Rolling Stones Boston Bomber Cover inspires NME: ‘Pol Pot – The Sultry Misunderstood Genius Behind Cambodia’s Summer of Love’
YES. Rolling Stone magazine still exists. Sure, it had to go some lengths to remind us that it is alive by featuring Boston bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev on its cover. You do what you need to get noticed.
The alleged killer looks dreamy, a kind of celebrity and a martyr. Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick says the rock magazine’s moves are cover “out of taste”. The Establishment hate it. Rock on, Rolling Stone.
And you know the image from the front page of the New York Times and pretty much all other newspapers. But whereas they deal in new, Rolling Stone deals in pop culture and sounds.
The cover line yells:
“The bomber – how a popular, promising student was failed by his family, fell into radical Islam and became a monster.”
No trial. No presusmption of innocence. Send the man down. Rock ‘n’ roll.
Better yet, CVS has banned the magazine’s issue “out of respect for the victims of the attack and their loved ones”.
Mindful of this marketing coup, let’s see what some other not-dead-yet magazines are looking to feature on their covers:
Title: NME
Cover dude: Pol Pot
Headline: The Sultry Misunderstood Genius Behind Cambodia’s Summer of Love
Title: National Geographic:
Cover dude: Idi Amin
Headline: Uganda’s Sexy Soul Brother #1 is Spreading Jungle Fever
Title: Q
Cover dude: Ted Bundy
Headline: 40 Years Later, Ted Bundy Still Makes Girls Scream
Title: Smash Hits
Cover dudd: Jimmy Savile
Headline: World’s swooniest DJ was ahead of his time
Headline: Jeffrey Dahmer was Right: How Cannibalism can Save the Earth from Climate Change.
Title: Conde Naste Traveller
Headline: Leaving on a jet plane: the Mohammed Atta story
Spotter: Iowahawk, Brian hinkle, Brit Abroad
Posted: 18th, July 2013 | In: Reviews Comment | TrackBack | Permalink