The Bold Type
add a link
'It celebrates a different kind of female boss' - Joanna Coles
'It celebrates a different kind of female boss' - Joanna Colestrefwoorden: the bold type, artikel
|
I remember visiting this website once...
It was called 'It celebrates a different kind of female boss': Joanna Coles on new toon 'The Bold Type' - ABC News
Here's some stuff I remembered seeing:
Chief Content Officer of Hearst Magazine, Joanna Coles attends the 2017 Outstanding Mother Awards at The Pierre Hotel, on May 8, 2017, in New York City.
When Joanna Coles, the chief content officer of Hearst Magazines, was 12 years old she created a magazine and sent an issue to Buckingham Palace for Queen Elizabeth. While it might have been a foreshadow for her future career in the publishing business, the British native didn’t consider that unusual behavior for her childhood self.
“It struck me that actually if you really want to understand what your passions are in mid-life, which is where I hope I am now, you can go back through your childhood and mine it for clues,” Coles tells ABC News\' Rebecca Jarvis on an episode of ABC Radio’s “No Limits with Rebecca Jarvis.”
When Joanna Coles, Chief Content Officer at Hearst Magazines, says “don’t block your title!” YOU LISTEN Loved this week’s convo ?? Link to the full episode in bio.
A post shared by Rebecca Jarvis (@rebeccajarvis) on Sep 5, 2017 at 8:05am PDT
Coles heard back from Buckingham Palace in the form of a note telling her that the Queen enjoyed reading her magazine. That was all the encouragement her journalism career needed.
Listen to Joanna Coles on ABC Radio’s “No Limits with Rebecca Jarvis”
The surprising reason why Jessica Alba wanted to become an actress
Comedian Heather McDonald talks career, motherhood and the \'Juicy Scoop\'
“Her [Queen Elizabeth’s] lady in waiting wrote back and said the queen very much enjoyed reading it and was looking forward to other issues. And so I was like Oh God now I\'ve got to produce subscription-worthy issues and send them to Buckingham Palace. That was all the encouragement I needed to go into the media,” Coles remembered.
Growing up in Yorkshire, or the “Texas of Britain,” Coles remembers a childhood shaped by extreme curiosity. She believes that books spoke directly to her, and Coles tells Jarvis about the “excitement of roaring home, throwing myself on the bed and devouring a book.”
Coles’s career has spanned both sides of the pond. Beginning with The Daily Telegraph in London, she moved to New York as bureau chief of The Guardian. She joined the mega media conglomerate Hearst in 2006 as the editor-in-chief of Marie Claire, and 6 years later took on the same role at Cosmopolitan.
Meet the woman behind @Hearst Magazines - Chief Content Officer, @JoannaColes on this week\'s #NoLimits: https://t.co/GqJMhn2Adf pic.twitter.com/UX69hAAzBu
Coles now oversees 300 magazines worldwide at Hearst. Throughout her career she’s seen the media landscape transform itself over and over, and despite digital’s apparent dominance, Coles still believes in the power of print.
“Our digital media is very much the sprint. It uses different muscles than other races, and you’re on a different diet for it.”
“The magazine is much more about what are we going to be thinking about in three months, 6 months, a year’s time. And that’s where magazine-makers are, really, cultural soothsayers,” Coles adds.
A post shared by Joanna Coles (@joannacoles) on Feb 4, 2016 at 2:38pm PST
Coles tells Jarvis that if she were to build a media company from the ground up, ink and paper would still be key.
“There would definitely be a print component because I see how much people crave the special interest of print and how ephemeral digital content is. People long to have things to hold on to,” Coles says.
For now, Coles has her energies focused on Hearst, serving on the board of Snap Inc. and now being an executive producer on “The Bold Type,” a show that recently debuted on Freeform, focusing on the power of female friendships.
“It celebrates a different kind of female boss than we have seen on television before, and one of the things that really disturbed me thinking about popular culture is how few images there are, how few story-lines there are, around working women.”
A post shared by Joanna Coles (@joannacoles) on Aug 4, 2017 at 11:23am PDT
As Coles reflects on her career and countless experiences from The Daily Telegraph to "The Bold Type," she tells Jarvis how so much of it has been shaped by “these incredible female friendships that are formed when you are young -- starting out together, failing together, and succeeding together.”
Hear more of Joanna Coles’s interview on this week\'s episode of "No Limits With Rebecca Jarvis," available on iTunes, Stitcher, Google Play Music, Spotify and the ABC News app.
Joanna Coles reflects on career and new show \'The Bold Type\'
Las Vegas gunman may have planned escape, had help: Sheriff
US Gulf Coast warned new tropical storm could strike as hurricane this weekend
Trump, Tillerson have sharp differences on policy despite denials
Otto Warmbier\'s parents want North Korea added to list of state sponsors of terrorism
Thousands of Dreamers could lose protection as DACA deadline arrives
Trump nominee defends move to void gay worker protections
Judge lets Trump\'s pardon of former Sheriff Arpaio stand
Anti-abortion Rep. Tim Murphy asked mistress to terminate pregnancy: Report
State Department denies Tillerson called Trump a \'moron\'
Sen. Warren says credit bureaus \'making millions\' from data breaches
Texas Republican sees \'no reason\' for bump stocks, open to ban
Senator introducing bill to ban bump stocks after Vegas shooting
\'Issue of collusion\' with Russia still open, Senate intel chief says
Obama veterans launch health insurance sign-up campaign
Pence donates blood \'to raise awareness for those in need in Las Vegas\'
Top Democrat demands answers on whether Kushner used private email for diplomacy
Nikki Haley issued warning over political tweet
Putin opens talks with Saudi king at the Kremlin
Tampa school fire blamed on Irma flooding
French president\'s vulgar comment on jobless causes outcry
Climate change could nearly triple airplane turbulence in next decades, study says
Judge won\'t release Iraq War veteran fighting deportation
Catalan officials mull independence; Spanish stocks sink
Las Vegas shooting victim reunites with \'angel\' who brought him to hospital
Nobel-winning technique like "Google Earth for molecules"
The Note: Bump stocks could be breakthrough on bipartisan gun legislation
Top House Republican wants to review \'bump stocks\' after Las Vegas
Trump avoids gun control talk as he visits Las Vegas after shooting
Portrait emerging of Las Vegas shooter as man \'descending into madness\'
Inside the Vegas gun culture that sits right on the Strip next to gleaming hotels
Las Vegas shooter may have been casing Chance the Rapper and Lorde concert
Teresa Giudice: Anger made me tell the truth about my marriage
95 percent of Puerto Rico still without power weeks after Hurricane Maria
Kim Zolciak Biermann gives update 2 years after having mini-stroke
Comedian releases novel inspired by his Irish roots
Female high school quarterback throws TD on 1st pass in varsity game
read more
teken in of kom bij fanpop om uw commentaar toe te voegen