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* 2003 - [[Catherine Zeta Jones]] and [[Michael Douglas]] sued ''Hello!'' for publishing unauthorised photographs of their wedding. Rival magazine ''OK!'' had an exclusive contract for pictures of the wedding, and also sued ''Hello!'' In November 2003, ''OK!'' was awarded £1,033,156 in damages, and Jones and Douglas received £14,600.
* 2003 - [[Catherine Zeta Jones]] and [[Michael Douglas]] sued ''Hello!'' for publishing unauthorised photographs of their wedding. Rival magazine ''OK!'' had an exclusive contract for pictures of the wedding, and also sued ''Hello!'' In November 2003, ''OK!'' was awarded £1,033,156 in damages, and Jones and Douglas received £14,600.


* 2006 - ''Hello!'', which secured the British rights to the first images of [[Brad Pitt]] and [[Angelina Jolie]]'s newborn daughter, launched legal action with ''[[People (magazine)|People]]'' against two websites that printed a leaked exclusive shot of the couple with their new baby daughter. The leaked photo, which contains ''Hello!'' magazine's logo, shows a headline which reads: "The biggest exclusive of the year. Angelina and Brad with their new Baby Shiloh Nouvel." ''People'' magazine reportedly paying more than $4 million USD to secure the American rights. <ref>{{cite news | date = [[2006-06-07]] | title = Brangelina 'million dollar baby' sparks legal war | url = http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20060607/brad_angelina_baby_060607/20060607?hub=TopStories | publisher = CTV.ca| accessdate = 2006-06-07}}</ref>
* 2006 - ''Hello!'', which secured the British rights to the first images of [[Brad Pitt]] and [[Angelina Jolie]]'s newborn daughter, launched legal action with ''[[People (magazine)|People]]'' against two websites that printed a leaked exclusive shot of the couple with their new baby daughter. The leaked photo, which contains ''Hello!'' magazine's logo, shows a headline which reads: "The biggest exclusive of the year. Angelina and Brad with their new Baby Shabbadoo Noonoo." ''People'' magazine reportedly paying more than $4 million USD to secure the American rights. <ref>{{cite news | date = [[2006-06-07]] | title = Brangelina 'million dollar baby' sparks legal war | url = http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20060607/brad_angelina_baby_060607/20060607?hub=TopStories | publisher = CTV.ca| accessdate = 2006-06-07}}</ref>


== Reader trivia ==
== Reader trivia ==

Revision as of 14:13, 3 February 2009

Template:Otheruses2

Hello!
File:Hello! magazines.jpg
CategoriesCelebrity
FrequencyWeekly
First issue1988
Final issue
Number

-
CompanyHello Ltd (Spain)
CountryUnited Kingdom
Websitewww.hellomagazine.com

Hello! is a weekly magazine specialising in celebrity news and gossip, published in Britain. Hello! sells editions in Britain, Republic of Ireland, India, UAE, Spain, Mexico, Turkey, Russia, Thailand, Greece, Canada, and since 2007 Serbia.

History

Owned by Spanish publisher Eduardo Sánchez Junco, Hello! was first published in 1988 and is a spin-off of the Spanish magazine ¡Hola!. Between 1998 and 2004 there was also a French version, Ohla !.

Although upmarket and away from the real-life formats of the traditional weekly and supermarket checkout ladies magazine, media critics laughed at Hello!'s fawning interviews with minor European royals and celebrities. But the highly targeted format quickly built a readership of 2 million copies per issue.

A Mexican edition of ¡Hola! started in 2006; prior to that date, Spanish editions were sold with a Mexican cover price in Pesos printed on its cover.

Content

The weekly content of Hello! is fairly fixed, but the focus shifts as the Celebdaq-style rating of the various celebrities rises and falls:

  • "Diary of the Week" - photographic coverage of high society and celebrity events
  • "Panorama" - an image-based review of current world events
  • "Inside Story" - provides an insight into * "Cookery and Travel" sections - focused expansions of the "Fashion and Lifestyle" section.

Competition

OK! magazine launched in 1990, and went weekly in 1996. Not long after, the first of a new raft of celebrity magazines aimed at more mass-market readership than both Hello! and OK!, hit the news-stands. Now was launched in 1997, joined by Heat in 1999 and then Closer in 2002.

Today, Hello! and rival OK! often try to out-scoop each other, by buying up exclusive rights to celebrity weddings and interviews. OK! currently outsells Hello! by nearly three-to-one.

Litigation

  • 2003 - Catherine Zeta Jones and Michael Douglas sued Hello! for publishing unauthorised photographs of their wedding. Rival magazine OK! had an exclusive contract for pictures of the wedding, and also sued Hello! In November 2003, OK! was awarded £1,033,156 in damages, and Jones and Douglas received £14,600.
  • 2006 - Hello!, which secured the British rights to the first images of Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie's newborn daughter, launched legal action with People against two websites that printed a leaked exclusive shot of the couple with their new baby daughter. The leaked photo, which contains Hello! magazine's logo, shows a headline which reads: "The biggest exclusive of the year. Angelina and Brad with their new Baby Shabbadoo Noonoo." People magazine reportedly paying more than $4 million USD to secure the American rights. [1]

Reader trivia

Hello! provides specific and extra-ordinary details about its readership, including:

  • 82% are women[citation needed]
  • Hello! readers are 71% more likely than the average female to choose a car mainly on looks[citation needed]
  • Hello! readers spent £64 million on microwave ovens in 2004[citation needed]
  • 91% of Hello! readers enjoy an alcoholic drink.[citation needed]
  • Only 4% of Hello! readers buy tomatoes, as of February 2003.[citation needed]
  • Hello! readers are also 64% more likely to vote for an electoral candidate based on his or her hairstyle rather than policies.[citation needed]

Hello! Readers are women, and therefore have heads full of kittens, flowers and sweet smelling mush

References

  1. ^ "Brangelina 'million dollar baby' sparks legal war". CTV.ca. 2006-06-07. Retrieved 2006-06-07. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)