Omni (magazine)

Omni

Cover of the October 1984 edition.
Categories Science and Science fiction magazine
Founder Kathy Keeton
Bob Guccione
First issue October 1978 (1978-October)
Final issue Winter 1995 (print)
1998 (online)
Company General Media, Inc.
Country United States
Based in New York City
Language English
Website omni.media
ISSN 0149-8711

Omni was a science and science fiction magazine published in the US and the UK. It contained articles on science, parapsychology, and short works of science fiction and fantasy.[1] It was published as a print version between October 1978 and 1995. The first Omni e-magazine was published on CompuServe in 1986 and the magazine switched to a purely online presence in 1996.[2][3] It ceased publication abruptly in 1997, following the death of co-founder Kathy Keeton, and closed down in 1998.[4][5]

History

Concept

Omni was founded by Kathy Keeton and her long-time collaborator and future husband Bob Guccione, the publisher of Penthouse magazine.[6] The initial concept came from Keeton, who wanted a magazine "that explored all realms of science and the paranormal, that delved into all corners of the unknown and projected some of those discoveries into fiction."[7]

Dick Teresi, an author and former Good Housekeeping editor, wrote the proposal for the magazine, from which a dummy was produced.[6][8] In pre-launch publicity it was referred to as Nova but the name was changed before the first issue went to print to avoid a conflict with the PBS science show of the same name.[1][9][10] Guccione described the magazine as "an original if not controversial mixture of science fact, fiction, fantasy and the paranormal".[11] The debut edition had an exclusive interview with Freeman Dyson, a renowned physicist, and the second edition carried an interview with Alvin Toffler, futurist and author of Future Shock.

Fiction

In its early run, Omni published a number of stories that have become genre classics, such as Orson Scott Card's "Unaccompanied Sonata", William Gibson's "Burning Chrome", "New Rose Hotel" and "Johnny Mnemonic", and George R. R. Martin's "Sandkings". The magazine also published original science fiction and fantasy by William S. Burroughs, Joyce Carol Oates, Jonathan Carroll, Julio Cortazar, T. Coraghessan Boyle, and other mainstream writers. The magazine excerpted Stephen King's novel Firestarter, and featured his short story "The End of the Whole Mess". Omni also brought the works of numerous painters to the attention of a large audience, such as H. R. Giger, De Es Schwertberger and Rallé. In the early 1980s, popular fiction stories from Omni were reprinted in The Best of Omni Science Fiction series and featured art by space artists like Robert McCall.

Market

Omni entered the market at the start of a wave of new science magazines aimed at educated but otherwise "non-professional" readers. Science Digest and Science News already served the high-school market, and Scientific American and New Scientist the professional, while Omni was arguably the first aimed at "armchair scientists" who were nevertheless well informed about technical issues. The next year, however, Time introduced Discover while the AAAS introduced Science '80. Advertising dollars were spread among the different magazines, and those without deep pockets soon folded in the 1980s, notably Science Digest, while Science '80 merged with Discover. Omni appeared to weather this storm better than most, likely due to its wider selection of contents. In early 1996 publisher Bob Guccione suspended publication of the print edition of Omni, attributing the decision to the rising price of paper and postage. At the end of its print run the circulation was still reported to be more than 700,000 copies a month.[12]

In September 1997, Keeton died of complications from surgery for an intestinal obstruction.[13] The staff of Omni Internet was laid off, and no new content was added to the website after April 1998. General Media shut the site down and removed the Omni archives from the Internet in 2003.

Editions

International editions

Omni magazine was published in at least six languages. The content in the British editions closely followed the North American editions, but with a different numbering sequence. This was mainly accomplished by wrapping the American edition in a new cover which featured British advertising on the inside. At least one British edition was entirely unique and was shipped under the banner of Omni UK. An Italian edition was edited by Alberto Peruzzo and ran for 20 issues from 1981 to 1983, when Peruzzo detached the name Omni from his local edition. The Italian spin-off continued with the name Futura, while maintaining the same graphical style and with an unchanged intended audience, for another twenty issues, up to July 1985. The Japanese edition ran from 1982 to the summer of 1989 and included almost entirely different content to the American edition. The German edition began in 1984 and ended in early 1986.[14] The first Spanish edition appeared in November 1986 and ran until the summer of 1988. A Russian edition was published in the Soviet Union beginning in September 1989 in conjunction with the USSR Academy of Sciences. These editions were 80% in English and featured both Russian and English advertising.[15] Publisher Guccione arranged for 20,000 copies of the Russian edition to be placed on news stands and onboard internal Aeroflot flights in the Soviet Union in exchange for an equivalent number of copies of "Science in Russia" being distributed in the USA. Omni ran subscription adverts beginning in August 1989 for "Science in Russia". This arrangement was intended to last for one year and was made possible by the Glasnost events in the Soviet Union.

Webzine

Omni first began its online presence as part of Compuserve in the summer of 1986. On September 5, 1993 Omni became part of the America Online service. The AOL unveiling took place at the 51st World Science Fiction Convention in San Francisco. AOL subscribers had access to much of the Omni printed archive as well as forums, chat groups and new fiction. After the print magazine folded, the Omni Internet webzine was launched on September 15, 1996. For the first few months the new website was integrated into the AOL service, replacing the existing AOL Omni interface. Now free of pressure to focus on fringe science areas, Omni returned to its roots as the home of gonzo science writing, becoming one of the first large-scale venues to deliver a journalism geared specifically to cyberspace, complete with real-time coverage of major science events, chats and blogs with scientific luminaries, and interactive experiments that users could join. The world's top science fiction writers also joined in, writing collaborative fiction pieces for Omni's readers live online.

