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Cleo (magazine)

Cleo is an Australian monthly women's magazine. The magazine was founded in 1972 in Australia; the Australia and New Zealand editions were discontinued in February 2016. Aimed at an older audience than the teenage-focused Australian magazine Dolly, Cleo was published by Bauer Media Group in Sydney and was known for its Cleo Bachelor of the Year award.[3] In June 2020, Cleo was acquired by the Sydney investment firm Mercury Capital.[5][4]

Cleo
EditorLucy E. Cousins
Founding editorIta Buttrose
CategoriesWomen's Lifestyle
FrequencyMonthly
Circulation53,221[1]
Total circulation173,000[2]
First issueNovember 1972
Final issueMarch 2016
Company
CountryAustralia (published internationally)
Websitewww.cleo.com.au

History and profile

Launched in November 1972[6] under the direction of Ita Buttrose, the magazine's founding editor,[7] Cleo became one of Australia's most iconic titles due to its mix of seemingly controversial content, including the first nude male centerfold (following American Cosmopolitan's nude centerfold of Burt Reynolds six months' earlier) and detailed sex advice.

According to the magazine's editorial philosophy, "Cleo gets women, and it also strikes the perfect balance, offers a bright, light-hearted tone and aesthetic without shying away from the more serious issues that are important to their readers.".[8]

Audited circulation in June 2014 was 53,221 copies monthly.[9] Readership numbers for September 2014 are estimated to be 173,000.[2]

With a strong online presence of 300,000+ visitors monthly, the magazine successfully established its brand online. In addition, Beauty Bites, Cleo's digital app, offered an interactive component to technologically minded Gen Y readers, including how-to video tutorials, expert advice and reader-generated content.[8]

Cleo Singapore was launched in 1994, Cleo Malaysia in 1995, and Cleo Indonesia was launched in 2007 as an international license under the Femina Group.[10] Cleo Thailand operated sometime before 2014.[11]

Bauer announced on 20 January 2016 that the March issue of Cleo would be its last Australian edition.[12]

Launch

In the early 1970s, journalist and editor, Ita Buttrose, and Kerry Packer, heir to what was then Australia's most influential publishing house, Australian Consolidated Press (ACP), created a new and bold Australian women's magazine which would become an instant sensation. Cleo was modelled in a large part on Cosmopolitan after the Packers lost the rights to the latter title to rivals Fairfax. The first issue was launched in November 1972, the same month that Gough Whitlam came to power in Australia.

In the original promotional video for Cleo, Buttrose observes "the rapidly changing personality of the Australian woman."[13] In an era when hopes for social and political change were high, Cleo was a fitting and welcome addition for women aged between 20 and 40 who were looking for something more than the recipes, knitting tips and coverage of royal births and weddings that the Australian Women's Weekly focused on at the time.

Cleo was politically provocative (but not aggressive) with its journalism. Alongside articles on group sex, contraception, "happy hookers" and Jack Thompson as the first nude "Mate of the Month", the launch issue featured tips on "How to be a sexy housekeeper." In stark contrast to the lack of literary content in modern glossy magazines, Buttrose ran a short story by Norman Mailer, a prominent author at the time. This trend continued in subsequent issues.

In two days, 105,000 copies of the first issue were sold and by the end of its first year circulation reached 200,000. When the magazine conducted the first national readership survey in 1974, figures revealed that 30 percent of women aged between 13 and 24 read Cleo every month.[14]

Cleo as a form of popular feminism

Through Cleo, feminism became a part of women's everyday lives and of their identity.

Ita Buttrose and her staff were committed to many of the ideas of women's and sexual liberation. However, it is important to note that Cleo's editorial agenda was that of liberal rather than radical feminism. In her first editorial letter, Buttrose described who she thought the Cleo reader was: "You're an intelligent woman who's interested in everything that's going on, the type of person who wants a great deal more out of life. Like us, certain aspects of Women's Lib appeal to you but you're not aggressive about it." (1972).

The feminist tone and ideas proliferated on the pages of Cleo throughout the 1970s. Every month, there were feature articles covering issues including: the work/life balance, the pressure to get married and raise a family, abortion, contraception, women's education, domestic violence and rape. "The celebrities Cleo chose to interview were women who had succeeded in politics, business and culture. There were also discussions of the Women's Liberation Movement itself, with writers for and against".[15]

Ordinary, every-day women gained knowledge and understanding of feminism through the pages of Cleo. The magazine helped create the feminist public sphere, opening doors for discussions about new ideas which modern women treat as mainstream today.

Cleo jump starts the sexual revolution

Cleo pushed boundaries in mainstream publishing with candid articles on topics ranging from sex toys, fantasies and orgasms, to lesbianism and contraception. "We wrote about sex as if we had discovered it", recalls Buttrose.[16]

Cleo was the first Australian women's magazine to feature non-frontal nude male centrefolds in 1972, with Jack Thompson, a prominent Australian actor at the time, the magazine's first Mate of the Month. What Buttrose thought would be a light hearted, one-off feature became an essential component of what made Cleo so popular. Other mates were Alby Mangels, Eric Oldfield, Peter Blasina and the band Skyhooks. The centrefold feature was discontinued in 1985, the last being a bare-chested picture of Mel Gibson.

University of Sydney media academic Megan Le Masurier interprets the centerfold phenomenon as an incentive for popular feminist desire. The centerfold attempted to reverse the dominant tradition of representing men as viewers, and women as viewed. The representation of the male nude "offered women the chance to imagine themselves as active sexual agents, quite capable of holding the gaze".[17] The naked man was a reminder that women could, and should, enjoy sex, and reaffirmed their right to talk about sex.

Sex no longer sells

In 2013, new editor Sharri Markson announced there would be no mention of sex on the cover of Cleo. More than 40 years after revamping women's magazines with male centrefolds, it was the first time that sex had not been used as a selling point.

The move came as a result of research conducted by the magazine which revealed a conservative streak among Generation Y readers – Cleo's largest audience demographic – most of whom still live at home.

As Markson explained: "They are embarrassed to be sitting at home with their parents reading a magazine which has the word 'orgasm' in bold print on the cover".[18]

In the pages of Cleo, all the racy content of the earlier, more progressive era was replaced with celebrity news and fashion, beauty and fitness tips.

Now sexy, according to December 2014 cover girl Taylor Swift is "knowing who you are and not needing to defend yourself."[19]

As seen through the pages of Cleo, there was a shift away from sexual liberation to personal gratification and self- improvement, a maxim characteristic of Generation Y.

Bauer: new owner, new direction

In October 2012, multinational publisher Bauer Media purchased Australian magazine publisher ACP, which controls titles ranging from Cleo magazine to The Australian Women's Weekly[20] This change of ownership meant drastic changes for the staff and readers of Cleo magazine.

