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Ex-Vogue editor: agencies are wringing the sponge dry

Kirstie ClementsMagazine creativity has been hit by the increasing influence of agencies attempting to “wring the sponge dry”, the former editor of Vogue has warned.

In a video interview with Encore to promote her new book The Vogue Factor, Kirstie Clements said that the emerging influence of PR and marketing on the editorial process hit creativity and ended the “church and state” separation between editorial and commercial interests.

She said: “Money is always the key to everything. It was gradual. Every day you drew a new line in the sand.

“The purity you started with was certainly not what you ended with. Every day you would think ‘Okay, I’ve heard it all now’, from marketing, from PRs, from clients. And then something else would come to test your scruples and your integrity.

“It was pretty much a daily basis. There was also a whole surge – emergence – of marketing and PR that wasn’t there before.

“Everything was much more direct way back, you didn’t have lots of middle management in between. You didn’t have agencies trying to wring the sponge dry. It just got more and more complex and more and more people got involved. With that, it ameliorated a lot of the creativity and the message.”

Clements was ousted as editor of Vogue last year by the new boss of NewsLifeMedia Nicole Sheffield. Long before then, said Clements, magazines had begun to make compromises, including taking more non-local content and featuring brands that were also advertisers.

She said: “In the eighties every page was started from scratch at the magazine, it was completely local. Because of the financial pressures now, there’s certain amounts that are pledged to lifts or to agreements for stories you have to write.

‘We all understand it is not completely church and state – it can’t be any more. There is a creative dance you do as editor between your editorial integrity and making sure that everything stays afloat and that you pay the bills. There is a path through that but you’ve got to make sure you are not duping the reader in that. If it’s just to pay off someone or it’s quasi-editorial, they’re going to be the first person to put up their hands and say they can see that.”

Later in the interview, Clements said of her departure: “I’ve minded my words for so many years maybe I can be a little bit more candid. It’s a lot of people to be the mouthpiece for – it’s quite a relief when you don’t have to do it any more.”
Encore issue 5

This story first appeared in the weekly edition of Encore available for iPad and Android tablets. Visit encore.com.au for a preview of the app or click below to download.

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