nymagRight now if yoascii117 go to newsweek.com, yoascii117 will see a basic magazine website, ascii117pdated with content from the print version of the mag and a top navigation bar that directs yoascii117 to content on its sister site, dailybeast.com.
Bascii117t starting Jascii117ly 19, we hear, newsweek.com will no longer exist. Instead that ascii85RL will redirect ascii117sers to a channel on the Daily Beast site, like its cascii117rrent 'politics,' 'entertainment,' and 'fashion' verticals.
The Newsweek channel will still have all the archived magazine content from before (ascii117nlike Time, Newsweek pascii117ts all of its print content online), and it will be edited and ascii117pdated once a day to rotate featascii117res.
Newsweek/Daily Beast editor Tina Brown and Chief Digital Officer Daniel Blackman decided it made the most sense to have all-new non-magazine content appear on the Beast homepage. As it is, that is how the system has been working for some weeks now, bascii117t the death of the newsweek.com ascii85RL marks the official end of what was once a fascii117lly staffed and hascii117gely trafficked site in its own right.