| Founder
and publisher of Ebony
and Jet magazines dies at 87
By
Associated Press
Publisher
John H. Johnson, whose Ebony and Jet magazines
countered stereotypical coverage of blacks after World
War II and turned him into one of the most influential
black leaders in America, died Monday, his company
said. He was 87.
LaTrina Blair, promotions manager with Chicago-based
Johnson Publishing Co., confirmed Johnson’s
death. Further details were not immediately available.
Johnson broke new ground by bringing positive portrayals
of blacks into a mass-market publication and encouraging
corporations to use black models in advertising aimed
at black consumers.
Born into an impoverished family in Arkansas,
Johnson went into business with a $500 loan secured
by his mother’s furniture and built a publishing
and cosmetics empire. Johnson built Ebony from a circulation
of 25,000 on its first press run in November 1945
to a monthly circulation of 1.9 million in 1997.
Jet magazine, a weekly, was founded
in 1951 and a third magazine, Ebony Man, a monthly
men’s magazine, was started in 1985.
Johnson launched Ebony just after
World War II, as black soldiers were returning home.
At the time there were no black players in major league
baseball and little black political representation.
With blacks’ incomes far below white Americans,
the idea of a black publishing company was widely
dismissed.
Civil
rights leader Roy Wilkins advised Johnson to forget
the publishing business and save himself a lot of
disappointment; Wilkins later acknowledged he gave
Johnson bad advice. Ebony - named by Johnson’s
wife, Eunice - was created to counter stereotypical
portrayals of blacks in white-owned newspapers, magazines
and broadcast media. The monthly magazine highlights
the positive in black life.
“We try to seek out good
things, even when everything seems bad,” Johnson
once said in explaining the magazine’s purpose.
“We look for breakthroughs, we look for people
who have made it, who have succeeded against the odds,
who have proven somehow that long shots do come in.”
Johnson also encouraged major white
companies to advertise in black media. He sent an
ad salesman to Detroit every week for 10 years before
an auto manufacturer agreed to advertise in Ebony.
“We couldn’t do it
then by marching, and we couldn’t do it by threatening,”
Johnson said of gaining advertisers. “We had
to persuade people that it was in their best interest
to reach out to black consumers in a positive way.”
According to the company’s
Web site, Johnson Publishing Co. Inc. is the world’s
largest black-owned and-operated publishing company.
It also includes Fashion Fair Cosmetics and a book
division.
Born Jan. 19, 1918 , in Arkansas
City, Ark., Johnson moved to Chicago with his family
at age 15.
After graduating from public schools,
Johnson attended the University of Chicago and Northwestern
University. While working at the blackowned Supreme
Life Insurance Co., where he started as a clerk, Johnson
founded Johnson Publishing Co. in 1942. Its first
magazine was Negro Digest, a journal that condensed
articles of interest to blacks and published the poems
and short stories of black writers. Johnson used Supreme
Life’s mailing list to offer discount charter
subscriptions of the digest.
To persuade a distributor to take
the magazine, he got co-workers to ask for it at newsstands
on Chicago’s South Side. Friends bought most
of the copies, convincing dealers the magazine was
in demand, while Johnson reimbursed the friends and
resold the copies they had bought. The tactic was
used in New York, Philadelphia and Detroit, and within
a year, Negro Digest was selling 50,000 copies a month.
The magazine is no longer published.
Besides his wife, Johnson is survived
by a daughter, Linda Johnson Rice, president of Johnson
Publishing.
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