X Tutup
TVTropes Now available in the app store!
Open

Follow TV Tropes

TIME Magazine

Go To

TIME Magazine (Magazine)
It's only a matter of time…okay, we'll stop.

Time (stylized as TIME) is an American weekly news magazine founded in 1923, owned by Marc and Lynne Benioff and read across the entire world. It has international editions for Europe, Asia, and Canada and an edition for children. It focuses on politics, culture, social changes, sport, fashion, economics and other current events. The magazine is also known for selecting an annual "Person of the Year", and since 1999 they also select an annual list of the 100 most influential people of the year.

Its publishing company, Time Inc., also produces or produced such other magazines as Life, Sports Illustrated, People, and Entertainment Weekly. It merged with Warner Communications, which owned Warner Bros., in 1990, resulting in the Time Warner MegaCorp. But since it was sold off in 2014, Time Inc. is no longer part of Time Warner (which nonetheless continued to use the Time name until 2018, when AT&T acquired the company and renamed it WarnerMedia). Time-Life Books is a related imprint.


Time provides examples of:

  • But Not Too Evil: Ruhollah Khomeini, the controversial supreme leader of Iran, was elected "Person of the Year" in 1979 for his role in leading the revolution that put him in power. While Time was no stranger to picking controversial figures for Person of the Year (having previously featured Adolf Hitler, among others), the choice of Khomeini sparked a big enough backlash to make the magazine far more careful not to elect people that are too "evil" in the public eye, even though later winners like George W. Bush, Vladimir Putin, and Donald Trump could hardly be considered free from controversy either.
  • Continuity Nod:
    • The cover of the issue reporting on Hitler's death had his face crossed out with a big red X against a plain white background. Then with the surrender of Japan months later, the cover had a big black X over the red Rising Sun over the same background, in effect forming the Japanese flag. Decades later, the issue reporting the fall of Baghdad during the Iraq War had the big red X over Saddam Hussein's face, months before he was captured. Years later, Iraqi Al-Qaeda leader Al-Zarqawi got the red X after his death. Then Osama bin Laden. The most recent usage of the big X is for 2020—the year 2020.
    • In 1966, one cover story was about the developing relationships of religion, theology and the modern world, and the issue's cover was just red text on an all-black background, asking "Is God Dead?" In 2017, one cover story was about Donald Trump and the issue had a similar cover asking "Is Truth Dead?"
  • Cosmetic Award: The "Person of the Year" election is often seen as a badge of honor, not being connected to any kind of a financial reward. Except that's not the magazine's intent.
  • Creator Provincialism: Despite trying to maintain a cosmopolitan image and being read across the entire world the magazine sometimes focuses too much on topics that only Americans would consider to be interesting.
    • Since 1996 most people elected to be "Person of the Year" have been Americans. The winner of every US presidential election since 2000 has been included, for instance. The magazine even went so far to name "The American Soldier" as the 2003 "Person of the Year", despite the fact that the Americans weren't the only troops fighting in Afghanistan and Iraq. So far, the only exceptions have been Irishman Bono (2005), Russian Vladimir Putin (2007), Italian-Argentinian Pope Francis (2013), German Angela Merkel (2015), Swede Greta Thunberg (2019), and Ukrainian Volodymyr Zelenskyy (2022), not counting general winners like "You" (2006) and "The Protester" (2011).
    • When Time tried to elect the "Person of the Century" in 1999 there was criticism that too many names were Americans, and not only that, some of them were solely important to the U.S.A. itself, not the world in general. (They eventually chose a German whose works had a demonstrable global impact, Albert Einstein.)
  • Inconsistent Spelling: The magazine (and company) always refers to itself in capital letters.
  • Men Are Generic, Women Are Special: The only women to specifically win the "Person of the Year" election have been "The Whistleblowers" (Cynthia Cooper, Coleen Rowley and Sherron Watkins, in 2002) and Melinda Gates (jointly with Bill Gates and Bono, in 2005), German chancellor Angela Merkel (2015), and 16-year-old Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg (2019). Before that, four women were granted the title as individuals, as "Woman of the Year" – Wallis Simpson (1936), Soong May-ling (1937), Queen Elizabeth II (1952) and Corazon Aquino (1986). "American Women" were recognized as a group in 1975. Other classes of people recognized comprise both men and women, such as "Hungarian Freedom Fighters" (1956), "U.S. Scientists" (1960), "The Inheritors" (1966), "The Middle Americans" (1969), "The American Soldier" (2003), "You" (2006) and "The Protester" (2011, represented on the cover by a woman).
  • Sex Sells: Very occasionally has tastefully nude or otherwise suggestive covers and even inside photos for these cover stories, pretty tame compared to what many other magazines have but still pretty surprising for a news magazine. Some instances include Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman hugging naked to promote Eyes Wide Shut, articles about women's health issues like breast cancer and the changing understanding of human female biology with nude women posing with Hand-or-Object Underwear and/or Scenery Censor in effect, and an article about radical approaches to early parenting where the cover had a mom casually letting her 3-year-old son (both conventionally too old and big for his age) suckle on her, with them both standing, him on a chair to reach. One cover story about breast cancer had the cover be a nude woman with a mammogram image overlaid on her breast, while the photos inside showed waist-up nudity and bare breasts with nipples included in a medical context. The Letters section in subsequent issues sometimes had irate readers reacting, and the breastfeeding cover in particular caused a ruckus.


Alternative Title(s): Time

Top
X Tutup