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    How Essence ACTUALLY Built A $200 Million Black Media Empire. In 1968, Black women made up 12 percent of America, yet not a single national magazine was made for them. Less than two percent of total U.S. advertising budgets were directed toward Black consumers, leaving a massive cultural gap. Enter Essence. Started by four men with zero publishing experience and a $13,000 loan, it shattered the mold to become a $200 million Black media empire that now commands over 16 million readers. Discover the untold story of how Essence survived industry resistance, internal chaos, and corporate takeovers to remain a cultural cornerstone: - A Risky $13,000 Beginning: Founders Edward Lewis, Clarence Smith, Cecil Hollingsworth, and Jonathan Blount scraped together a $13,000 loan from Freedom National Bank to launch the magazine in May 1970. Facing near-collapse, they survived by taking a controversial $250,000 loan from Playboy Enterprises in 1971, causing Hollingsworth and Blount to leave the company. - The Susan Taylor Era: A 23-year-old single mother and licensed cosmetologist with no journalism degree walked into the Essence offices and got hired as the first beauty editor. Susan Taylor eventually became editor-in-chief in 1981, holding the position for 19 years and growing the publication's paid circulation to over one million. - The Revlon Boycott: In 1986, after Revlon’s president publicly insulted Black-owned businesses, Essence chose principle over income and banned Revlon’s ad dollars from its pages entirely. The industry took notice, and Revlon eventually returned as an advertiser. - The Essence Festival: Created in 1995 to celebrate the magazine's 25th anniversary, the inaugural New Orleans festival drew 142,000 attendees. By 2024, attendance reached half a million, generating an economic footprint that exceeded $300 million annually for Louisiana. - Corporate Takeover to Black Ownership: Time Inc. fully acquired Essence in 2005, putting the publication under the control of a white-controlled conglomerate. In January 2018, Sundial Brands founder Richelieu Dennis successfully purchased the magazine, returning it to Black ownership and awarding equity stakes to its all-Black female executive team. Subscribe to The Black Wealth Explainer for more cinematic deep dives into the hidden mechanics of elite wealth and historical Black-owned empires! #EssenceMagazine #BlackWealth #TheBlackWealthExplainer #BlackMedia #GenerationalWealth #SusanTaylor
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