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's Health and Fitness Magazine - April 2013 (Australia): The Best Workouts, Recipes, and Advice for



Started as a men's health magazine by Rodale, Inc. in Emmaus, Pennsylvania, the magazine currently covers various men's lifestyle topics such as fitness, nutrition, fashion and sexuality. The magazine's website, MensHealth.com, averages over 118 million page views a month.[9]




's Health and Fitness Magazine - April 2013 (Australia)



Started by Mark Bricklin in the US in 1986[10] as a health magazine, Men's Health evolved into a lifestyle magazine, covering fitness, nutrition, relationships, travel, technology, fashion and finance. Bricklin, Rodale, Inc. editors Larry Stains and Stefan Bechtel produced three newsstand test issues. The results led Rodale to start Men's Health as a quarterly magazine in 1988 and begin to sell subscriptions.


Zinczenko became editor-in-chief in 2000.[4][13] Circulation increased 30 percent, ad pages by 80 percent from 700 to 1150. In 2000, the brand had 21 international editions.[4] In 2001 the title was consistently selling 400,000 copies at newsstands and circulation was 1.6 million.[14] In 2001, the magazine started the annual list of cities with the healthiest men, based on twenty "live-long parameters, including death rates (both homicide and disease); illness rates (high blood pressure, heart disease, stroke, etc.); body-mass index; fitness training; even environmental factors like number of parks, golf courses, etc."[15] In 2003, the circulation was 1.7 million.[16] In 2006, the circulation was close to 1.8 million.[5]


In 2008, the magazine partnered with Google to make back issues available.[27] In July 2008, Men's Health became the first to "create the first fully interactive advertising magazine in America," where readers could take a picture of an ad, and a promotional "bounce-back" was sent to their phone.[28] For its 20th anniversary issue in November 2008, Men's Health included an interview and photo shoot with president-elect Barack Obama. In 2010, Obama was again featured about health care and his plans.[29]


In 2009, Men's Health spun off Children's Health, a special issue that was part of a Rodale publishing idea to work with President and First Lady Obama to show support for the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. The magazine published how-to stories about fitness and nutrition for children.[53]


In April 2017, under Matt Bean, Men's Health released an online video franchise, MH Films, which has featured people such as Hafþór Björnsson, Erik Weihenmayer and Sam Calagione. In June 2017, the magazine launched MH Rec Room, specializing in shorter videos for social media featuring various fitness trainers, lifestyle influencers and authors.[55]


Men's Health won the category of Personal Service in 2004, the first win for the magazine[5] and Rodale. In 2010, Men's Health received the General Excellence award.[58] Menshealth.com's "Eat This, Not That!" portion of their Web site won the 2010 Digital Ellies award, also sponsored by the ASME, for best Interactive Tool, an award honoring the outstanding use of interactive tools that enable readers to create or share content, participate in communities, improve the quality of their lives, or enjoy recreational activities.[59] In 2010, Minonline.com deemed menshealth.com's personal trainer channel, the "Best Premium Site," an award recognizing subscription sites oriented around service.[60] In 2011, Men's Health won an Ad Age Media Vanguard Award in the Print-to-Digital Best Reader-Service Website category, a Society of Publication Designers Award for design and photography, and an ASME Ellie in the category of Personal Service for "I Want My Prostate Back" by Larry Stains.[61] It was also a finalist in the 2012 Ellies.[62]


We're here to inturrupt your regularly scheduled Friday with some breaking cat news: Choupette, the famed feline companion of Chanel designer Karl Lagerfeld, has just landed her first Vogue cover. The couture-adjacent kitten appears on the cover of the magazine's German edition for July 2013, photographed by the Kaiser himself. Linda Evangelista joins Choupette on the cover, but clearly the cat is the real star of this story: Vogue Germany's styling team couldn't even be bothered to brush Evangelista's hair in preparation for the shoot.


Since the Virginia Tech shooting, about half of the states have enacted laws authorizing and requiring the submission of mental health records to NICS, as described below. States that have enacted such laws have, in fact, subsequently submitted greater numbers of records. Of the states that had submitted the top 15 highest numbers of records as of May 2013, 14 (93%) had enacted such laws, while only two of the 15 poorest performing states (13%) had enacted such laws.7


Despite the huge increase in the number of individuals identified in NICS, records of many individuals prohibited from possessing firearms because of their mental health histories are still missing from the database. The greatest gains in the numbers of state records submitted to NICS largely reflect the efforts of a small minority of states,8 and as of November 2013, 12 states had still submitted fewer than 100 records each.9


In 2005, of the total number of prospective purchasers who were denied following an FBI background check, only 0.5% were denied for mental health reasons.10 By 2017, this number had risen 6.4%.11 Mental health records in the system blocked 316 gun sales in Virginia in 2013. This represents a 47% increase from 2010, before Virginia had increased its reporting of such records.12


All the states mentioned in this summary include within their reporting requirements at least some people confined to mental health treatment facilities as inpatients, although the length of the required commitment varies. Most of these laws only involve people who have been subject to formal involuntary commitment processes, although there are exceptions. Florida, for instance, enacted a law in 2013 that requires reporting of a voluntarily committed person if a judge or magistrate has classified the person as a danger to self or others because the examining physician certified that a petition for involuntary commitment would have been filed if the person had not consented to treatment.86


New York adopted a law in 2013 that requires a mental health professional to report any person receiving treatment who is likely to engage in conduct that would result in serious harm to self or others; this information may be used to determine firearms eligibility and must be destroyed after five years.88 2ff7e9595c


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