81-year-old Martha Stewart on the cover of "Sports Illustrated" in a bathing suit

Coup marketing

At the dawn of the 1960s, the American weekly Sports Illustrated saw its sales drop at the start of each year – a low period for sports news. In January 1964, the director of the publication, André Laguerre, former correspondent of Time Magazine in Europe, then had the idea of ??showing on the cover of an issue not an athlete, but a model, Babette March, posing in a swimsuit. bathroom on a beach in Yucatán, Mexico. Sales are exploding. So much so that the Swimsuit Issue (“the issue of swimwear”) becomes each winter the biggest commercial success of the year of the magazine, which has become monthly. From 2019, its publication is postponed to May, without hurting sales. Each of these editions is a small media event.

Slow opening

Over the years, the covers have succeeded, featuring various models and sportswomen. Casting choices have accompanied the evolutions of American society. Thus, during the first decades, all models were white. It will be necessary to wait until 1997 for a black woman, the model Tyra Banks, to appear on the cover, 2020 for it to be the turn of a trans woman, the model Valentina Sampaio, and 2021 for an Asian, the tennis player Naomi Osaka. The 2023 Swimsuit Issue features four covers, including one with Martha Stewart, a very famous media personality in the United States, known for her cooking and decorating television shows and magazines.

Senior category record

81-year-old Martha Stewart poses in a white one-piece swimsuit with an orange tracksuit top. She becomes the oldest model in Swimsuit Issue history, succeeding model Maye Musk, mother of Elon, last year, then aged 74. The American press has extensively commented on the presence of Martha Stewart. First because of his fame due to his cookie recipes and his imprisonment in 2004 for insider trading. But especially for his age. On social media, many applauded the idea of ??an octogenarian striking suggestive poses and showing off her body, in a snub to ageism. The New York Times even called Martha Stewart a “final stroke of bravery”.

Inflexible critics

Some netizens and editorial writers have assured that this Swimsuit Issue is no exception to her sexagenarian misogyny: whatever the age, origin or background of the model, she is always photographed in a certain eroticism for a readership predominantly masculine and heteronormative – never has a man been on the cover. But whether it changes mindsets or reinforces stereotypes, the Swimsuit Issue continues to be debated. In conservative states, many municipal libraries refuse copies. Since 2007, so as not to offend its puritan readership, Sports Illustrated has offered a subscription plan for all issues except this one. The Swimsuit Issue, a metaphor for America.

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