James Brown (born 26 September 1965 [1] in Leeds) is a British former journalist, author, radio host and media entrepreneur. His first book, Above Head Height: A Five-a-Side Life, was published in 2017 by Quercus [2] and received positive reviews in The Guardian , [3] The Australian [4] and The Daily Telegraph . [5] A renowned Leeds United supporter, Brown also co-hosts The Late Tackle [6] on Talksport with the comedy writer Andy Dawson, of Athletico Mince fame. In addition to his media profile, he is the owner of Sabotage Times – a music, football and culture website – and the Sabotage Agency, which has provided content for such brands as Scotts, Carling and Adidas.
In 1985, Brown was a contributor to the alternative newspaper Leeds Other Paper . In 1986, following work on his fanzine Attack on Bzaag, he was hired as freelance features writer for Sounds . From there, he soon joined the magazine NME . In 1991, he became the manager of Fabulous, a rock band composed of various NME journalists. [7] After leaving NME, he wrote features for the Sunday Times Magazine.
In 1994, Brown launched the magazine Loaded , which was an early example of the modern "lads' mag" format. He won the British Society of Magazine Editors' "Editors' Editor of the Year" award for his work on the title. [8]
In a 1997 Independent interview, Brown expressed pride in his accomplishment in beginning Loaded, saying, "The facts are there. I started the most influential magazine in Britain in the last 10 years and made my last company millions and millions and millions of pounds after an outlay of virtually nothing, and I've got something like six or seven major publishing awards." [9]
In 1997, Brown left Loaded for the British edition of GQ . He launched the "Man of the Year" Awards and hired the then-unknown chef Jamie Oliver to write the food column. Brown left GQ in early 1999 over what were termed "philosophical differences", having included Field Marshal Rommel (shown in a photograph sporting a swastika band on his uniform) on a list of "The Most Fashionable Men of the Century".[ citation needed ]
After leaving GQ, Brown launched his own company, I Feel Good, and subsequently acquired Viz , Fortean Times and Bizarre magazines from John Brown Publishing for £6.4 million. [10]
He created the magazine Jack in August 2002. [11] IFG was sold to Dennis Publishing for £5.1 million in 2003 [12] after the company's annual losses doubled to £1.1 million and the film title Hotdog was sold, having failed to reach break-even. [13] Speaking in 2010, Brown said he had "made a lot of mistakes" at IFG and felt "a bit embarrassed about how little I had made of the opportunities I had created". [8] In July 2004, Dennis wrote off its investment in Jack and closed the title with paid-for sales stagnant at less than 28,000 copies. [14]
In 2007, he was hired as editor-in-chief of the free-to-air TV channel Sumo TV, saying he had plans to push the genre of "spectacular voyeurism". The channel was briefly moved into the Adult, Gaming and Dating categories before refocusing on content provided by Psychic Television. [15]
After selling IFG, Brown worked across the media. On television he appeared with Gok Wan in Miss Naked Beauty and was a participant in Channel 4's Extreme Detox . He also helped to create Flipside TV [ citation needed ] and co-produced over 50 episodes before the show was bought for Channel 4 and then Paramount.
Brown was appointed as consultant editor-in-chief at Sport Media Group, a part-time post, in November 2007. [16] In January 2008, Barry McIlheney was hired by Brown as the new editor-in-chief. [17] The two men were responsible for a relaunch of the Daily Sport and Sunday Sport newspapers in April 2008. [18]
Brown also presented and co-produced I Predict a Riot for Bravo, a ten-part investigation into the history of civil disorder, and regularly appeared as a pundit on the BBC's art shows Newsnight Review and The Culture Show . In 2010 he oversaw the relaunch of the Sky Sports Magazine.
In May 2010, Brown launched the website Sabotage Times to focus on music, sports, fashion, travel, TV and film.
Since 2010, Brown has made frequent appearances in the media, both on the radio for talkSPORT'sshow The Warm Up, hosted by Brown, Johnny Vaughan and Gavin Woods, and as a guest panellist on Alan Davies' show As Yet Untitled , broadcast on Dave. He is also an active business speaker and took the stage alongside figures such as Kofi Annan and Al Gore at the Leaders in London summit in 2007. [19]
In March 2019, Brown was appointed as editor-in-chief of FourFourTwo magazine. [20] In August 2019, he left FourFourTwo after less than six months. [21] It was later reported that he had made offensive remarks about the Tottenham Hotspur player Son Heung-min. [22]
New Musical Express (NME) is a British music, film, gaming, and culture website and brand. Founded as a newspaper in 1952, with the publication being referred to as a 'rock inkie', the NME would become a magazine that ended up as a free publication, before becoming an online brand which includes its website and radio stations.
