Top 1200 Magazine Publishing Quotes & Sayings - Page 4

Explore popular Magazine Publishing quotes.
Last updated on April 21, 2025.
I had a publishing history of murder mysteries.
I should have my own publishing companies.
During the Second War, the U.S.O. sent special issues of the principal American magazines to the Armed Forces, with the ads omitted. The men insisted on having the ads back again. Naturally. The ads are by far the best part of any magazine or newspaper. More pains and thought, more wit and art go into the making of an ad than into any prose feature of press or magazine. Ads are news. What is wrong with them is that they are always good news.
The wheels of publishing never slow down. — © Laurie Graham
The wheels of publishing never slow down.
Publishing for me is a business, not an ideology.
You'd better discover a more important motive than publication for your work or else you'll go crazy. My sense is that you'll be writers only if you are convinced that to write is something for which there is no substitute in your life. You must therefore be ambitious for your work rather than for its promotion. The good news here is that if you assign secondary importance to publishing and primary to writing itself, you will write better, and will thus increase your odds of getting publishing.
And I'm working with all these great people at Sony Publishing.
It's a crapshoot, publishing.
I just thought I'd take a break from publishing for a while.
Technology and the internet have changed the world of publishing forever.
Publishing and film are such different worlds for writers.
Publishing is not my world.
I think you have to have a publishing house that offers you some support.
Publishing requires a lot of persistence and a fair amount of luck. — © Liza Campbell
Publishing requires a lot of persistence and a fair amount of luck.
For years I'd understood that publishing in paperback was the kiss of death.
My mother obviously was in the publishing business.
Publishing at a young age is not really an indicator of talent.
Publishing magazines for yourself is not good business, man.
I graduated with an English degree and worked for awhile in academic publishing.
Yelling is a form of publishing
I'm really good at making software for publishing.
Book publishing would be so much easier without the authors.
In some cases, people are silent; they're being complacent. But we're also seeing people speak out against some of these raids, these arrests. So for example, the Townhouse Gallery - the outreach director gave an interview to Ahram Online, which is a semi-official news agency here. And he sort of dismissed it, played it down. But the publisher from the publishing house - the Merit Publishing House, which was raided - he said this won't scare us; we will continue to dream of a free country, a country with social justice, and this won't silence us.
We've worked together with Carine Roitfeld a lot; she's been a big supporter and helped me along with everything. Also, just the way she does her magazine - she's not afraid to do things differently or scared to put certain things in her magazine, a bit of controversy. She's a bit naughty. She likes sexy things.
And when you get an eminent journal like Time magazine complaining, as it often has, that to the young writers of today life seems short on rewards and that what they write is a product of their own neuroses, in its silly way the magazine is merely stating the status quo and obvious truth. The good writing of any age has always been the product of someone's neurosis, and we'd have a mighty dull literature if all the writers that came along were a bunch of happy chuckleheads.
President Bush got an early Christmas gift. This week, President Bush was chosen as 'Person of the Year' by Time magazine. Not only that, Martha Stewart was chosen as person of the year by Doing Time magazine.
I bless / all knowledge of love, all ways of publishing it.
Publishing isn't a job anymore. It's a button.
Actually, I started as a ventriloquist and my music teacher said, "Why don't you emcee the talent show?" My act was out of the back of Boys' Life magazine-they had a whole series of jokes in the back of Boys' Life magazine for Boy Scouts. So my act was jokes with my ventriloquist figure, and it was really bad, but I walked into the classroom afterward and the kids went, "Wow, you're cool." I wasn't cool at all, but I thought, "Well, this is a pretty good deal."
When I was 16, I started publishing all kinds of things in school magazines.
The publishing industry is not immune to gossips.
Publishing is in a kind of Jurassic age.
There's no law preventing a journalist from publishing whatever they want.
The first review our band ever got - when I was 17 years old and we had just released our first EP, and this tiny little magazine wrote a review on it, and for that month, we were the best album of the month, and we were also the worst album of the month. We won best and worst album of the month in the same magazine.