Merge of editorial staff: Dolly and Cleo

A primary cost-cutting measure taken by Bauer was to merge the editorial staff of Dolly and Cleo magazines, reducing the staff size by half and appointing a single Editor-in-Chief for both magazines.[21]

This was presented as a move to unite the two magazines under a "young women's lifestyles division".[22]

Observers argue that these two magazines are in fact not directed at the same generalised market. Where Dolly targets teenage girls, Cleo focuses on an older group, women in their twenties and thirties.[23]

Imported content

Bauer Media also now uses "content translated from Bauer's youth titles Joy and Bravo which the publishing house produce in Germany",[21] reducing the amount of original Australian content across the magazines, but reducing the cost of producing issues across their titles.

Lucy Cousins appointed Editor-in-Chief

In 2014, Lucy Cousins was appointed Editor-in-Chief of Bauer's newly merged Dolly and Cleo magazines. Cousins was previously employed as Deputy Editor at Bauer's Women's Fitness magazine.[24]

Cousins says of Cleo magazine:

"CLEO magazine is and has always been a bible of all things fashion, beauty and celebrity for young Australian women. And now we've added travel, lifestyle, music and the new CLEO man section. We have attitude and aren't afraid to push the boundaries."[8]

Past editors' opinions on Bauer's changes

Mia Freedman: "Like most Australian women, Dolly and Cleo in particular were my lifeblood growing up and sparked my love of women's media back in the 80s and 90s. [I'm] frustrated and disappointed at the lack of business foresight that has brought those titles to this point. One of the reasons I left magazines was because I was so tired of trying to get my bosses to understand that Armageddon was coming in the form of online. I knew the young women's market was the most vulnerable. But nobody would listen so I left and started Mamamia...Publishers didn't realise they were content producers, they kept acting like magazine makers"[21]

Lisa Wilkinson on Twitter: "Very sad to hear news that Dolly & Cleo magazines are merging, with expected losses of half the staff. End of an era. And a personal one." Wilkinson believes that it will take "somebody who is an incredibly smart magazine editor and someone who understands the subtle but very important differences that are going to have to exist between those two magazines" to ensure the survival of both Dolly and Cleo magazines.[23]

Readership figures 2013–14

It appears that Bauer's changes did not improve the continuing drop in circulation of Cleo magazine. Cleo suffered a steady decline in circulation due to changes in the way media was consumed and the failure of publishers in the 1990s and 2000s (decade) to follow their readers online. Statistics showed Cleo suffered a 28.2% drop between September 2013 and September 2014, with a readership size of 173,000 in September 2014.[25]

Bauer Media however argued that it experienced a 100% increase in "social media growth" in that time period,[8] suggesting that indeed the reason why readership figures fell was due to the movement from print media to the online world of blogs, forums and Facebook. They also stated that the best that Bauer Media could do to ensure the continuation of Australian magazines like Cleo was to minimise its production costs and hope that it can catch up with digital media.

Final issue 2016

On 20 January 2016, Bauer Media Group confirmed that Cleo magazine would close in Australia after more than 40 years of publication, with the final issue being March, on sale 22 February.[12][26] Cleo magazine's final cover, for the March edition, would feature Jesinta Campbell.

Mercury Capital acquisition

In June 2020, Cleo was acquired by the Sydney investment firm Mercury Capital as part of its acquisition of several of Bauer Media's former Australian and New Zealand titles.[5][4]

Noteworthy editors

Ita Buttrose

 
Ita Buttrose

Ita Buttrose started as a copy girl at the Australian Women's Weekly, she quickly became a cadet journalist at The Daily Telegraph and its sister newspaper Sunday Telegraph before taking over as women's editor at the age of 23. Buttrose would go on to become the first female Editor-in-Chief of these two newspapers and the first woman appointed to the board position with News Limited.

Her arguably most well known role began in 1972, as the founding editor of Cleo magazine where she achieved such great success that it led to a promotion in 1975, editing the Packers' flagship magazine at the time, the Australian Women's Weekly. She subsequently became editor-in-chief of both publications.

Buttrose played an important role in shaping women's identity in the 1970s through the pages of Cleo. She had the talent and conviction to take advantage of this period of social and political change, with new ideas about sexual freedom, female independence and gender equality heavily promoted in her magazine.

Despite scepticism from Sir Frank Packer, the Publisher, Buttrose's hunch that Cleo would appeal to modern Australian women proved to be right, with the magazine becoming the top selling monthly women's title and elevating Buttrose to the status of a feminist icon and magazine queen.

Andrew Cowell, the art director on the debut edition of Cleo said: "Ita's always had a talent to tap into a real need. She's always been a forward thinker, which keeps her ahead of the curve and able to make instinctive decisions. If Ita had a gut feeling for something, you were best to go with it." [16]

Since 2011, Buttrose has been National President of Alzheimer's Australia and is also Vice-President of Arthritis Australia. In 2013, she was named Australian of the Year. Buttrose uses her high-profile to champion social issues such as women's education and raise awareness of breast cancer and HIV/AIDS.

Lisa Wilkinson

 
Lisa Wilkinson

Lisa Wilkinson's career in magazine publishing started at age 19 with no university education, as the enthusiastic secretary/editorial assistant/Girl Friday at Dolly magazine. After rising to the editorship of Dolly in only 5 years, Wilkinson took over the position of Cleo magazine editor in 1984, and reigned there for ten years. Later she became Cleo's International Editor-in-Chief, running editions in New Zealand, Singapore, Malaysia and Thailand. Under Wilkinson, Cleo magazine became the highest selling women's magazine per capita in the world.[27]

A significant change made by Wilkinson at Cleo was the replacement of the Cleo centerfold with the Bachelor of the Year competition in 1985. Cleo magazine presents an annual round up of the 50 most eligible bachelors in Australia, and encourages readers to vote for their favourite eligible bachelor.[28]

Wilkinson also mentored numerous high-profile women in Australian media today. Nicole Kidman, Miranda Kerr, Deborah Thomas, Paula Joye and Mia Freedman all credit her as a long-time supporter.[27]

After her career as a magazine editor, Wilkinson established her own media consultancy business and hosted breakfast talk show Today on the Nine Network, with Karl Stefanovic, before joining A Current Affair's program The Project on Network Ten[29]

Deborah Thomas

 
Thomas in January 2013

Deborah Thomas' career in magazine publishing started at Cleo magazine as Beauty and Lifestyle editor in 1987. She became deputy editor at Cleo in 1990, and was editor at Mode (now Harper's Bazaar) and Elle magazines until she took over the Editorship at Cleo from 1997 to 1999[30] where she "revive[d] the magazine's falling circulation and advertising revenue".[31]

