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Soap Opera Digest: Difference between revisions

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The source I saw did not say anything near five million.
→‎External link: Formatted heading. Even when it's one external link, it should be titled External links.
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* ''[[Soap Opera Weekly]]''
* ''[[Soap Opera Weekly]]''


==External link==
==External links==
* [http://www.soapoperadigest.com/ Soap Opera Digest & Weekly Homepage]
* [http://www.soapoperadigest.com/ Soap Opera Digest & Weekly Homepage]



Revision as of 21:08, 19 August 2007

File:Sodfebruary1977.jpg
The February 1977 issue of Soap Opera Digest. Featured is Paul Gleason of All My Children.
File:Sod02032004cover.jpg
The February 3, 2004 issue of Soap Opera Digest. Featured is Deidre Hall from Days of our Lives.

Soap Opera Digest is a magazine chronicling the stories airing on American soap operas and the off-screen lives of the actors appearing on them. The magazine first debuted in November 1975, with John Aniston, Ron Tomme, Audrey Peters, Birgitta Tolksdorf, Jerry Lacy and Tudi Wiggins of Love of Life gracing the cover. Currently, the magazine boasts a subscription base of 500,000, as well as more than one million more issues purchased at newsstands and supermarkets each week. In the early 1990s, the magazine had up to 1.4+ million subscribers.

The magazine, originally published monthly, moved to biweekly issues in 1979, and started publishing weekly in 1997. The current editor-in-chief is Lynn Leahey.

The magazine holds an awards show annually to promote excellence in the genre, as decided by the fans who read the magazine. The Soap Opera Digest Awards (formerly the Soapies) has been held every year since 1977. The Soapy Award was originally designed by Janis Rogak who was the magazines Art Director.

This magazine coined "soap speak," in which show names are abbreviated to save space. Nowadays, with the advent of chat rooms and message boards, these shortened names for the shows have become very popular, and a use has been made of them outside of the magazine.

Examples of Soap Speak: Acronyms

Series like Capitol, Loving, The Doctors, Somerset and Passions kept their names as they were shorter.

See also