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W Magazine Vol.8



Released in 1999, the Dreamcast was Sega's last video game console. The Dreamcast was packed with innovative, cutting-edge technology considerably ahead of its time, a trait common to most Sega systems. Cancelled in 2001, Sega continued to produce games for the Dreamcast through 2004, with some independent games released as late as 2005. Named by Popular Science magazine as one of the most important and innovative products of 1999, the Dreamcast continues to have a cult following today.




W Magazine Vol.8




About Downloadable Issue OptionThe downloadable issue includes a PDF of the magazine, audio in MP3 format, and a PDF of the Student Reproducible Parts. The combo version includes all that, plus the print magazine, CD, and print Student Reproducible Parts.Access the downloads through your account after the order is processed. An account will be created if you don't have one: Watch for an e-mail with instructions. (Visit the Download Help page for more info.)


Important Note: CDs and PartsCDs and Student Reproducible Parts for Music K-8 will only be sold to customers who own the corresponding magazines, as it is the ownership of these magazines that conveys the use and performance rights for the music and materials found in them.


Often the subject of controversy, W subsequently featured stories and covers which have provoked mixed responses from its intended audience; most of W's most memorable covers are featured on the W Classics[9] page on the magazine's website. In July 2005, W produced a 60-page Steven Klein portfolio of Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt entitled "Domestic Bliss".[10] The shoot was based upon Pitt's idea of the irony of the perfect American family; set in 1963, the photographs mirror the era when 1960s disillusionment was boiling under the facade of pristine 1950s suburbia.


W also became well known for covering high class Western and Asian societies. Many of these society luminaries, as well as the elite of the entertainment and fashion industries, have allowed W into their homes for the magazine's "W House Tours"[15] feature, including Marc Jacobs, Sir Evelyn Rothschild and Imelda Marcos.


By 2009, W was harder hit than most fashion publications by a drop in luxury advertising, with ad pages down nearly 46 percent in one year.[16] Longtime editor in chief Patrick McCarthy retired in 2010 when Condé Nast moved W to its consumer magazine group, along with Vogue, Glamour and Allure.[17] Stefano Tonchi succeeded him as the magazine's editor in chief.[18] In 2011, Edward Enninful was tapped to take the magazine's style directorship.[19][20] Under Enninful's direction, W generated considerable attention for its riskier editorial, including the March 2012 cover shot by Steven Klein featuring Kate Moss depicted as a nun[21] as well as another cover featuring singer Nicki Minaj dolled up as an 18th-century French courtesan. For the magazine's November 2011 art issue, Enninful collaborated with Steven Meisel on a series of fake advertisements that ran throughout the magazine, including one that featured RuPaul's Drag Race Season 3 contestant Carmen Carrera hawking a fictitious fragrance called La Femme.


I would like to start this message expressing my gratitude to our readers who are continuously supporting us. This support is particularly reflected in a recent survey on the best magazines in the transformers industry, conducted by Virginia Transformer Corp, where we have received a huge support with 73 % votes. This has really impressed us, although it is consistent with the support that you give us continuously subscribing to the magazine. We have over 90 % paid subscribers, despite the fact that you can read over 90 % of our content for free, and apparently this is very unique in the publishing business. We see this recognition as an obligation to continue on this course with even greater devotion and passion, and we are fully committed to the task.


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