After Cleo magazine, Thomas became Editor-in-Chief of The Australian Women's Weekly and was awarded Editor of the Year in 2002 for her efforts at the iconic magazine. Later, Thomas was Director of Media, Public Affairs and Brand Development across Bauer Media's portfolio of 70-plus titles.[32] In April 2015 she was appointed as CEO (chief executive officer) of Ardent Leisure.[33][34]

Mia Freedman

Mia Freedman's first foray into magazine publishing was also at Cleo – doing work experience under then-editor Lisa Wilkinson.[35] Freedman became the youngest ever editor of Cosmopolitan magazine at age 24,[36] and at 32 became Editor-in-Chief of Dolly, Cleo and Cosmo.[37] Freedman moved away from magazine publishing in 2007 and is now the publisher and editor behind popular women's interest website Mamamia, while continuing to write articles and books across numerous publications.[38]

Sarah Oakes

Sarah Oakes is an experienced editor who has worked on a number of Australian publications such as K-Zone and Girlfriend and received many accolades throughout her career. She was the youngest ever recipient of the Magazine Publishers' Awards, Editor of the Year Award in 2005. Oakes was the editor-in-chief of Cleo between 2008 and 2010, where she repositioned the title and had great success with the Cleo 'Bachelor of the Year' campaigns. While at Cleo, Oakes was also a finalist in the Good Editor Awards. Oakes currently holds the position of editor of Sunday Life, a Fairfax publication that has a readership of more than 1.6 million.[39]

Oakes' innovative changes for Cleo

New editorial line-up

Oakes presided over the relaunch and repositioning of Cleo in October 2009. She has signed-up a veteran magazine editor and fashion stylist Aileen Marr as the new Fashion Director and Pip Edwards as Contributing Fashion Editor. The October issue in 2008 hence started to feature more fashion pages up front, introduce new sections and launch more beauty pages, including a market-first beauty panel.[40] Such a strong fashion editorial team cemented Cleo's status as an invaluable source of information for women who want to stay on top of fashion trends.

"Models only" policy overturned

Oakes also brought celebrities back to the Cleo cover instead of "models only" policy introduced in the late 2007.

New "honesty policy"

Introduced in the August 2008 issue, this policy was designed to appeal to Generation Y, with readers invited to critique each issue in return for prizes such as iPhones and designer bags. As then editor Oakes explained, "Every month we will ask our readers online to give feedback (which will be) incorporated into the magazine the following month. We are doing all the things that motivate Generation Y: instant gratification and personalisation."[41]

Sales trend

Cleo experienced an Average Net Paid Sales (ANPS) decline from 149,256 in 2008 to 134,286 in 2009, with a rate dropped by −10.03% and the number of copies sold decreased by 14,970-year-on-year.[42] Meanwhile, the cover price of Cleo increased by $0.2 from $7.00 in 2008 to $7.20 in 2009. The circulation of Cleo decreased from 128,183 in 2009 to 110,081 in 2010.[43]

In popular culture

ABC mini-series, Paper Giants: The Birth of Cleo dramatises the emergence of the magazine. Screened over two nights in April 2011, the series was a ratings winner, with an average of 1.34 million viewers tuning in on the opening night to watch Ita Buttrose (played by Asher Keddie) navigate the male dominated world of Australian publishing in the 1970s as she fights to get Cleo off the ground.[44] For many avid readers of Cleo, the idea that the magazine almost did not exist made for exciting television.

Most critics praised Asher Keddie's convincing portrayal of Buttrose as an ambitious leader and supportive mentor. According to producer John Edwards, Buttrose was a significant contributor to the script. "When I went to meet her, she was tentative, nervous and fearful but also flattered".[45]

Feminist representational techniques

Academic Margaret Henderson argues that just as Cleo made feminist ideas popular, Paper Giants uses "feminist representational techniques" to make the 1970s era of social and political change accessible to modern audiences.[46] For many avid readers of Cleo, the idea that the magazine almost did not exist made for exciting television.

A feminist approach to relationships is shown through the many scenes of the staff gathered around the table brainstorming. The impression given is that the evolution of editorial ideas is very much a collective work process, and the women's relationship to each other is supportive rather than competitive.

The typical Cleo reader is represented by Ita's shy assistant, Leslie (played by Jessica Tovey) who begins the series faking orgasms and running errands, and by the end, escapes her dead-end relationship to begin working as a journalist in London.

Women's sexual liberation is highlighted in playful tones. There is plenty of joking, bantering, and double entendres among the female characters who use humour to deal with obstacles that come their way from the suits upstairs when creating the magazine. When we are shown the discomfort expressed by Kerry Packer (played by Rob Carlton) and Sir Frank when the female staff have frank discussions with them regarding the sexual content of Cleo, the scene is meant to be funny.

"Paper Giants' recruitment of humour…is an important corrective to the cliché of humourless feminists and to po-faced and hubristic accounts of radical political movements".[47]

Cleo Bachelor of the Year winners

Cleo New Zealand Bachelor of the Year winners

  • 2012 – John Templeton
  • 2011 – Nick Oswald
  • 2010 – Philipp Spahn[56]
  • 2009 – please expand
  • 2008 – please expand
  • 2007 – Brad Werner[57]
  • 1993 – Matthew Rodwell

