The magazine, said editor Adam Moss, "was never really about the concrete of the city. Chicago Mercantile Association: Certain market data is the property of Chicago Mercantile Exchange Inc. and its licensors. Yeah, we did a couple nice things. All content of the Dow Jones branded indices Copyright S&P Dow Jones Indices LLC 2018 and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Died: David Haskell, an insider who has been an editor at New York magazine since 2007, was tapped on Wednesday to succeed Adam Moss as editor-in-chief of the magazine and its related websites. "Clay is, was, a boy from the Middle West whose nose was pressed against the windows of the rich and famous in New York," said Milton Glaser, who co-founded New York with Clay Felker. © 2019 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. And as of late last year, once you've read a few articles for free, you're asked to pay $5 a month for access to its websites. Where in the world did that idea come from?". It's now my job to make sure we cover it all with the intelligence and creativity our readers have come to expect.". "It was a wonderful time for me," he said. I began working at New York in 2007 and became Editor-in-Chief in April, 2019, overseeing both the print magazine and its digital brands: the Cut, Grub Street, Intelligencer, the Strategist and Vulture. "I feel like they're each sort of could be a standalone website that's under the umbrella of New York Magazine," said Allison P. Davis, who writes for both the printed magazine and The Cut. Standard & Poor's and S&P are registered trademarks of Standard & Poor's Financial Services LLC and Dow Jones is a registered trademark of Dow Jones Trademark Holdings LLC. He will take over as editor on April 1, so there will be a two-and-a-half month long transition period. You've probably seen the famous "I Love New York" logo, which Glaser designed for the city in 1977, or his hundreds of album covers, posters, and magazine and newspaper designs. Pogue asked, "Is there any less glamour to writing for a digital-only enterprise than for a print one? This was 1994, and New York Magazine occupied a fairly small, somewhat fusty space at 755 Second Avenue. (June 8, 1970). "Free Leonard Bernstein!" "And I was a Jewish boy from the Bronx who knew how the city operated and was interested in working class and left-wing politics. The photographer was able to take pictures from the helicopter, 99.9% of which were unusable – I think he had three usable frames – because of the movement of the helicopter.". But Clay and I were completely in tune when we came to ideas we wanted to express. And so, I think to our readers there's really no difference.". Pogue asked, "Could you have ever imagined that 51 years later it would still be …" ", Glaser laughed. New York magazine is certainly one of Milton Glaser's favorites. "At the time nobody was paying any attention to Bill Cosby, and the accusations were all isolated. "There are many reasons, but they pretty much boil down to this: editors ought to have term-limits," Moss wrote in a note to staff on Tuesday. Clockwise from top left: "Listening to Xanax" cover illustration by Ward Sutton (March 26, 2012); "Brooklyn is finished" photograph by Adrian Gaut (Oct. 1, 2012); "The Single American Woman" photograph by Bobby Doherty (Feb. 22, 2016); "It's the corruption, stupid" photo-illustration by Joe Darrow (April 2, 2018); a ground meat sculpture by Carl D'Alvia in collaboration with Victoria Granof, photographed by Bobby Doherty (June 1, 2015); "Cosby: The Women" (July 27, 2015) photographs by Amanda Demme. New York was a weekly, completely unlike anything that anyone had ever seen before. In an age when dozens of venerable magazines have gone to the Great Newsstand in the Sky, it's impressive that New York is still in print.