How Rolling Stone got its groove back


In its infancy during the 1960s and 1970s, Rolling Stone magazine offered young, enraged and engaged readers with a countercultural voice no other publication at the time provided. Then those youths grew up, had showers, got jobs, and Rolling Stone didn’t have much to say. Fast-forward to today. Given the string of disasters that have ravaged the 2000s to date, it makes sense that the building anger has rekindled the magazine’s fiery spirit. Read Jeremy W. Peters’ interesting article that explores Rolling Stone’s grand resurgence.
Full story at The New York Times.

No comments:

Post a Comment