
"The news came in the form of an article posted to Vogue's business vertical. Per the post, the transition is "part of a broader push to expand the Vogue ecosystem." The article goes on to explain that Teen Vogue "will remain a distinct editorial property, with its own identity and mission," and that the publication will "focus its content on career development, cultural leadership and other issues that matter most to young people.""
"In the wake of Vogue's announcement, Condé Nast laid off several of Teen Vogue's staffers, reportedly including a majority of its BIPOC and trans employees. Now, Teen Vogue's former editors and writers, and many of its current fans, are taking to the internet to mourn the loss and criticize the magazine giant that owns it. Here's what to know: What happened to Teen Vogue? While Vogue is framing the absorption of Teen Vogue as a way to provide "a more unified reader experience,""
Vogue announced on November 3 that Teen Vogue will be folded into Vogue.com as part of a push to expand the Vogue ecosystem. Teen Vogue will "remain a distinct editorial property" focused on career development, cultural leadership, and issues for young people, while editor-in-chief Versha Sharma will depart and Chloe Malle will oversee the brand. Condé Nast laid off several Teen Vogue staffers, reportedly including a majority of BIPOC and trans employees. Condé United criticized the move as designed to blunt Teen Vogue’s journalism and noted plans to lay off six union members, leaving no writers explicitly covering politics. Former staff and readers expressed mourning and criticism online.
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