Television

A short-lived syndicated television show based on the magazine's format (and called Omni: The New Frontier) aired in the United States beginning in September 1981, hosted by Peter Ustinov. A French-language, dubbed version of the show appeared on the Canadian public TV network Radio-Québec (now known as Télé-Québec) in 1994. In 1985, extracts of the 1981 television series were re-edited and repackaged into four television shows hosted by Keir Dullea under the title Omni: Visions of the Future. Episodes were titled Futurebody, Space, Amazing Medicine and Lifestyles in the 21st Century.[16]

Comics

An equally short-lived spin-off magazine called Omni Comix debuted in 1995, and was published in the same glossy, newsstand magazine format as its sister publications Omni, Penthouse and Penthouse Comix. Omni Comix ran for only three issues, and the third and final issue featured an abortive revival of the classic 1960s superhero series T.H.U.N.D.E.R. Agents.[17]

Anthologies

From 1983 to 1986, Zebra Books published a series of anthologies containing selected non-fiction content from Omni magazine:

From 1984 to 1989, Zebra Books also published a series of Science Fiction anthologies containing stories published in Omni magazine with all volumes edited by Ellen Datlow who was also serving as the editor of Omni magazine at the time:

Ellen Datlow also edited and released the following Science Fiction anthologies of stories published in Omni magazine under the OMNI Books imprint:

Editorial staff

The magazine was initially edited by Frank Kendig, who left several months after the magazine's launch. Ben Bova, who was hired as Fiction Editor, was promoted to Editor, leaving the magazine in 1981. After Kendig and Bova, Editors of Omni included Dick Teresi, Gurney Williams III, Patrice Adcroft, Keith Ferrell, and Pamela Weintraub (editor of Omni as one of the first major standalone webzines from 1996-1998). Kathleen Stein managed the magazine's prestigious Q&A interviews with the top scientists of the 20th century through 1998. Ellen Datlow was Associate fiction editor of Omni under Robert Sheckley for one and a half years, and took over as Fiction Editor in 1981 until the magazine folded in 1998.

Ownership

In 2013, Glenn Fleishman undertook a research project with the goal of learning who currently owns the Omni intellectual property, and concluded that the rights to the fiction published in Omni had long since reverted to the original authors (who had only sold first North American publication rights), and that "possibly even the current ostensible owner" may not know who owns the rights to the rest of the content.[18]

Reboot

In August 2013, plans to launch "a new online project, described as an 'Omni reboot'" were reported by The Verge. The project was said to be under the guidance of producer Rick Schwartz and businessman/collector Jeremy Frommer who purchased a storage locker "on a whim" in November 2012 that was found to contain "a sizable chunk of the estate of Bob Guccione." The rediscovered materials include "cover drafts with greasy pencil notations, thousands of 35-mm slides, large-format chromes, magazines bundled with stapled paperwork, production materials, and untold amounts of photos and artwork."[19][20]

See also

References

Footnotes
  1. 1 2 Ashley 2007, p. 367
  2. "Omni Internet Relaunch". Locus 36 (6). June 1996. p. 8.
  3. "Physical Omni Bites the Dust". Science Fiction Chronicle 17 (4). May 1996. p. 6.
  4. Collins, Paul (7 January 2010). "Defunct Omni magazine forecast a future of robots, telecommuting". The Washington Post (Washington, D.C.). Retrieved 2 December 2012.   via HighBeam Research (subscription required)
  5. "Omni Online Folds". Locus 40 (5). May 1998. pp. 8, 61.
  6. 1 2 Ashley 2007, p. 368
  7. Ashley 2007, pp. 367–368
  8. "Quest for longevity entails paradoxes, compromises". Winnipeg Free Press. 17 March 2012. Retrieved 2 December 2012.   via HighBeam Research (subscription required)
  9. Brown, Charles. "Nova coming". Locus 208(1): January/February 1978. Cited in Ashley (2007); p.367
  10. "Bob Guccione wanted to start a science magazine called Nova, but was stopped by a television program of the same name — so he switched to Omni." Klingel, John (1 January 1986). "What's in a name?". Folio. Retrieved 2 December 2012.  via HighBeam Research (subscription required)
  11. Guccione, Bob (6 October 1978). "First word". Omni 1 (1).
  12. Guccione Halts Publication of Omni
  13. Pogrebin, Robin (September 23, 1997). "Kathy Keeton Guccione, 58, President of Magazine Company". The New York Times.
  14. Omni International Editions
  15. Omni Magazine Gets A Lesson In Russian - Chicago Tribune
  16. Omni Advertising
  17. Omni Comix on Comicvine.com
  18. Who Owns Omni? at BoingBoing; by Glenn Fleishman; published July 9, 2013; retrieved July 15, 2013
  19. "Omni, reboot: an iconic sci-fi magazine goes back to the future". The Verge. 8 August 2013. Retrieved 9 August 2013.
  20. Evans, Claire (2013). "OMNI MAGAZINE WILL RISE AGAIN". Vice. Retrieved 9 August 2013.
Bibliography

Ashley, Mike (2007). Gateways to Forever: The Story of the Science-Fiction Magazines from 1970-1980. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press. ISBN 978-1-8463100-2-7. 

External links

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