KEEPING SOME FAST COMPANYPicked up the recent issue of
Fast Company at the airport, which represents the first time I've actually looked at the actual magazine and not a stray blog link to one of their articles. Have to say that I enjoyed it enough to contemplate ordering a subscription. The
cover article on Al Gore, while hagiographic in a mildly sycophantic way, was nonetheless, very informative. The whole tone, while geared toward business, is accented by techno-futurism and looking across domains. I ended up reading the issue straight through.
I still have a delight in magazines retained from the pre-internet era where getting the new issue in the mailbox represented a small pleasure. Currently, I subscribe to
The Smithsonian,
Edutopia,
Esquire,
The Atlantic Monthly and
GQ. Formerly, I did so with
The Wilson Quarterly,
Foreign Affairs,
National Geographic,
Foreign Policy,
Men's Fitness,
Playboy ( strictly for the articles),
Muscle & Fitness,
Men's Health, Newsweek,
The Columbia Journalism Review,
Time,
U.S. News & World Report, National Review and several local newspapers. My tendency was for the periodical pile to steadily grow to epic proportions until backlogged and unread material threatened to collapse the coffee table.
The internet has rendered such an excess of dead tree text superfluous and I no longer have the free time to even entertain trying to keep up with that kind of deluge. However, I still pick up some of those at the bookstore, along with magazines to which I've never subscribed, like
Scientific American,
The Economist,
The New Republic ,
The Nation and
The National Interest. The change in point of view or subject matter always does me some good.
What do you read ? Or not read ?
Labels: fast company, periodicals