SPY Research Materials





This page contains a list of user images about SPY which are relevant to the point and besides images, you can also use the tabs in the bottom to browse SPY news, videos, wiki information, tweets, documents and weblinks.

SPY Images

Rihanna - Take A Bow
Music video by Rihanna performing Take A Bow. YouTube view counts pre-VEVO: 66288884. (C) 2008 The Island Def Jam Music Group.
Key & Peele: Substitute Teacher
A substitute teacher from the inner city refuses to be messed with while taking attendance.
Taylor Swift - Back To December
Music video by Taylor Swift performing Back To December. (C) 2011 Big Machine Records, LLC.
P!nk - Try (The Truth About Love - Live From Los Angeles)
Music video by P!nk performing Try (The Truth About Love - Live From Los Angeles). (C) 2012 RCA Records, a division of Sony Music Entertainment.
Rihanna - Stay ft. Mikky Ekko
Download "Stay" from Unapologetic now: http://smarturl.it/UnapologeticDlx Music video by Rihanna performing Stay ft. Mikky Ekko. © 2013 The Island Def Jam Mu...
David Guetta - Just One Last Time ft. Taped Rai
"Just One Last Time" feat. Taped Rai. Available to download on iTunes including remixes of : Tiësto, HARD ROCK SOFA & Deniz Koyu http://smarturl.it/DGJustOne...
MACKLEMORE & RYAN LEWIS - CAN'T HOLD US FEAT. RAY DALTON (OFFICIAL MUSIC VIDEO)
Macklemore & Ryan Lewis present the official music video for Can't Hold Us feat. Ray Dalton. Can't Hold Us on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/cant-...
Rihanna - Diamonds
Pre-order new album Unapologetic, out worldwide Monday, November 19: http://smarturl.it/UnapologeticDlx Music video by Rihanna performing Diamonds. ©: The Is...
Draw My Life- Jenna Marbles
This video accidentally turned out kind of sad, ME SO SOWWY IT NOT POSED TO BE SAD WHO WANTS HUGS AND COOKIES? Also, FYI for anyone attempting this, it takes...
Fast Food Lasagna - Epic Meal Time
LIKE/FAV We got 45 burgers, a whole bunch of liquor and bacon.... this is Fast Food Lasagna. Buy TSHIRTS!! Click Here! http://shop.epicmealtime.com/ Like on ...
Key & Peele: Dueling Hats
A couple of friends step up their hat game.
Draw My Life - Ryan Higa
So i was pretty hesitant to make this video... but after all of your request, here is my Draw My Life video! Check out my 2nd Channel for more vlogs: http://...
Fanfiction: Flowers For My Valentine. Read By: PewDiePie & Cry
Cry ▻ http://www.youtube.com/chaoticmonki Click Here To Subscribe! ▻ http://bit.ly/JoinBroArmy Fanfiction: http://www.fanfiction.net/s/9010921/1/Flowers-For-...
Spy's offices were in New York City's Puck Building, which had formerly been the home of an earlier satirical US magazine, "Puck"

Spy was a satirical monthly magazine founded in 1986 by Kurt Andersen and E. Graydon Carter, who served as its first editors, and Thomas L. Phillips, Jr., its first publisher. After one folding and a rebirth, it ceased publication in 1998. Spy was named after the fictitious magazine that employed James Stewart's character, Macaulay "Mike" Connor, in the movie The Philadelphia Story.

Primarily a magazine of satirical reporting and humor, but also featuring some more serious investigative journalism, the New York–based Spy traced its influences to "H. L. Mencken and A. J. Liebling and Wolcott Gibbs from the '20s, '30s, and '40s; parody-Time-ese of the '40s and '50s; New Journalism of the '60s and '70s; Private Eye, the scabrous (and much jokier) British fortnightly; and the ways we just happened to write," as Andersen and Carter would later write in Spy: The Funny Years. On April 12, 2011, during a live interview on Public Broadcasting Service (PBS), Kurt Anderson stated that Mad magazine also had a strong influence on their humor by creating examples of satirical and cold analysis of government and prominent figures read in their youth.

It specialized in intelligent, thoroughly researched, irreverent pieces targeting the American media and entertainment industries. Many issues often featured brief photographs of nudity relevant to a story. Some of its features attempted to present the darker side of celebrities such as Arnold Schwarzenegger, John F. Kennedy, Jr., Steven Seagal,[1] Martha Stewart, and especially, the real-estate tycoon Donald Trump and his then-wife Ivana Trump. Pejorative epithets of celebrities, e.g. "Abe 'I'm Writing As Bad As I Can' Rosenthal" and "former fat girl Diane Brill" became a Spy trademark.

