Johnson Publishing Company

Johnson Publishing Company
Type Private
Industry Mass media
Founded November 1942
Founder(s) John H. Johnson
Eunice W. Johnson
Headquarters Chicago, Illinois
Key people Linda Johnson Rice
Chairman
Desiree Rogers
CEO
Products Newspapers, magazines, cosmetics
Website www.JohnsonPublishing.com

Johnson Publishing Company, Inc. is an American publishing company founded in November 1942 by John H. Johnson, headquartered in Chicago, Illinois, The company is privately held, and its chief executive officer is Desiree Rogers.

Contents

Background

Led by its flagship publication, Ebony, Johnson Publishing is the largest African-American-owned publishing firm in the United States. It also publishes Jet magazine and operates a book division. In addition, Johnson Publishing produces a line of hair care products (Supreme Beauty) and cosmetics (Fashion Fair) marketed for African-American women, and each year it hosts the Ebony Fashion Fair, a traveling fashion show that raises money for scholarships and charities in cities across the US and Canada.

The company's book division features titles such as The New Ebony Cookbook and the more controversial Forced Into Glory: Abraham Lincoln's White Dream.

The company also produced the 1954 film The Secret of Selling the Negro Market, which was designed to encourage advertisers to promote their products and services in the African American media.

Publications

Divisions

Former Divisions

References

  1. ^ Laretta Henderson (Fall 200). "Ebony Jr.!: The Rise and Demise of an African American Children's Magazine". Journal of Negro Education. http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3626/is_200610/ai_n18705758. Retrieved 2008-11-13. 

External links