ZIFF DAVIS

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'Ziff Davis Inc.' (ZD) is an American magazine publisher and Internet Information company. It was founded in 1927 in Chicago by William B. Ziff, Sr. and Bernard G. Davis. Throughout most of its history, it was a publisher of hobbyist magazines, often ones devoted to expensive, advertiser-rich hobbies such as cars, photography, and electronics. However, since 1980 onward, Ziff Davis has primarily published computer and technology related magazines, and its growing number of websites, spun off from its magazines, have established Ziff Davis as an Internet Information company.
Ziff Davis had several broadcasting properties, first in the mid-1970s, and later with its own technology network ZDTV, later renamed to TechTV, that was sold to Vulcan Ventures in 2001. Ziff Davis' magazine publishing and Internet operations offices are based in New York City, San Francisco and Woburn.

Contents
History
Popular Aviation
Fiction and hobbyist magazines
Television stations
Technology magazines and web properties
Current magazines
Current properties
Discontinued magazines and websites
References
Sources

History


Popular Aviation

An early issue of Popular Aviation; the first magazine published by Ziff Davis. The covers were paintings for the first decade.

The William B. Ziff Company, founded 1920, was a successful Chicago advertising agency that secured advertising from national firms such as Proctor and Gamble for virtually all African American weekly newspapers. In 1923, Ziff acquired E. C. Auld Company, a Chicago publishing house. He had previously worked as a cartoonist for the ''Chicago Daily News'' so he created a humor periodical, ''Ziff's Magazine'', which was later changed to ''America's Humor''. William B. Ziff, 55, Publisher, Is Dead. [1]
Bernard George Davis was the student editor of the University of Pittsburgh's humor magazine, the ''Pitt Panther'', and was active in the Association of College Comics of the East. In his senior year he attended the association's convention and met William B. Ziff. When Davis graduated in 1927 he joined the William B. Ziff Company as the editor of ''America's Humor''. Bernard G. Davis, Publisher, Dead. "Bernard George Davis." ''Dictionary of American Biography, Supplement 9: 1971-1975''. Charles Scribner's Sons, 1994. Reproduced in Biography Resource Center. Farmington Hills, Mich.: Thomson Gale. 2007.
Ziff, who had been an aviator in World War I, created a new magazine, ''Popular Aviation'', in August 1927 that was published by Popular Aviation Publishing Company of Chicago, Illinois. Under Editor Harley W. Mitchell it became the largest aviation magazine with a circulation of 100,000 in 1929. Again, Mitchell, , , , Time Magazine, "Monthly magazine until this month called Popular Aviation and Aeronautics. With 100,000 circulation it is largest-selling of U. S. air publications." "Editor of Aeronautics is equally airwise Harley W. Mitchell, no relative of General Mitchell." The magazine's title became ''Aeronautics'' in June 1929 and the publishing company's name became Aeronautical Publications, Inc. The title was changed back to ''Popular Aviation'' in July 1930. The magazine became ''Flying'' in 1942 and is still published today by Hachette Filipacchi Media. The magazine celebrated its 80th anniversary in 2007.
The company histories normally give the founding date as 1927. This is when B.G. Davis joined and ''Popular Aviation'' magazine started. It was not until 1936 that the company became the "Ziff-Davis Publishing Company". (''Popular Aviation'', April 1936, was the first issue by Ziff-Davis Publishing.) Davis was given a substantial minority equity position in the company and was appointed a vice-president and director. He was later named president in 1946. Davis was a photography enthusiast and the editor of the ''Popular Photography'' magazine started in May 1937.
Fiction and hobbyist magazines

In early 1938, Ziff-Davis acquired ''Radio News'' and ''Amazing Stories'' magazines.[2] These were founded by Hugo Gernsback but sold in the Experimenter Publishing bankruptcy in 1929. Both magazines had declined since the bankruptcy but the resources of Ziff-Davis rejuvenated them starting with the April 1938 issues. ''Radio News'' was published until 1972 and in 1955 spun off ''Popular Electronics'' which was published until 1985. ''Amazing Stories'' was a leading science fiction magazine and Ziff Davis soon added a new companion, ''Fantastic Adventures'' (FA). In 1954 ''FA'' was folded by merger into the newer ''Fantastic'', founded in 1952 to great initial success. ZD published a number of other pulp magazines and, later, digest-sized fiction magazines in the 1940s and 1950s, and continued to publish ''Amazing'' and ''Fantastic'' till 1965.
William B. Ziff, Sr., died in 1953 and son William B. Ziff, Jr. returned from Germany to assume his role in the company. In 1958 Bernard G. Davis sold his share of Ziff Davis to found Davis Publications. Under the younger Ziff's direction, the company soon became a successful publisher of enthusiast magazines. Ziff Davis purchased titles like ''Car and Driver'' and by gearing content towards enthusiasts ''and'' readers who made purchasing decisions for their companies ("brand specifiers"), the company was able to attract advertising money that other, general-interest publications were losing.
In the 1970s and 1980s the company's success grew with this approach and a rapidly expanding interest in electronics and computing. With titles such as ''PC Magazine'', ''Popular Electronics'', and ''Computer Shopper'', Ziff Davis rose to the top of the technology magazine business.
Television stations

