San Francisco (magazine)

San Francisco
Categories Culture
Frequency Monthly
Publisher Modern Luxury
Country  United States
Language English
Website www.sanfranmag.com

San Francisco is an American monthly magazine devoted to San Francisco Bay Area culture, including arts, food, and entertainment. It is published monthly by Modern Luxury publications.

History

There have been two separate San Francisco magazines published in San Francisco. The first was started in the 1970s and published for many years, under a series of different publishers, until it went out of business around 1985.

The second magazine has its roots starting in 1955, when San Francisco public broadcasting station KQED-TV began publishing a programming guide called KQED in Focus. The program guide began to add more articles and took on the character of a regular magazine. The name was later changed to Focus Magazine and then to San Francisco Focus.[1] In 1984, a new programming guide, Fine Tuning was separated off from Focus, with Focus carrying on as a self-contained magazine.[2]

In the early 1990s, San Francisco Focus was the recipient of number of journalism and publishing awards, including a National Headliner Award for feature writing in 1993. In 1996, KQED sold San Francisco Focus to Diablo Publications in order to pay off debts.[3] The magazine was spun off into an independent entity in January 1997. In October 1997, the magazine re-branded itself as simply San Francisco. In 1999, new management took over and Editor-In-Chief Bruce Kelley arrived in June 2000. Under Kelley's leadership, San Francisco has been nominated for two National Magazine awards and has garnered three Maggies as Best City and Regional Magazine from the Western Publications Association (2006, 2007 and 2009). In 2005, San Francisco was sold to Modern Luxury Media (a nation-wide conglomerate of city and lifestyle magazines).[4]

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President

Fifth-generation San Franciscan Steven Dinkelspiel stepped to the head of San Francisco magazine as the publisher in March 1999 after working as both circulation director and general counsel for the magazine. After the merge of the magazine with Modern Luxury, he became the president of the magazine. With a B.A. from Yale University and a law degree from Stanford, he was a local district attorney for seven years, as well as a private business consultant specializing in libel law.

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Editor in Chief

Prior to joining San Francisco as editor-in-chief in July 2000, Bruce Kelley was executive editor at Health magazine, where he worked since 1992. His regional editing experience spanned Sunset and California magazines. He has also written for publications such as the Los Angeles Times magazine, the New York Times, and Mother Jones.

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Awards

American Society of Magazine Editors (ASME)
ASME'S "Ellie" Awards are the Oscars of Publishing

  • Finalist, Public Interest: "Innocence Lost," by Nina Martin, November 2004
  • Finalist, Public Interest: "Trouble in the Presidio," by Kerry Tremain, December 2001

City & Regional Magazine Awards (CRMA)
The CRMA's annual awards honor the best city and regional publications throughout the country.

  • Gold Award, Civic Journalism: "Innocence Lost," by Nina Martin, November 2004
  • Bronze Award, General Excellence, 2003
  • Bronze Award, Reporting: "The Brobeck Mutiny," July 2003
  • Bronze Award, Special Issue: "Think Green," June 2003
  • Silver Award, Special Issue: "Our Dot-com Decade: What Really Happened," April 2002
  • Bronze Award, Reporting: "What Just Happened Here?," April 2002
  • Bronze Award, Food and Dining Criticism: Josh Sens's monthly review "Critical Dish" ("The Best Restaurant," July 2002; "Now We're Not Cooking," September 2002; "A Maison of His Own," November 2002)
  • Bronze Award for General Criticism: Dana Goia's classical music criticism ("Good Lord!," December 2001; "Glass Appeal," October 2002; "Moulin Rogue," September 2002)

Maggie Awards
The Western Publications Association honors the "Best in the West" in editorial and design excellence in magazine, periodical, and online publishing.

  • Best Feature Article/Consumer: "What Happened to Black San Francisco", Sept. 2006, by Jaimal Yogis
  • Best Feature Article/Consumer: "What it Really Means to be Green," June 2003
  • Best Regularly Featured Department, Section or Column/Consumer: "City Journal"
  • Best City & Metropolitan/Consumer: April 2006

James Beard Awards
These are the highest honors in the land for food journalism.

  • Finalist, Best Feature Writing, "King of the Mall," Maile Carpenter, August 2004
  • Winner, Best Feature Writing, "Eating in Michael Bauer's Town," Maile Carpenter, August 2001
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Last modified on 23 March 2013, at 04:45