A lot of double issues this week starting with Time's "Health Special Report," which puts Dr. Oz on the cover with "Lessons from my cancer scare," and of more universal interest, "Is your cell phone safe?" Inside Joe Klein suggests that both the President and Paul Ryan misread their mandates regarding Medicare in "The politics of self-delusion." Newsweek, meanwhile, has Mitt Romney clicking his heels in its double-issue cover, "The Mormon moment--How the outsider faith creates winners."
New York gives us the "Best Doctors 2011" double-issue, naming 1,144 physicians in every specialty. Inside is a guide to where to eat, shop, and nap along the High Line's new second section. The New Yorker's "summer fiction issue" includes Jeffrey Eugenides, Vladimir Nabokov, Jhumpa Lahiri, Aleksandar Hemon, George Saunders and Laura Groff on its cover illustration of a summer reading room; also cited is Elizabeth's Kolbert's take on "the extreme-weather forecast."
The Hollywood Reporter puts "The Split Personality of Chelsea Handler" on the cover while revealing that she wants to utilize her brain more, suggesting, perhaps, that she's done with her show. Inside are Hangover Part II, "Emmy Dark Horses" and "First Look: Costumes of X-Men" features.
Finally, Billboard goes with Jason Aldean on top, the "Indie spirit, country heart, rock 'n' roll soul" story about his and his Broken Bow label's rise to the top. Also covered is the "YouTube vs. Vevo" live-streaming battle, and the trouble rock radio is in--as evidenced by "format flips."
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