Slitz

'Slitz'
Editor-in-chief Mats Drougge
Categories Men's
Frequency Monthly
First issue 1980 (1980)
Final issue
— Number
2012
December
Country Sweden
Language Swedish
Website www.slitz.se

Slitz was a Swedish men's magazine.

History

Slitz was initially created in 1980 when two music magazines Schlager and Ritz merged. The magazine continued to be a music publication until 1996 when it became a men's lifestyle magazine similarly to Café. After this Slitz become a men's magazine with content similar to FHM and Maxim featuring articles about sex, crime, cars, games, entertainment, and gadgets.

The magazine was published by MDM Media AB in Stockholm and featured some of Sweden's most prevalent glamour models. Its main competitors were the magazines Café, Moore Magazine and the Swedish issue of FHM. Slitz was also available in Finland, since a part of the population in Finland has Swedish as their native language. As of 2008, Slitz had a reader circulation of 135,000 with an issue frequency of 12 times a year.[1]

In 2005, Slitz launched Slitz Man which focused more on style and fashion. By 2007, Slitz aimed to change the concept of the magazine due to the trend of declining sales among most men's magazine. Men's magazine such as Loaded had reported a decline in sales while men's fashion magazines had elevated. "We have noticed a change in our target audience. The Swedish boy is slowly dying. Our conclusion is that Swedish guys of today are asking for a smarter magazine and not a magazine with the degree of nudity that we have had before," said Chief Editor Niklas Natt och Dag.[2]

In December 2012 the decision was made to discontinue the magazine. The Christmas issue of 2012 was the last issue of Slitz.

Content

The men's magazine had content similar to FHM, Stuff and Maxim. The magazine dealt with topics such as sex, crime, cars, music, movies, games, and the outdoors. The magazine featured glamour models wearing bikinis or lingerie. However, the girls in Slitz occasionally appeared topless or bottomless from only the back or side, but never with full frontal nudity.

Among some of the famous glamour model who have appeared in the magazine are Elin Grindemyr, Emma Johnson, Erika Johnson, Oksana Andersson, Natacha Peyre, Pernilla Lundberg, Hannah Graaf, Magdalena Graaf, Anine Bing, and Victoria Silvstedt. The magazine has also featured celebrities such as football star, Josefine Öqvist.

Like Playboy, Slitz had their own version of playmate of the year aptly called Miss Slitz.[3]

Controversy

Slitz claimed to be the magazine that first found Victoria Silvstedt, who became a Playboy Playmate in December 1996 and Playmate of the Year in 1997.

In 2006, Tone Bekkestad, a Norwegian meteorologist, appeared in the magazine. As a result, she was suspended from her work as meteorologist and weather presenter for the Swedish TV channel TV4.[4] The suspension lasted for 3 months.[5]

Editors

References

  1. "Mediefakta: sök mediefakta". ts.se. Archived from the original on 2011-10-02. Retrieved 2013-06-26.
  2. https://web.archive.org/web/20121010045828/http://www.dn.se/kultur-noje/grabbtidningarna-har-blivit-smartare-1.544672. Archived from the original on October 10, 2012. Retrieved June 7, 2009. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  3. Archived February 25, 2009, at the Wayback Machine.
  4. Aftonbladet (Swedish) 2006-06-21
  5. Aftonbladet (Swedish) 2006-09-16
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