The Sunday Sport is a British tabloid newspaper that was founded by David Sullivan in 1986. It mainly publishes images of topless female glamour models, and is well-known for publishing sensationalised, fictionalised, and satirical content, alongside celebrity gossip and sports coverage. It has changed from including legitimate journalism throughout its history. A sister title, the Daily Sport, was published from 1991 to 2011, when it ceased publication and went online-only, under separate ownership.
Arena was a British monthly men's magazine. The magazine was created in 1986 by Nick Logan, who had founded The Face in 1980, to focus on trends in fashion and entertainment. British graphic designer Neville Brody, who had designed The Face, designed Arena's launch appearance.
Loaded is a men's lifestyle magazine, now positioned as a men's lifestyle brand and community. It launched as a mass-market print publication in 1994, ceased being issued in March 2015, but relaunched as a digital magazine on 11 November 2015. The content was changed, with risqué material being heavily reduced. It relaunched in May 2024 as a digital lifestyle brand with quarterly print magazine, to celebrate its 30th anniversary.
Lad culture was a media-driven, principally British and Irish subculture of the 1990s and the early 2000s. The term lad culture continues to be used today to refer to collective, boorish or misogynistic behaviour by young heterosexual men, particularly university students.
Nuts was a British lads' mag published weekly in the United Kingdom on Tuesdays. Nuts' marketing campaign at its launch in 2004 used the slogan "When you really need something funny".
Bizarre was a British alternative magazine published from 1997 to 2015. It was published by Dennis Publishing and was a sister publication to Fortean Times.
John Brown Media is one of the world's largest content marketing agencies. It was bought by Dentsu Aegis in May 2015. While originally formed as a magazine company, the company creates multichannel content for various brands, with services including social media, film and audio, mobile.
Match, stylised as MATCH or MATCH!, is a weekly British football magazine aimed at the teenage and pre-teenage market. First published in 1979, the magazine had a circulation of 57,108 copies in December 2010. The magazine includes interviews, a skills school, quizzes and a weekly round-up of results, tables and player ratings from the four main English divisions and the Scottish Premier League in MatchFacts. It mostly covers teams and players in the English Premier League, but also has a limited coverage of La Liga, Serie A and international football.
Lad mag was a term principally used in the UK in the 1990s and early 2000s to describe a then-popular type of lifestyle magazine for younger, heterosexual men, focusing on "sex, sport, gadgets and grooming tips". The lad mag was notable as a new type of magazine; previously, lifestyle magazines had been almost entirely bought by women. It was the central cultural component of 1990s lad culture. The rapid decline of the lad mag in the late 1990s/early 2000s is generally associated with the rise of the Internet which provided much of the same content for free.
Martin Edward Daubney is a British commentator, journalist and former politician who was the deputy leader of the Reclaim Party from 2021 until August 2022. Daubney was a Brexit Party Member of the European Parliament (MEP) for the West Midlands from 2019 to 2020. He was the longest-serving editor of the men's lifestyle magazine Loaded.
Front was a British men's magazine. First published by Cabal Communications in 1998, it was created to rival IPC's publication Loaded, catering to a demographic of 16-to 25-year-old males. It began as part of the British "lads' mag" genre of magazines, though the covers rejected this description with the statement "Front is no lads' mag".
Woman's Own is a British lifestyle magazine aimed at women.
Esquire Magazine is a monthly men's magazine originally owned by the National Magazine Company, a subsidiary of the US-based Hearst Corporation. The first edition was published Spring/Summer 1991.
ShortList was a free weekly magazine published in London. Launched in 2007, it was published by Shortlist Media Ltd., who in 2009 launched Stylist, a similar magazine for women. Another publication, Shortlist Dubai, launched in March 2015. The magazine's print edition was discontinued in 2018 due to declining advertising revenue. Around 20 staff members were estimated to have lost their jobs as a result of its closure. The magazine released its last issue on 20 December 2018.
Tim Southwell is the co-founder of loaded magazine, launched in April 1994.
Derek Ridgers is a British photographer known for his photography of music, film and club/street culture. He has photographed people including James Brown, the Spice Girls, Clint Eastwood and Johnny Depp, as well as politicians, gangsters, artists, writers, fashion designers and sports people. Ridgers has also photographed British social scenes such as skinhead, fetish, club, punk and New Romantic.
Iestyn George is a Welsh journalist, who previously worked as an editor at both NME and GQ and is now a lecturer at University of Brighton.
Andrew Harrison is an English music journalist who has worked as a staff writer for NME, Select, Mixmag, The Word, and Q, and freelance for Rolling Stone, The Face, The Guardian, The Observer and Mojo. In 2008 he coined the term landfill indie, which VICE described as referring to the "procession of homogenous [guitar] bands" that dominated the UK charts in the early-2000s.