See also

References

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  2. ^ a b "Australian Magazine Readership, 12 months to September 2014". Roy Morgan. Retrieved 9 January 2015.
  3. ^ a b . ABC News. 20 January 2016. Archived from the original on 8 November 2020. Retrieved 3 September 2020.
  4. ^ a b c Whyte, Jemina (19 June 2020). "Magazine buyer writes new story". Australian Financial Review. from the original on 23 June 2020. Retrieved 17 July 2020.
  5. ^ a b Kelly, Vivienne (17 June 2020). "Bauer has left the building. What next for magazines in Australia?". Mumbrella. from the original on 18 August 2020. Retrieved 30 June 2020.
  6. ^ Robert Crawford; Kim Humphery (9 June 2010). Consumer Australia: Historical Perspectives. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. p. 59. ISBN 978-1-4438-2305-0. Retrieved 30 April 2016.
  7. ^ "Buttrose, Ita Clare (1942 - )". Australian Women's Register. Retrieved 18 February 2017.
  8. ^ a b c d . Archived from the original on 9 January 2015. Retrieved 9 January 2015.
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  10. ^ "Cleo". SPH Magazines. Retrieved 4 November 2019.
  11. ^ . www.cleothailand.com. Archived from the original on 9 April 2019. Retrieved 12 January 2022.
  12. ^ a b ABC 20 January 2016
  13. ^ "Paper Giants: The Birth of Cleo Preview". ABC.
  14. ^ Le Masurier, Megan (2010). "Reading the Flesh – Popular feminism, the second wave and Cleo's male Centrefold". Feminist Media Studies. 11 (2): 216. doi:10.1080/14680777.2010.521628. S2CID 216643999.
  15. ^ Le Masurier, Megan (2007). "My Other, My Self: Cleo Magazine and Feminism in 1970's Australia". Australian Feminist Studies. 22 (53): 199.
  16. ^ a b Pitt, Helen (11 April 2011). "Ita Buttrose on kick-starting a sexual revolution". Retrieved 10 January 2015.
  17. ^ Le Masurier, Megan (2010). "Reading the Flesh – Popular feminism, the second wave and Cleo's male centrefold". Feminist Media Studies. 11 (3): 226. doi:10.1080/14680777.2010.521628. S2CID 216643999.
  18. ^ Pickett, Rebekah. "Cleo drops sex from front cover". The Fashion Section. Retrieved 10 January 2015.
  19. ^ . Taylor Swift Web Community. Archived from the original on 14 April 2015. Retrieved 10 January 2015.
  20. ^ Kruger, Colin (October 2012). "Bauer takes control of ACP". Retrieved 8 January 2015.
  21. ^ a b c "Q&A with Mia Freedman about the future of Dolly and Cleo". Mamamia. 13 November 2013. Retrieved 7 January 2015.
  22. ^ "Bauer Media Group set to merge Cleo and Dolly teams". Mumbrella. 4 November 2013. Retrieved 7 January 2015.
  23. ^ a b Hornery, Andrew. . Archived from the original on 14 April 2015. Retrieved 8 January 2015.
  24. ^ . Archived from the original on 11 March 2015. Retrieved 7 January 2015.
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  26. ^ Jake Mitchell (20 January 2016). "Bauer confirms closure of Cleo". The Australian. Retrieved 29 October 2016.
  27. ^ a b "Lisa Wilkinson". The Fordham Company. Retrieved 8 January 2015.
  28. ^ . Archived from the original on 14 April 2015. Retrieved 8 January 2015.
  29. ^ . The Bottom Line. Archived from the original on 1 March 2015. Retrieved 8 January 2015.
  30. ^ Jackson, Sally. "Ten questions for Deborah Thomas". The Australian. Retrieved 8 January 2015.
  31. ^ "Deborah Thomas". Australian Speakers Bureau. Retrieved 8 January 2015.
  32. ^ "Deborah Thomas". ICMI Speakers. Retrieved 8 January 2015.
  33. ^ Burke, Liz (27 October 2016). "Dreamworld boss in line for $800k bonus". NewsComAu. Retrieved 27 October 2016.
  34. ^ Daniel, Sue; MacMillan, Jade; staff (27 October 2016). "Dreamworld under fire for failing to contact victims' families directly". ABC News. Retrieved 27 October 2016.
  35. ^ "Mia Freedman". Australian Speakers Bureau. Retrieved 8 January 2015.
  36. ^ Keenan, Catherine (23 August 2009). "Being Mia". Retrieved 8 January 2015.
  37. ^ "Mia Freedman". HuffPost. Retrieved 8 January 2015.
  38. ^ "Mia Freedman". Small Business Big Marketing. 8 January 2013. Retrieved 8 January 2015.
  39. ^ . University of Canberra. Archived from the original on 9 January 2015. Retrieved 10 January 2015.
  40. ^ . Bauer Media Group. Archived from the original on 9 January 2015. Retrieved 10 January 2015.
  41. ^ "Cleo loses sealed section". The Australian. Retrieved 10 January 2015.
  42. ^ (PDF). Mediabiznet. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 March 2011. Retrieved 3 January 2015.
  43. ^ "Mags: State of the (mag)nation – December 2010 Circulation". Girl With a Satchel. Blogspot. 14 February 2011. Retrieved 16 January 2015.
  44. ^ Henderson, Margaret (2013). "A Celebratory feminist aesthetics in postfeminist times: Screening Paper Giants – The Birth of Cleo". Australian Feminist Studies. 28 (77): 261. doi:10.1080/08164649.2013.821727. S2CID 143039508.
  45. ^ Enker, Debi (13 April 2011). "Power and the passion: When women came of age". Retrieved 10 January 2015.
  46. ^ Henderson, Margaret (2013). "A Celebratory feminist aesthetics in postfeminist times: Screening Paper Giants – The Birth of Cleo". Australian Feminist Studies. 28 (77): 260. doi:10.1080/08164649.2013.821727. S2CID 143039508.
  47. ^ Henderson, Margaret (2013). "A Celebratory feminist aesthetics in postfeminist times: Screening Paper Giants – The Birth of Cleo". Australian Feminist Studies. 28 (77): 258. doi:10.1080/08164649.2013.821727. S2CID 143039508.
  48. ^ AAP (29 April 2010). "Bachelor has fire in the belly". Herald Sun. Retrieved 29 April 2010.
  49. ^ AAP (23 April 2009). "Axle Whitehead is Cleo bachelor of the year". The Age. Retrieved 23 April 2009.
  50. ^ AAP (19 March 2008). "Jason Dundas named Cleo bachelor of the year". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 27 March 2008.
  51. ^ Jacqueline Maley and Alexa Moses (15 September 2006). "Son, you be a bachelor boy". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 4 August 2007.
  52. ^ "Bachelor of the year". The Age. 16 September 2005. Retrieved 4 August 2007.
  53. ^ "Airport manager our top bachelor". The Sydney Morning Herald. 27 March 2002. Retrieved 4 August 2007.
  54. ^ Christine Sams (5 May 2003). "Bride's something blue was a Wiggle". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 2 August 2007.
  55. ^ "Biography for Aaron Pedersen". IMDb. Retrieved 5 September 2007.
  56. ^ Bachelor of the Year 2010 4 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  57. ^ "CLEO bachelor of the year: Hot boys". Cleo Magazine. Retrieved 10 December 2007.