I worked for a publishing company in Hollywood.
I am a co-writer of 'Survivor,' so there's publishing that I'll receive for some of the records.
The music publishing I own is fabulous recording.
I wrote a letter to the magazine [Time magazine] pointing out that [Richard] Corliss's comparison of Christopher Lee's Saruman to Osama Bin Laden, and the vastly outnumbered defenders of Helm's Deep united against the Orcs to the "Coalition of the Willing" fighting the good fight against Muslim hordes, displayed the simplistic, xenophobic, and arrogant worldview that makes the government of the United States feared and mistrusted around the world. The editors claimed they had no space to print my brief letter, which I felt was dishonest and cowardly.
I cannot claim to have had a hard time publishing. — © Alice Walker
I cannot claim to have had a hard time publishing.
It's a wonderfully democratic method, publishing a text on the Internet.
Book clubs are the best thing that has happened to the world of publishing.
Publishing a book is a very different thing than writing one.
The successful publishing house is the one that can guess ahead, not the one that imitates the past.
Publishing is the only industry I can think of where most of the employees spend most of their time stating with great self-assurance that they don't know how to do their jobs. "I don't know how to sell this," they explain, frowning, as though it's your fault. "I don't know how to package this. I don't know what the market is for this book. I don't know how we're going to draw attention to this." In most occupations, people try to hide their incompetence; only in publishing is it flaunted as though it were the chief qualification for the job.
I started, actually, in journalism when I was - well. I started at the 'New York Times' when I was 18 years old, actually, but really got into journalism when I was 15 years old and had started a sports magazine which was trying to become a national sports magazine.
I have written some poetry and two prose books about baseball, but if I had been a rich man, I probably would not have written many of the magazine essays that I have had to do. But, needing to write magazine essays to support myself, I looked to things that I cared about and wanted to write about, and certainly baseball was one of them.
The Voice did not consider itself a conventional magazine. It took me awhile to realize that it was named The Voice for a reason. They wanted voices. At the time, good magazine stories were still believed to be written in the third person based on the false belief they were more objective. Of course some conventional stories require third person, but in the really interesting stories - the ones I got do to at The Voice and Esquire - were about subjectivity, subjectivities.
The publishing industry is stuck somewhere in the Jurassic era.
I started working and publishing in price theory by 1938. — © George Stigler
I started working and publishing in price theory by 1938.
Don't sell your publishing.
Once a discovery has been published, there is no way of un-publishing it.
I was publishing when I was 20, 21. And it really never stopped.
Publishing can be tough. It has the ability to kill dreams.
I had done an interview with 'Hello' magazine. In it, they asked me if I was going to marry Emily Blunt. Of course, what was I going to say? I said, 'Oh yeah I am going to marry her and I love her and all of this stuff.' It's true. I was making a joke. They said to me, 'Have you asked her?' I said, 'Have I? Maybe I am asking her through the magazine.'
I have made mention of something I've found incredible a lot of times. I'm gonna remind you of it again. A TIME magazine cover back in the mid-1990s. The cover story on that issue of TIME magazine had the following headline Shock: Men and Women are Actually Born Different." When I saw that the first time, I was astounded. I cite it often, because I need to ask you a question: What must you think, what must you believe if you come across research that tells you men and women are born different?
With the communication internet, whole industries have been disrupted. You're in the publishing industry, you understand that. Before, we had newspapers, magazines - now you're on the web. I'm in book publishing. I don't have to tell you what's happened to us. Television has taken a hit. The music industry. But, thousands of new businesses have emerged on this new communication revolution platform. Not just Google, Facebook, and Twitter. There are thousands of operations. Businesses that are doing the platforms, the apps. They're mining the big data. They're creating the connections.
Publishing is a tough business.
As soon as you start publishing, you are the star and so people see you that way.
Don't sign your publishing away.
Yes, the world is now flat for publishing as well.
This site uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience. More info...
Got it!