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Landon Jones
Landon Jones
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Landon Young Jones Jr. (November 4, 1943 – August 17, 2024) was an American editor and author. He was the managing editor of People magazine and the author of William Clark and the Shaping of the West, a biography of William Clark, joint leader of the Lewis and Clark Expedition.[1]

Key Information

Background

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Jones was born in Rome, Georgia, in 1943.[2][3] He grew up in St. Louis, attending the St. Louis Country Day School, and went on to attend Princeton University, where he became involved with The Daily Princetonian[2] and Princeton Alumni Weekly[4]

Career

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After graduating in 1966, Jones was hired by Time Inc., writing first for its flagship Time magazine until 1971, when he spent three years editing Princeton Alumni Weekly.[2] He returned to Time Inc. and joined People around the time of its founding in 1974.[2] In 1989, he became its managing editor, holding the role for the next eight years.[2] Under his watch, sales quadrupled, and he oversaw the launch of three related publications: In Touch, People en Español, and Who.[2][3] He also served as editor of Time Inc.'s Money magazine from 1984 to 1989.[3] He retired from the magazine business in 2000.[2]

Jones also edited a selection of the expedition journals, The Essential Lewis and Clark, and was the author of Great Expectations: America and the Baby Boom Generation.[2] In a review for his last book, Celebrity Nation, Publishers Weekly called him an "astute chronicler of celebrity culture". In Celebrity Nation, Jones shares his analysis of over 75 celebrities over many decades and shows us how the apparatus of fame operates.

Personal life and death

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Jones and his wife, the former Sarah Brown, had three children.[2] He was resident of Princeton, New Jersey, for almost all of his adult life, but also maintained a residence near Bozeman, Montana.[2]

Jones died from complications of myelofibrosis at a hospital in Plainsboro, New Jersey, on August 17, 2024, at the age of 80.[2]

Bibliography

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References

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from Grokipedia
Landon Jones was an American editor and author known for his seminal work on generational trends and his leadership at major publications. His book Great Expectations: America and the Baby Boom Generation (1980) provided a comprehensive analysis of the baby boom cohort's impact on American society, culture, and economy. He served as managing editor of People magazine from 1989 to 1997, during which time the publication's profits increased fourfold and it solidified its position as a leading popular culture and celebrity news outlet. Jones began his career in journalism after graduating from Princeton University, contributing to various magazines and newspapers before rising through the ranks at Time Inc. His editorial work emphasized accessible yet insightful coverage of social trends, influencing how mainstream media portrayed generational shifts. After leaving People, he continued writing and editing, including contributions to books and articles on demographics and American history. His perspectives remain referenced in discussions of post-war American culture and the boomer generation's legacy.

Overview

Introduction

Landon Young Jones Jr. (November 4, 1943 – August 17, 2024) was an American magazine editor and author best known for his tenure as managing editor of People magazine from 1989 to 1997, a period when the publication's profits increased fourfold. Under his leadership, People shifted its newsstand date from Monday to Friday to boost weekend sales, introduced color printing throughout the magazine, and refocused its audience primarily toward women, with frequent cover features on Diana, Princess of Wales. Jones described the magazine's successful editorial formula as the "three D's": Diana, diet, and death (of celebrities). He helped popularize the term "baby boomer" through his 1980 book Great Expectations: America and the Baby Boom Generation, which examined the demographic and cultural influence of Americans born between 1946 and 1964. Jones later authored additional works, including The Essential Lewis and Clark (2000), William Clark and the Shaping of the West (2004), and Celebrity Nation: How America Evolved Into a Culture of Fans and Followers (2023). A 1966 graduate of Princeton University, Jones began his career as a writer at Time magazine and later edited the Princeton Alumni Weekly before returning to Time Inc. in 1974 as a writer at People magazine, where he also served as managing editor of Money magazine from 1984 to 1989. He retired from Time Inc. in 2000 as vice president for strategic planning and received the company's Lifetime Achievement Award in 2015. Jones died in Plainsboro, New Jersey, from complications of myelofibrosis at the age of 80.
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