Bust is a women's lifestyle magazine that is published four times a year. The magazine was started by Debbie Stoller and Laurie Henzel and is currently published by Street Media LLC. Bust covers music, news, crafts, art, sex, and fashion from an independent ("indie"), third wave feminist perspective. The magazine's slogan is "For women with something to get off their chest."

Bust
Editor-in-ChiefTara Finley
CategoriesFeminism
FrequencyQuarterly
PublisherErin Domash
FounderDebbie Stoller, Laurie Henzel, and Marcelle Karp
Founded1993 (1993)
CompanyStreet Media, LLC
CountryUnited States
Based inNew York City
LanguageEnglish
Websitebust.com
ISSN1089-4713

Content

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In the book titled Girl Culture: An Encyclopedia Volume 1, Miranda Campbell wrote a section on Bust and its features, including "Real Life: Crafts, Cooking, Home and Hearth" which encourages readers to make their own items instead of buying them, "Fashion and Booty" which suggests clothing, accessories, and other novelty items readers might be interested in purchasing, and articles on car maintenance featuring auto technician Lucille Treganowan. BUST magazine promotes a balance of contributing to consumerism as well as encouragement of independence from consumerism. The magazine also features articles on issues about sex in which they encourage women to embrace their sexuality and each issue also includes an erotic short story.[1]

Many mainstream and indie actors, directors, comedians, and musicians have appeared on the cover.[2]

History

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Bust was founded in New York City in 1993[3][4] by Stoller (using the alias "Celina Hex"),[5] Henzel, and Marcelle Karp (using the alias "Betty Boob"). The trio founded BUST after meeting at Nickelodeon;[6] they wanted to create a positive and outspoken women's magazine for their generation. "Our intention," Stoller said, "was to start a magazine that would be a real alternative to Vogue, Cosmo, Mademoiselle, and Glamour, something that was as fierce and as funny and as pro-female as the women we knew." She said the women she knew who read the Cosmos of the world "always ended up feeling bad afterward. They support very stereotypical ideas about women."[7] BUST started off as a zine, with Stoller, Henzel, and Karp photocopying, stapling, and distributing the issues themselves after work and on weekends. After receiving positive feedback on their zine, Stoller, Henzel, and Karp left their jobs to work on BUST full-time, putting out four issues a year.

Stoller named the magazine Bust because she wanted a name that was "provocative, funny, and also sexy."[8]

Bust won a Firecracker Alternative Book Award in the 'Zine category in 1997.[9]

Bust was purchased by Razorfish Studios in August 2000; one year later, after September 11, Razorfish Studios went out of business.[6] Stoller and Henzel later bought Bust back from Razorfish Studios. Bust was purchased by Street Media, LLC in 2022.[10]

Events

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Bust sponsored the Holiday Craftacular,[11] an annual craft fair in New York City that began in December 2005, and added a Spring Fling Craftacular in 2008.

On July 25, 2013 Bust held 'The Bust Magazine 20th Anniversary Extravaganza' in Brooklyn, New York. To commemorate the magazine's 20th anniversary, they held the 'Golden Bra Awards'.[12]

DIY Guide To Life

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Stoller and Henzel are the authors of Bust's DIY Guide to Life, consisting of more than 250 of the best DIY projects from the magazine's then 15 years of publication. There are guides for a wide range of things from gardening, to weddings, and sex projects, organized by category.

The Bust Guide to the New Girl Order

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Stoller and Karp are also the authors of The Bust Guide to the New Girl Order which was published on August 1, 1999, by Penguin Books. The book has eight topics on female issues and includes the best writings from the magazine. There are essays about girls' culture, such as women in media, sex, fashion, growing up, and relationships with boys.[13]

References

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  1. ^ Girl Culture: An Encyclopedia Volume 1 pp. 208-210 [permanent dead link]
  2. ^ "Current and Past Issues". Bust.
  3. ^ Elizabeth Groeneveld (2010). "Join the Knitting Revolution: Third-Wave Feminist Magazines and the Politics of Domesticity" (PDF). Canadian Review of American Studies. 40 (2). Retrieved March 14, 2016.
  4. ^ Mary Kosut (May 1, 2012). Encyclopedia of Gender in Media. SAGE Publications. p. 756. ISBN 978-1-5063-3828-6. Retrieved June 18, 2016.
  5. ^ Glenn, Joshua (December 19, 2013). "REGRESSION TOWARD THE ZINE (17)". HiLoBrow. Bust cofounder Debbie Stoller (Celina Hex)...
  6. ^ a b "BUST Magazine Refuses to Go, Well, Bust". LA Times. April 1, 2002. Retrieved June 10, 2012
  7. ^ Kuczynski, Alex (September 10, 2001). "The New Feminist Mystique; Variety of Brash Magazines Upset the Old Stereotypes". The New York Times.
  8. ^ ""The Four Questions," The Association of Magazine Media, May 11, 2007".
  9. ^ "Firecracker Alternative Book Awards". ReadersRead.com. Archived from the original on Mar 4, 2009.
  10. ^ "LA Weekly's controversial publisher wants to revive OC Weekly. Should he?". LA Times. January 19, 2023
  11. ^ "Bust Magazine Craftacular and Food Fair Holiday 2011". Inhabitat New York. inhabitat.com. Archived from the original on 2015-03-01. Retrieved 10 June 2012.
  12. ^ "BUST's Turning 20...Come Party with Us!". bust.com.
  13. ^ "The Bust Guide to the New Girl Order". NPR. 1999-09-24. Retrieved 2020-08-26.

Further reading

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