazine also devotes several issues each year to national politics.

In July, writer-at-large Frank Rich kicked off his post-New York Times career with a harsh critique of how the Obama administration hasn't held Wall Street accountable for the financial crisis. Recently, New York's published cover stories have focused on Occupy Wall Street's potential impact on 2012, by "Game Change" co-author John Heilemann, and Mitt Romney's tenure atop Bain Capital, by Benjamin Wallace-Wells.

Moss says that New York has currently "amassed what we think is an unusually strong line-up of political writers of various types who write both for us digitally and write for us in print." In addition to the aforementioned writers, Moss rattled off several others who’ll contribute regularly to "Early & Often," including Dan Amira, Noreen Malone, Jason Zengerle, Gabriel Sherman and Jennifer Senior.

These days, roughly two thirds of New York's online readership is located outside the city -- more than is the case for most other regional magazines. "Our whole digital ambition is national," Moss said. "And in fact, the magazine itself has more and more national content, as seen through what we think is a New York lens. But what it's looking at is the national scene."

In September, Moss spoke to Adweek about focusing more on national politics, and hinted there would be more features unveiled over "the next several months." In addition to Monday's launch, New York plans to publish a special election issue in October 2012. The magazine will also partner with Economist Group's Ideas People Media an advertising sales network that could lead to millions of more eyeballs both nationally and internationally.

Moss hopes that political junkies nationwide will bookmark the new politics channel, heading there to find reporting and analysis of the candidates' statements as well as the media outrage of the day.

"If Rick Perry or Newt Gingrich or Joe Biden says something someplace and you want a certain kind of commentary that you identify as our way of looking at things, you'll begin to depend on us for that," Moss said. "And this is where you'll find it."

Still, Moss doesn't expect "Early & Often" to be a one-stop shop for politics obsessives, who are more likely to look for New York's unique take and original reporting while also clicking through Politico, Talking Points Memo, Andrew Sullivan, or The Huffington Post's own Politics vertical. He sees New York's channel as more complementary than competitive with any specific site.

"We're not completely unique," Moss said. "I wouldn't make that claim for us. But we're unique-ish."

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NEW YORK -- On Nov. 21 New York magazine hit newsstands with dueling pieces, one titled "How the GOP Went Mad," by former Bush speechwriter David Frum, and the other titled "The Self-Loathing of Liber...
NEW YORK -- On Nov. 21 New York magazine hit newsstands with dueling pieces, one titled "How the GOP Went Mad," by former Bush speechwriter David Frum, and the other titled "The Self-Loathing of Liber...
 
 
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05:02 PM on 12/05/2011
David Frum, Jonathan Chait, Frank Rich, Adam Moss, Jacob Weisberg, Joe Klein and Gloria Steinem have "something to contribute to the political dialogue", what about some one?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Freenation
08:57 AM on 12/05/2011
It still sucks...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ginger42
Just the facts, ma'am--Sgt Friday
12:02 AM on 12/05/2011
Sounds/Looks good
hatchetfac
I love contradictions!
09:35 PM on 12/04/2011
If the NY Times ever, ever wanted to resurrect itself as a really credible news organization. . .it would fire every political hack "journalist" on the payroll. Ok! That means they would have to fire everyone and begin anew. . .well. . .so be it. . you'll still be in business! Otherwise, you are going the way of the dodo bird!
lightnessandjoy
Is micro-bio a new disease?
10:11 PM on 12/04/2011
NY Times is a newspaper; New York is a magazine. This article is about the magazine.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
foodcoma
11:50 PM on 12/04/2011
thank you - that just made me laugh. .... and hatchetfac, really? LOL
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
The Power To Unelect
Corruption Is Destroying The Nation
02:00 AM on 12/05/2011
They are as bought as Fx.

No longer credible.
09:33 PM on 12/04/2011
The Blimp & The Simp honor fallen at Ground Zero on 7 Dec. To honor those who served when we passed the hat. Mitt & Newt, Deferment Duet.
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Sarazzara
La Fanciulla del East Coast
09:31 PM on 12/04/2011
Pardon me, but "launching a channel"?

Where exactly? Online? Cable? New York mag's own website?

Anyone?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
alyseven
Religion is the root of all evil.
09:42 PM on 12/04/2011
Who knows!? I still haven't finished reading the Nov 21 edition because it just gets me depressed.
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Sarazzara
La Fanciulla del East Coast
09:59 PM on 12/04/2011
HaHa! That bad, eh? Just what I need, even more reason to loathe our ridiculous political system and its hideous participants.

Makes me want to climb into bed, pull the bed covers up to my chin and watch screwball comedies and eat ice cream right through the 2012 election. And then some.
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OzzieTonto
“Hatred, the only thing that lasts.”
11:03 PM on 12/04/2011
You're obviously living in New York.
lightnessandjoy
Is micro-bio a new disease?
10:12 PM on 12/04/2011
Online it appears.
09:30 PM on 12/04/2011
The Simp and The Blimp celebrate Pearl at Ground Zero. We serve ourselves first and our Country last. Amerika hold your Nose and vote 4 us
09:30 PM on 12/04/2011
Translation: NY magazine ramps up coverage favoring O b a m a.
lightnessandjoy
Is micro-bio a new disease?
10:14 PM on 12/04/2011
Pretty hard to find a Republican worthy of favorable coverage, so they're probably stuck with the President for favorable stuff. BTW, something wrong with your keyboard?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
FearlessFreep
I'm actually a radical leftist
02:03 AM on 12/05/2011
Better than all caps, anyway.
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simian sez
"Hands on your heads!"
08:59 PM on 12/04/2011
Why would anyone be smiling while holding up a banner that says, "Something Rotten" if they weren't making money on the fact.
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john rajah
'Why do u call me Lord and dont do what I say?'
08:33 PM on 12/04/2011
Please oh please,Adam Moss, don't sell shares in "Early and Often" to something like AOL.

You'll lose your soul.