External links

  • CLEO Singapore Official Website
  • CLEO Malaysia Official Website
  • CLEO Indonesia Website
  • CLEO Thailand Website

cleo, magazine, cleo, australian, monthly, women, magazine, magazine, founded, 1972, australia, australia, zealand, editions, were, discontinued, february, 2016, aimed, older, audience, than, teenage, focused, australian, magazine, dolly, cleo, published, baue. Cleo is an Australian monthly women s magazine The magazine was founded in 1972 in Australia the Australia and New Zealand editions were discontinued in February 2016 Aimed at an older audience than the teenage focused Australian magazine Dolly Cleo was published by Bauer Media Group in Sydney and was known for its Cleo Bachelor of the Year award 3 In June 2020 Cleo was acquired by the Sydney investment firm Mercury Capital 5 4 CleoEditorLucy E CousinsFounding editorIta ButtroseCategoriesWomen s LifestyleFrequencyMonthlyCirculation53 221 1 Total circulation173 000 2 First issueNovember 1972Final issueMarch 2016CompanyBauer Media Group until February 2016 3 Mercury Capital 4 CountryAustralia published internationally Websitewww cleo com au Contents 1 History and profile 2 Launch 3 Cleo as a form of popular feminism 3 1 Cleo jump starts the sexual revolution 4 Sex no longer sells 5 Bauer new owner new direction 5 1 Merge of editorial staff Dolly and Cleo 5 2 Imported content 5 3 Lucy Cousins appointed Editor in Chief 5 4 Past editors opinions on Bauer s changes 5 5 Readership figures 2013 14 5 6 Final issue 2016 5 7 Mercury Capital acquisition 6 Noteworthy editors 6 1 Ita Buttrose 6 2 Lisa Wilkinson 6 3 Deborah Thomas 6 4 Mia Freedman 6 5 Sarah Oakes 6 5 1 Oakes innovative changes for Cleo 6 5 1 1 New editorial line up 6 5 1 2 Models only policy overturned 6 5 1 3 New honesty policy 6 5 1 4 Sales trend 7 In popular culture 7 1 Feminist representational techniques 8 Cleo Bachelor of the Year winners 9 Cleo New Zealand Bachelor of the Year winners 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksHistory and profile EditLaunched in November 1972 6 under the direction of Ita Buttrose the magazine s founding editor 7 Cleo became one of Australia s most iconic titles due to its mix of seemingly controversial content including the first nude male centerfold following American Cosmopolitan s nude centerfold of Burt Reynolds six months earlier and detailed sex advice According to the magazine s editorial philosophy Cleo gets women and it also strikes the perfect balance offers a bright light hearted tone and aesthetic without shying away from the more serious issues that are important to their readers 8 Audited circulation in June 2014 was 53 221 copies monthly 9 Readership numbers for September 2014 are estimated to be 173 000 2 With a strong online presence of 300 000 visitors monthly the magazine successfully established its brand online In addition Beauty Bites Cleo s digital app offered an interactive component to technologically minded Gen Y readers including how to video tutorials expert advice and reader generated content 8 Cleo Singapore was launched in 1994 Cleo Malaysia in 1995 and Cleo Indonesia was launched in 2007 as an international license under the Femina Group 10 Cleo Thailand operated sometime before 2014 11 Bauer announced on 20 January 2016 that the March issue of Cleo would be its last Australian edition 12 Launch EditIn the early 1970s journalist and editor Ita Buttrose and Kerry Packer heir to what was then Australia s most influential publishing house Australian Consolidated Press ACP created a new and bold Australian women s magazine which would become an instant sensation Cleo was modelled in a large part on Cosmopolitan after the Packers lost the rights to the latter title to rivals Fairfax The first issue was launched in November 1972 the same month that Gough Whitlam came to power in Australia In the original promotional video for Cleo Buttrose observes the rapidly changing personality of the Australian woman 13 In an era when hopes for social and political change were high Cleo was a fitting and welcome addition for women aged between 20 and 40 who were looking for something more than the recipes knitting tips and coverage of royal births and weddings that the Australian Women s Weekly focused on at the time Cleo was politically provocative but not aggressive with its journalism Alongside articles on group sex contraception happy hookers and Jack Thompson as the first nude Mate of the Month the launch issue featured tips on How to be a sexy housekeeper In stark contrast to the lack of literary content in modern glossy magazines Buttrose ran a short story by Norman Mailer a prominent author at the time This trend continued in subsequent issues In two days 105 000 copies of the first issue were sold and by the end of its first year circulation reached 200 000 When the magazine conducted the first national readership survey in 1974 figures revealed that 30 percent of women aged between 13 and 24 read Cleo every month 14 Cleo as a form of popular feminism EditThrough Cleo feminism became a part of women s everyday lives and of their identity Ita Buttrose and her staff were committed to many of the ideas of women s and sexual liberation However it is important to note that Cleo s editorial agenda was that of liberal rather than radical feminism In her first editorial letter Buttrose described who she thought the Cleo reader was You re an intelligent woman who s interested in everything that s going on the type of person who wants a great deal more out of life Like us certain aspects of Women s Lib appeal to you but you re not aggressive about it 1972 The feminist tone and ideas proliferated on the pages of Cleo throughout the 1970s Every month there were feature articles covering issues including the work life balance the pressure to get married and raise a family abortion contraception women s education domestic violence and rape The celebrities Cleo chose to interview were women who had succeeded in politics business and culture There were also discussions of the Women s Liberation Movement itself with writers for and against 15 Ordinary every day women gained knowledge and understanding of feminism through the pages of Cleo The magazine helped create the feminist public sphere opening doors for discussions about new ideas which modern women treat as mainstream today Cleo jump starts the sexual revolution Edit Cleo pushed boundaries in mainstream publishing with candid articles on topics ranging from sex toys fantasies and orgasms to lesbianism and contraception We wrote about sex as if we had discovered it recalls Buttrose 16 Cleo was the first Australian women s magazine to feature non frontal nude male centrefolds in 1972 with Jack Thompson a prominent Australian actor at the time the magazine s first Mate of the Month What Buttrose thought would be a light hearted one off feature became an essential component of what made Cleo so popular Other mates were Alby Mangels Eric Oldfield Peter Blasina and the band Skyhooks The centrefold feature was discontinued in 1985 the last being a bare chested picture of Mel Gibson University of Sydney media academic Megan Le Masurier interprets the centerfold phenomenon as an incentive for popular feminist desire The centerfold attempted to reverse the dominant tradition of representing men as viewers and women as viewed The representation