In 1979, Ziff Davis expanded into broadcasting, following an acquisition of television stations originally owned by greeting card company Rust Craft. Ziff Davis's stations included NBC affiliates WROC-TV in Rochester, New York and WRCB-TV in Chattanooga, Tennessee, CBS affiliates WEYI-TV in Saginaw, Michigan and WSTV-TV in Steubenville, Ohio (which changed its calls to WTOV-TV and its network affiliation to NBC after Ziff Davis assumed control of the station), and ABC affiliate WJKS-TV in Jacksonville, Florida (which would also switch to NBC shortly after its acquisition was finalized). These stations would be sold off to other owners (mainly "Television Station Partners") by the mid-1980s.
'Current DMA#' 'Market' 'Station' 'Years Owned' 'Current Affiliation/Owner'
50. Jacksonville, Florida 'WJKS-TV 17'
(now WCWJ)
1979-82 'CW' affiliate owned by Media General
66. Saginaw - Flint, Michigan 'WEYI-TV 25' 1979-83 'NBC' affiliate owned by Barrington Broadcasting
78. Rochester, New York 'WROC-TV 8' 1979-83 'CBS' affiliate owned by Nexstar Broadcasting Group
86. Chattanooga, Tennessee 'WRCB-TV 3' 1979-82 'NBC' affiliate owned by Sarkes Tarzian, Inc.
155. Steubenville, Ohio - Wheeling, West Virginia 'WSTV-TV/
WTOV-TV 9'
1979-83 'NBC' affiliate owned by Cox Enterprises

Technology magazines and web properties

Ziff Davis first started technology-themed publications in 1954, with ''Popular Electronics'' and, more briefly, ''Electronics World'' led more or less directly to its interest in home-computer magazines. Since then, Ziff Davis became a major player in the field of computer and internet related publishing. In 1982 it acquired PC Magazine. In 1988 it acquired the trade journal MacWEEK. In 1989 the company launched the ZDNet site. In 1991 ZDNet on Compuserve and on the fledgling internet were augmented by the purchase of Public Brand Software, the leading shareware disk provider. In 1995 it launched the magazine Yahoo! Internet Life, initially as ZD Internet Life. The magazine was meant to accompany and complement the site Yahoo!.
In 1998, Ziff Davis started ZDTV, a technology-themed television network. ZDTV was sold to Paul Allen's Vulcan Inc. in 2000, and was renamed to TechTV.
In 2001 Ziff Davis Media Inc. reached an agreement with CNET Networks Inc. and ZDNet to regain the URLs lost in the 2000 sale of Ziff Davis Inc, to SoftBank. The Ziff Davis Media Inc. partnership of Willis Stein & Partners and James Dunning (former Ziff Davis CEO, chairman, and president) gained the online content licensing rights to 11 publications, including PC Magazine, CIO Insight and eWEEK, home to industry insider
Spencer Katt.
Since 2004, Ziff Davis has annually hosted a trade show in New York City known as DigitalLife. DigitalLife showcases the newest technology in consumer electronics, gaming and entertainment. Unlike E3 or the Worldwide Developers Conference, DigitalLife is open to the public.
In November 2006, Ziff Davis announced the cancellation of the Official Playstation Magazine. They cited a lack of interest in the magazine (and its demo disk) due to digital distribution. OPM had run since 1997.

Current magazines




Baseline

CIO Insight

Current properties




PC Magazine

eSeminars

Microsoft Watch

PDF Zone

Publish

Gearlog.com

AppScout.com

GoodCleanTech.com

The Channel Insider

ExtremeDAP.com (Formerly ExtremeiPod, the name was changed following pressure from Apple over the use of iPod.)

Gazerk

Discontinued magazines and websites




★ ''Xbox Nation''

Patch Management

Small Business Center

★ ''Yahoo! Internet Life''

PC/Computing

Sm@rt Partner

References


1. "William Bernard Ziff.", ''Dictionary of American Biography, Supplement 5: 1951-1955''. American Council of Learned Societies, 1977. Reproduced in Biography Resource Center. Farmington Hills, Mich.: Thomson Gale. 2007.
2. Advertising News and Notes Ziff-Davis Publishing Company, New York and Chicago, has purchased Radio News Magazine and Amazing Stories.

Sources



★ De la Merced, Michael J., "William B. Ziff Jr., 76, Builder of Magazine Empire Dies", ''The New York Times'', September 12, 2006.

★ Thorsen, Tor. "RIP OPM." GameSpot. CNET Networks. 20 Nov 2006 [1].

★ "Ziff Davis Media: Press Release." Ziff Davis Reports Fourth Quarter 2005 Results. Ziff Davis Publishing Inc.. 8 Oct 2006 [2].

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