Whose ‘Obit’ Is It?

Share post:

Maybe you saw the glamorous advertisement for a new magazine with an odd name, Obit, and a puzzling mailing address — architect Robert Hillier’s headquarters at 500 Alexander Park.

By writing about “lives well lived,” (yes, they do mean obituaries), Obit hopes to be, according to the brochure, the “voice of the generation of Americans who refuse to passively slip into old age, who realize that life reinvents itself every moment.”

“It is research that we are conducting on behalf of one of the firm’s important clients,” says a Hillier spokesperson.

Will this new magazine be, as it predicts, the hottest thing in periodicals since the golden years of Esquire and Playboy?

“The advertising will be extremely challenging,” suggests Lanny Jones, a former managing editor of People Magazine and a Princeton resident. “But it could have a very strong editorial franchise, because assessments of someone’s life get very high readership. You don’t see the arc of a person’s life until they die.”

CE – US1

Related articles

Tess James named director of Princeton Program in Theater and Music Theater

Princeton University’s Lewis Center for the Arts has named award-winning lighting designer Tess James as the new director...

Foundation gives retired racehorses a future

A horse once headed for slaughter surged through traffic, scaffolding and parked cars on a Manhattan street, carrying...

Bristol Riverside Theater Review: Real Women Have Curves

Listening closely, you can discern the drama, comedy, and humanity inherent in Josefina López’s “Real Woman Have Curves”...

Mercer County Cultural Festival, Food Truck Rally Returns June 6

Mercer County will celebrate the region’s diverse cultures, music and cuisine during the 14th Annual Cultural Festival and...