"It's pretty safe to say," Dave Eggers[2] wrote in 2006, "that Spy was the most influential magazine of the 1980s. It might have remade New York's cultural landscape; it definitely changed the whole tone of magazine journalism. It was cruel, brilliant, beautifully written and perfectly designed, and feared by all. There's no magazine I know of that's so continually referenced, held up as a benchmark, and whose demise is so lamented."

Contents

History [edit]

Despite its relatively short life, Spy was among the most widely acclaimed and discussed of American magazines of its time, chiefly for its detached and ironic tone, its use of quasi-scientific charts and tables to convey information, and its elaborate, classically influenced typography and layout.

With a business staff led by Phillips, founding advertising director and future Nickelodeon worldwide creative director Anne Kreamer, and future ESPN.com and Newsweek digital SVP Geoff Reiss, Spy broke even in 1989 and 1990. But it was not able to remain profitable after a recession began to affect the U.S. economy beginning in the early 1990s. The founders sold the magazine to advertising mogul Charles Saatchi and art collector Jean Pigozzi in 1991; several months later, Carter left the magazine; Andersen departed eighteen months later, being replaced by Tony Hendra. The magazine briefly ceased publication in 1994, was revived soon afterward under new ownership, and finally went out of business permanently in 1998. Its last editor was a recent Harvard graduate, Bruno Maddox.

In October 2006, Miramax Books published Spy: The Funny Years (ISBN 1-4013-5239-1), a greatest-hits anthology and history of the magazine created and compiled by Carter, Andersen, and one of their original editors, George Kalogerakis.

Features [edit]

Spy's popular features included "Separated at birth?" (side-by-side photographs of two different celebrities, similar to Private Eye's "Lookalikes") and "Celebrity Math", which presented thumbnail head shots atop simple mathematical models representing the components of celebrities (e.g., Fabio - Catherine Deneuve = Billy Ray Cyrus).

The magazine also specialized in often elaborate stings and hoaxes that explored the American phenomenon of celebrity. Notable efforts in this regard include: the purchasing by the magazine of a bona fide Scottish noble title, a test of the U.S. Postal Service in which letters were addressed only with the photograph of the intended recipient (the letter sent to Cardinal John Joseph O'Connor was successfully delivered), and, to test the ethical limits of the public relations industry, the successful pitching of a chain of fast-food restaurants that served burgers of freshly ground rabbit meat and was fronted by a fuzzy-eared mascot who told customers how delicious his species was to humans.

For a humorous magazine, Spy often was aggressive about straight feature reporting. In the summer of 1992, it ran the only serious investigative story on President George H.W. Bush's alleged extramarital affairs with Jennifer Fitzgerald and other women.[3] The following year, Spy ran an article entitled "Clinton's First 100 Lies", detailing what it described as the new president's pattern of duplicitous behavior.[4] After O.J. Simpson was acquitted on charges of murdering his former wife and her friend, Spy ran a cover story under the headline "He's Guilty, By George!" presenting a long list of details that its writers said proved conclusively that Simpson was the killer; he did not sue. The cover illustration parodied that of the much-hyped premiere issue of George magazine, with Simpson standing in for Cindy Crawford. Spy used attorneys to vet such potentially libelous material, but its stories often angered their prominent subjects and occasionally drove away advertisers.

Editorial staff [edit]

Books [edit]

CDs [edit]

  • Spy Magazine Presents: Spy Music (Vol I)
  • Spy Magazine Presents: White Men Can't Wrap (Vol II)
  • Spy Magazine Presents: Soft, Safe & Sanitized (Vol III)

See also [edit]

References [edit]

  1. ^ John Connolly (18 April 2010). "Steven Seagal Under Siege". The Daily Beast. Retrieved 25 March 2013. 
  2. ^ Dave Eggers (10 February 2011). "Spy". Google Books. Retrieved 12 May 2013. 
  3. ^ http://books.google.com/books?id=goAxRblMWT4C&pg=PA31&dq=%22one+hot+story%22&hl=en&ei=9MhnTdHOLcf2gAeoyZnLCg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CDIQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=%22one%20hot%20story%22&f=false
  4. ^ http://books.google.com/books?id=hDPVu_HzgWwC&pg=PA46&dq=%22the+following+100+examples%22&hl=en&ei=XMpnTbrvFs3qgQfvpf3KCg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CCgQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=%22the%20following%20100%20examples%22&f=false

External links [edit]

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