of the male nude offered women the chance to imagine themselves as active sexual agents quite capable of holding the gaze 17 The naked man was a reminder that women could and should enjoy sex and reaffirmed their right to talk about sex Sex no longer sells EditIn 2013 new editor Sharri Markson announced there would be no mention of sex on the cover of Cleo More than 40 years after revamping women s magazines with male centrefolds it was the first time that sex had not been used as a selling point The move came as a result of research conducted by the magazine which revealed a conservative streak among Generation Y readers Cleo s largest audience demographic most of whom still live at home As Markson explained They are embarrassed to be sitting at home with their parents reading a magazine which has the word orgasm in bold print on the cover 18 In the pages of Cleo all the racy content of the earlier more progressive era was replaced with celebrity news and fashion beauty and fitness tips Now sexy according to December 2014 cover girl Taylor Swift is knowing who you are and not needing to defend yourself 19 As seen through the pages of Cleo there was a shift away from sexual liberation to personal gratification and self improvement a maxim characteristic of Generation Y Bauer new owner new direction EditIn October 2012 multinational publisher Bauer Media purchased Australian magazine publisher ACP which controls titles ranging from Cleo magazine to The Australian Women s Weekly 20 This change of ownership meant drastic changes for the staff and readers of Cleo magazine Merge of editorial staff Dolly and Cleo Edit A primary cost cutting measure taken by Bauer was to merge the editorial staff of Dolly and Cleo magazines reducing the staff size by half and appointing a single Editor in Chief for both magazines 21 This was presented as a move to unite the two magazines under a young women s lifestyles division 22 Observers argue that these two magazines are in fact not directed at the same generalised market Where Dolly targets teenage girls Cleo focuses on an older group women in their twenties and thirties 23 Imported content Edit Bauer Media also now uses content translated from Bauer s youth titles Joy and Bravo which the publishing house produce in Germany 21 reducing the amount of original Australian content across the magazines but reducing the cost of producing issues across their titles Lucy Cousins appointed Editor in Chief Edit In 2014 Lucy Cousins was appointed Editor in Chief of Bauer s newly merged Dolly and Cleo magazines Cousins was previously employed as Deputy Editor at Bauer s Women s Fitness magazine 24 Cousins says of Cleo magazine CLEO magazine is and has always been a bible of all things fashion beauty and celebrity for young Australian women And now we ve added travel lifestyle music and the new CLEO man section We have attitude and aren t afraid to push the boundaries 8 Past editors opinions on Bauer s changes Edit Mia Freedman Like most Australian women Dolly and Cleo in particular were my lifeblood growing up and sparked my love of women s media back in the 80s and 90s I m frustrated and disappointed at the lack of business foresight that has brought those titles to this point One of the reasons I left magazines was because I was so tired of trying to get my bosses to understand that Armageddon was coming in the form of online I knew the young women s market was the most vulnerable But nobody would listen so I left and started Mamamia Publishers didn t realise they were content producers they kept acting like magazine makers 21 Lisa Wilkinson on Twitter Very sad to hear news that Dolly amp Cleo magazines are merging with expected losses of half the staff End of an era And a personal one Wilkinson believes that it will take somebody who is an incredibly smart magazine editor and someone who understands the subtle but very important differences that are going to have to exist between those two magazines to ensure the survival of both Dolly and Cleo magazines 23 Readership figures 2013 14 Edit It appears that Bauer s changes did not improve the continuing drop in circulation of Cleo magazine Cleo suffered a steady decline in circulation due to changes in the way media was consumed and the failure of publishers in the 1990s and 2000s decade to follow their readers online Statistics showed Cleo suffered a 28 2 drop between September 2013 and September 2014 with a readership size of 173 000 in September 2014 25 Bauer Media however argued that it experienced a 100 increase in social media growth in that time period 8 suggesting that indeed the reason why readership figures fell was due to the movement from print media to the online world of blogs forums and Facebook They also stated that the best that Bauer Media could do to ensure the continuation of Australian magazines like Cleo was to minimise its production costs and hope that it can catch up with digital media Final issue 2016 Edit On 20 January 2016 Bauer Media Group confirmed that Cleo magazine would close in Australia after more than 40 years of publication with the final issue being March on sale 22 February 12 26 Cleo magazine s final cover for the March edition would feature Jesinta Campbell Mercury Capital acquisition Edit In June 2020 Cleo was acquired by the Sydney investment firm Mercury Capital as part of its acquisition of several of Bauer Media s former Australian and New Zealand titles 5 4 Noteworthy editors EditIta Buttrose Edit Ita Buttrose Ita Buttrose started as a copy girl at the Australian Women s Weekly she quickly became a cadet journalist at The Daily Telegraph and its sister newspaper Sunday Telegraph before taking over as women s editor at the age of 23 Buttrose would go on to become the first female Editor in Chief of these two newspapers and the first woman appointed to the board position with News Limited Her arguably most well known role began in 1972 as the founding editor of Cleo magazine where she achieved such great success that it led to a promotion in 1975 editing the Packers flagship magazine at the time the Australian Women s Weekly She subsequently became editor in chief of both publications Buttrose played an important role in shaping women s identity in the 1970s through the pages of Cleo She had the talent and conviction to take advantage of this period of social and political change with new ideas about sexual freedom female independence and gender equality heavily promoted in her magazine Despite scepticism from Sir Frank Packer the Publisher Buttrose s hunch that Cleo would appeal to modern Australian women proved to be right with the magazine becoming the top selling monthly women s title and elevating Buttrose to the status of a feminist icon and magazine queen Andrew Cowell the art director on the debut edition of Cleo said Ita s always had a talent to tap into a real need She s always been a forward thinker which keeps her ahead of the curve and able to make instinctive decisions If Ita had a gut feeling for something you were best to go with it 16 Since 2011 Buttrose has been National President of Alzheimer s Australia and is also Vice President of Arthritis Australia In 2013 she was named Australian of the Year Buttrose uses her high profile to champion social issues such as women s education and raise awareness of breast cancer and HIV AIDS Lisa Wilkinson Edit