Growing Baby Bunny
23 PostsKarma: +1/-0
07:16pm Mon, Nov 18, 2013
Ever since Hollywood's traditional celebrity tabloids, rumor magazines and paparazzi decided to reform their image and information gathering practices, raising their industry standards to those of National News Media Outlets, Entertainment News has not been the same.
The National Enquirer reported a 35% drop in sales this week, and readership across the entertainment publishing industry has plummeted. But not all tabloids have suffered in the wake.
Entertainment Weekly, who has been utilizing 'friendly tactics' to retrieve current Hollywood stories from willing celebrities, has doubled readership subscriptions with their promises of a 'gentler, life-enriching Hollywood'.
In fact, Entertainment Weekly has managed to acquire access to so many celebrities willing to talk about their lives in unobtrusive, fair-reporting ways - they have content backlogged to cover a few months of weekly shows, with more rolling in.
Says one Entertainment Weekly reporter who wished to remain anonymous, "Who knew celebrities would actually share some of their lives with us if we started treating them like Humans? Times have changed for the better... I may retire in the Bahamas without having to stalk Jennifer Lawrence into the Ladies Lounge."
The effects of Hollywood's Reformation remains to be seen. But reader polls indicate that the positive change has been taken in stride and appreciated.