Sette (magazine)
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| Editor | Pier Luigi Vercesi |
|---|---|
| Former editors | Andrea Monti |
| Categories | News magazine Political magazine Lifestyle magazine |
| Frequency | Weekly |
| Circulation | 464,428 (November 2013) |
| Publisher | RCS MediaGroup SPA |
| First issue | 1 September 1987 |
| Company | RCS MediaGroup |
| Country | Italy |
| Based in | Milan |
| Language | Italian |
| Website | Sette |
| ISSN | 2037-2663 |
Sette, also known as Corriere della Sera Sette, is a news, political and lifestyle magazine based in Milan, Italy. The magazine is the weekly supplement of the daily newspaper Corriere della Sera. It was the first colour supplement distributed with a daily paper in Italy.[1]
Sette was established in September 1987.[2][3][4] The owner of the magazine is RCS Media Group,[5] and its publisher is RCS MediaGroup SPA.[6] The magazine has its headquarters in Milan.[6] Sette was sold weekly with the Thursday edition of Corriere della Sera.[2][7] In October 1987 it began to be distributed with the Friday edition of the paper.[3][5]
Andrea Monti served as the editor of Sette.[8] Pier Luigi Vercesi is the editor of the weekly which features articles on politics, news, fashion, art, leisure, culture, entertainment and lifestyle.[5]
In May 2004 the title of the magazine switched from Corriere della Sera Sette to Corriere della Sera magazine.[9] On 26 November 2009 the name was again changed and the original title began to be used, Corriere della Sera Sette.[10]
Circulation
Sette had a circulation of 690,000 copies in 2000, 683,000 copies in 2001 and 634,000 copies in 2002.[9] Between December 2002 and November 2003 the average circulation of the magazine was 623,335 copies.[11] From January to August 2003 its circulation rose to 634,000 copies.[12] Its total circulation was 626,000 copies in 2003.[9] In 2004 the magazine sold 648,000 copies.[13] It was the second best-selling news magazine in Italy in 2007[14] with a circulation of 528,792 copies.[15]
In November 2013 Sette sold 464,428 copies, including the circulation of its print and digital editions.[5]