Lisa Wilkinson Lisa Wilkinson s career in magazine publishing started at age 19 with no university education as the enthusiastic secretary editorial assistant Girl Friday at Dolly magazine After rising to the editorship of Dolly in only 5 years Wilkinson took over the position of Cleo magazine editor in 1984 and reigned there for ten years Later she became Cleo s International Editor in Chief running editions in New Zealand Singapore Malaysia and Thailand Under Wilkinson Cleo magazine became the highest selling women s magazine per capita in the world 27 A significant change made by Wilkinson at Cleo was the replacement of the Cleo centerfold with the Bachelor of the Year competition in 1985 Cleo magazine presents an annual round up of the 50 most eligible bachelors in Australia and encourages readers to vote for their favourite eligible bachelor 28 Wilkinson also mentored numerous high profile women in Australian media today Nicole Kidman Miranda Kerr Deborah Thomas Paula Joye and Mia Freedman all credit her as a long time supporter 27 After her career as a magazine editor Wilkinson established her own media consultancy business and hosted breakfast talk show Today on the Nine Network with Karl Stefanovic before joining A Current Affair s program The Project on Network Ten 29 Deborah Thomas Edit Thomas in January 2013 Deborah Thomas career in magazine publishing started at Cleo magazine as Beauty and Lifestyle editor in 1987 She became deputy editor at Cleo in 1990 and was editor at Mode now Harper s Bazaar and Elle magazines until she took over the Editorship at Cleo from 1997 to 1999 30 where she revive d the magazine s falling circulation and advertising revenue 31 After Cleo magazine Thomas became Editor in Chief of The Australian Women s Weekly and was awarded Editor of the Year in 2002 for her efforts at the iconic magazine Later Thomas was Director of Media Public Affairs and Brand Development across Bauer Media s portfolio of 70 plus titles 32 In April 2015 she was appointed as CEO chief executive officer of Ardent Leisure 33 34 Mia Freedman Edit Mia Freedman s first foray into magazine publishing was also at Cleo doing work experience under then editor Lisa Wilkinson 35 Freedman became the youngest ever editor of Cosmopolitan magazine at age 24 36 and at 32 became Editor in Chief of Dolly Cleo and Cosmo 37 Freedman moved away from magazine publishing in 2007 and is now the publisher and editor behind popular women s interest website Mamamia while continuing to write articles and books across numerous publications 38 Sarah Oakes Edit Sarah Oakes is an experienced editor who has worked on a number of Australian publications such as K Zone and Girlfriend and received many accolades throughout her career She was the youngest ever recipient of the Magazine Publishers Awards Editor of the Year Award in 2005 Oakes was the editor in chief of Cleo between 2008 and 2010 where she repositioned the title and had great success with the Cleo Bachelor of the Year campaigns While at Cleo Oakes was also a finalist in the Good Editor Awards Oakes currently holds the position of editor of Sunday Life a Fairfax publication that has a readership of more than 1 6 million 39 Oakes innovative changes for Cleo Edit New editorial line up Edit Oakes presided over the relaunch and repositioning of Cleo in October 2009 She has signed up a veteran magazine editor and fashion stylist Aileen Marr as the new Fashion Director and Pip Edwards as Contributing Fashion Editor The October issue in 2008 hence started to feature more fashion pages up front introduce new sections and launch more beauty pages including a market first beauty panel 40 Such a strong fashion editorial team cemented Cleo s status as an invaluable source of information for women who want to stay on top of fashion trends Models only policy overturned Edit Oakes also brought celebrities back to the Cleo cover instead of models only policy introduced in the late 2007 New honesty policy Edit Introduced in the August 2008 issue this policy was designed to appeal to Generation Y with readers invited to critique each issue in return for prizes such as iPhones and designer bags As then editor Oakes explained Every month we will ask our readers online to give feedback which will be incorporated into the magazine the following month We are doing all the things that motivate Generation Y instant gratification and personalisation 41 Sales trend Edit Cleo experienced an Average Net Paid Sales ANPS decline from 149 256 in 2008 to 134 286 in 2009 with a rate dropped by 10 03 and the number of copies sold decreased by 14 970 year on year 42 Meanwhile the cover price of Cleo increased by 0 2 from 7 00 in 2008 to 7 20 in 2009 The circulation of Cleo decreased from 128 183 in 2009 to 110 081 in 2010 43 In popular culture EditABC mini series Paper Giants The Birth of Cleo dramatises the emergence of the magazine Screened over two nights in April 2011 the series was a ratings winner with an average of 1 34 million viewers tuning in on the opening night to watch Ita Buttrose played by Asher Keddie navigate the male dominated world of Australian publishing in the 1970s as she fights to get Cleo off the ground 44 For many avid readers of Cleo the idea that the magazine almost did not exist made for exciting television Most critics praised Asher Keddie s convincing portrayal of Buttrose as an ambitious leader and supportive mentor According to producer John Edwards Buttrose was a significant contributor to the script When I went to meet her she was tentative nervous and fearful but also flattered 45 Feminist representational techniques Edit Academic Margaret Henderson argues that just as Cleo made feminist ideas popular Paper Giants uses feminist representational techniques to make the 1970s era of social and political change accessible to modern audiences 46 For many avid readers of Cleo the idea that the magazine almost did not exist made for exciting television A feminist approach to relationships is shown through the many scenes of the staff gathered around the table brainstorming The impression given is that the evolution of editorial ideas is very much a collective work process and the women s relationship to each other is supportive rather than competitive The typical Cleo reader is represented by Ita s shy assistant Leslie played by Jessica Tovey who begins the series faking orgasms and running errands and by the end escapes her dead end relationship to begin working as a journalist in London Women s sexual liberation is highlighted in playful tones There is plenty of joking bantering and double entendres among the female characters who use humour to deal with obstacles that come their way from the suits upstairs when creating the magazine When we are shown the discomfort expressed by Kerry Packer played by Rob Carlton and Sir Frank when the female staff have frank discussions with them regarding the sexual content of Cleo the scene is meant to be funny Paper Giants recruitment of humour is an important corrective to the cliche of humourless feminists and to po faced and hubristic accounts of radical political movements 47 Cleo Bachelor of the Year winners Edit2017 Marcus Courts 21 2016 Jaryd Robertson 25 2015 Matthew Buntine 22 2014 Thien Nguyen 2013 Trent Maxwell 23 2012 Hayden Quinn 26 2011 Eamon Sullivan 25 2010 Firass Dirani 26 48 2009 Axle Whitehead 28 49 2008 Jason Dundas 25 50 2006 Andy Lee 25 51 2005 Ryan Phelan 29 52 2004 Andrew G 30 2003 Geoff Huegill 24 2002 Paul Khoury 28 53 2001 David Whitehill 26 2000 Craig Wing 21 1999 Anthony Field 35 54 1998 Kyle Vander Kuyp 27 1997 Kyle Sandilands 26 1996 Eric Bana 28 1994 Aaron Pedersen 24 55 1993 Grahame Smith 36Cleo New Zealand Bachelor of the Year winners Edit2012 John Templeton 2011 Nick Oswald 2010 Philipp Spahn 56 2009 please expand 2008 please expand 2007 Brad Werner 57 1993 Matthew RodwellSee also EditList of men s magazines List of women s magazines Paper Giants The Birth of CleoReferences Edit Roy EMMA and the ABCs The Misfits Media Company 15 August 2014 Retrieved 9 January 2015 a b Australian Magazine Readership 12 months to September 2014 Roy Morgan Retrieved 9 January 2015 a b Cleo magazine to close after 44 years in print Bauer Media Group confirms ABC News 20 January 2016 Archived from the original on 8 November 2020 Retrieved 3 September 2020 a b c Whyte Jemina 19 June 2020 Magazine buyer writes new story Australian Financial Review Archived from the original on 23 June 2020 Retrieved 17 July 2020 a b Kelly Vivienne 17 June 2020 Bauer has left the building What next for magazines in Australia Mumbrella Archived from the original on 18 August 2020 Retrieved 30 June 2020 Robert Crawford Kim Humphery 9 June 2010 Consumer Australia Historical Perspectives Cambridge Scholars Publishing p 59 ISBN 978 1 4438 2305 0 Retrieved 30 April 2016 Buttrose Ita Clare 1942 Australian Women s Register Retrieved 18 February 2017 a b c d Cleo Magazine Overview Archived from the original on 9 January 2015 Retrieved 9 January 2015 ABC Circulation Results Aug 2014 Metropolitan Newspapers All Magazines and NIMs PDF ABC Archived from the original PDF on 9 January 2015 Retrieved 1 January 2015 Cleo SPH Magazines Retrieved 4 November 2019 CLEO Thailand Online Magazine Cleo Thailand Magazine www cleothailand com Archived from the original on 9 April 2019 Retrieved 12 January 2022 a b ABC 20 January 2016 Paper Giants The Birth of Cleo Preview ABC Le Masurier Megan 2010 Reading the Flesh Popular feminism the second wave and Cleo s male Centrefold Feminist Media Studies 11 2 216 doi 10 1080 14680777 2010 521628 S2CID 216643999 Le Masurier Megan 2007 My Other My Self Cleo Magazine and Feminism in 1970 s Australia Australian Feminist Studies 22 53 199 a b Pitt Helen 11 April 2011 Ita Buttrose on kick starting a sexual revolution Retrieved 10 January 2015 Le Masurier Megan 2010 Reading the Flesh Popular feminism the second wave and Cleo s male centrefold Feminist Media Studies 11 3 226 doi 10 1080 14680777 2010 521628 S2CID 216643999 Pickett Rebekah Cleo drops sex from front cover The Fashion Section Retrieved 10 January 2015 Cleo magazine Australia December 2014 Taylor Swift Web Community Archived from the original on 14 April 2015 Retrieved 10 January 2015 Kruger Colin October 2012 Bauer takes control of ACP Retrieved 8 January 2015 a b c Q amp A with Mia Freedman about the future of Dolly and Cleo Mamamia 13 November 2013 Retrieved 7 January 2015 Bauer Media Group set to merge Cleo and Dolly teams Mumbrella 4 November 2013 Retrieved 7 January 2015 a b Hornery Andrew A sign of the times Lisa Wilkinson laments changes ahead for Cleo and Dolly Archived from the original on 14 April 2015 Retrieved 8 January 2015 Lucy Cousins appointed Editor In Chief CLEO amp Dolly Archived from the original on 11 March 2015 Retrieved 7 January 2015 Australian Magazine Readership 12 months to September 2014 Roy Morgan Retrieved 8 January 2015 Jake Mitchell 20 January 2016 Bauer confirms closure of Cleo The Australian Retrieved 29 October 2016 a b Lisa Wilkinson The Fordham Company Retrieved 8 January 2015 CLEO celebrates 25 years of Australia s Hottest List 50 Most Eligible Bachelors Archived from the original on 14 April 2015 Retrieved 8 January 2015 Leaders Lisa Wilkinson The Bottom Line Archived from the original on 1 March 2015 Retrieved 8 January 2015 Jackson Sally Ten questions for Deborah Thomas The Australian Retrieved 8 January 2015 Deborah Thomas Australian Speakers Bureau Retrieved 8 January 2015 Deborah Thomas ICMI Speakers Retrieved 8 January 2015 Burke Liz 27 October 2016 Dreamworld boss in line for 800k bonus NewsComAu Retrieved 27 October 2016 Daniel Sue MacMillan Jade staff 27 October 2016 Dreamworld under fire for failing to contact victims families directly ABC News Retrieved 27 October 2016 Mia Freedman Australian Speakers Bureau Retrieved 8 January 2015 Keenan Catherine 23 August 2009 Being Mia Retrieved 8 January 2015 Mia Freedman HuffPost Retrieved 8 January 2015 Mia Freedman Small Business Big Marketing 8 January 2013 Retrieved 8 January 2015 In 2008 Sarah became editor of CLEO where she repositioned the title University of Canberra Archived from the original on 9 January 2015 Retrieved 10 January 2015 CLEO relaunches and adds hot editorial team Bauer Media Group Archived from the original on 9 January 2015 Retrieved 10 January 2015 Cleo loses sealed section The Australian Retrieved 10 January 2015 Australian Magazine Audit Report January to June 2009 PDF Mediabiznet Archived from the original PDF on 7 March 2011 Retrieved 3 January 2015 Mags State of the mag nation December 2010 Circulation Girl With a Satchel Blogspot 14 February 2011 Retrieved 16 January 2015 Henderson Margaret 2013 A Celebratory feminist aesthetics in postfeminist times Screening Paper Giants The Birth of Cleo Australian Feminist Studies 28 77 261 doi 10 1080 08164649 2013 821727 S2CID 143039508 Enker Debi 13 April 2011 Power and the passion When women came of age Retrieved 10 January 2015 Henderson Margaret 2013 A Celebratory feminist aesthetics in postfeminist times Screening Paper Giants The Birth of Cleo Australian Feminist Studies 28 77 260 doi 10 1080 08164649 2013 821727 S2CID 143039508 Henderson Margaret 2013 A Celebratory feminist aesthetics in postfeminist times Screening Paper Giants The Birth of Cleo Australian Feminist Studies 28 77 258 doi 10 1080 08164649 2013 821727 S2CID 143039508 AAP 29 April 2010 Bachelor has fire in the belly Herald Sun Retrieved 29 April 2010 AAP 23 April 2009 Axle Whitehead is Cleo bachelor of the year The Age Retrieved 23 April 2009 AAP 19 March 2008 Jason Dundas named Cleo bachelor of the year The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 27 March 2008 Jacqueline Maley and Alexa Moses 15 September 2006 Son you be a bachelor boy The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 4 August 2007 Bachelor of the year The Age 16 September 2005 Retrieved 4 August 2007 Airport manager our top bachelor The Sydney Morning Herald 27 March 2002 Retrieved 4 August 2007 Christine Sams 5 May 2003 Bride s something blue was a Wiggle The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 2 August 2007 Biography for Aaron Pedersen IMDb Retrieved 5 September 2007 Bachelor of the Year 2010 Archived 4 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine CLEO bachelor of the year Hot boys Cleo Magazine Retrieved 10 December 2007 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cleo magazine CLEO Singapore Official Website CLEO Malaysia Official Website CLEO Indonesia Website CLEO Thailand Website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cleo magazine amp oldid 1132978910, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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