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Subject: AEJ 05 BerengeR MAG West versus East in Egyptian Teen Magazines: A Content Analysis of Teen Stuff, Al Shabab and Kelmetna
From: Elliott Parker <[log in to unmask]>
Reply-To:AEJMC Conference Papers <[log in to unmask]>
Date:Mon, 6 Feb 2006 04:57:39 -0500
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This paper was presented at the Association for Education in Journalism and
Mass Communication in San Antonio, Texas August 2005.
         If you have questions about this paper, please contact the author
directly. If you have questions about the archives, email
rakyat [ at ] eparker.org. For an explanation of the subject line, 
send email to
[log in to unmask] with just the four words, "get help info aejmc," in the
body (drop the "").

(Feb 2006)
Thank you.
Elliott Parker
====================================================================

West versus East in Egyptian Teen Magazines:
A Content Analysis of Teen Stuff, Al Shabab and Kelmetna



By Ralph D. Berenger and Dalia El Nimr
The American University in Cairo
113 Kasr El Aini Street
Journalism and Mass Communication Department
Cairo 11511 Egypt
[log in to unmask]
Phone: +2-20-797-6955



For Presentation to the
2005 Conference of the
Association for Education in Journalism
and Mass Communication

Magazine Division

Mariott Rivercenter
San Antonio, Texas
August 10-13, 2005



ABSTRACT
This study examines three teen magazines in Egypt: what topics they 
cover and what they don't cover to better understand the effect they 
publications have on young readers. Through content analysis and 
content evaluation, this paper finds celebrities and romance 
dominates the publications. The paper also explores the publications' 
similarities and differences, and offers some suggestions on how they 
can be improved to help young people better understand the world around them.


  West versus East in Egyptian Teen Magazines:
A Content Analysis of Teen Stuff, Al Shabab and Kelmetna
ABSTRACT
This study examines three teen magazines in Egypt: what topics they 
cover and what they don't cover to better understand the effect they 
publications have on young readers. Through content analysis and 
content evaluation, this paper finds celebrities and romance 
dominates the publications. The paper also explores the publications' 
similarities and differences, and offers some suggestions on how they 
can be improved to help young people better understand the world around them.



And the first step, as you know, is always what matters most, 
particularly when we are dealing with those who are young and tender. 
That is the time when they are easily molded and when any impression 
we choose to make leaves a permanent mark ... Then it seems that our 
first business is to supervise the production of stories and to 
choose only what we think suitable, and reject the rest.
Plato, The Republic (ca. 360 B.C.)
(quoted in Buckingham, 1993, p. 1)

	Plato's observations apply not only to children but to teenagers as 
well. Teenagers are a vulnerable type of audience because they are 
young and easily influenced by the messages conveyed to them. 
Different types of media – including television, movies, music 
videos, and magazines – help shape adolescents' malleable attitudes 
and give them insight into the world. The media's choice of topics 
and the way these topics are presented have a profound effect on 
adolescents' behavior, attitudes, and what they consider important in life.
	As McCombs and Shaw stipulated in their agenda setting theory, the 
media play an important role in telling people, not what to think, 
but what to think about (Severin & Tankard, 2001, p. 222). Through 
repeated coverage of certain topics, the media elevate the importance 
of these topics in people's minds. If stories and images on wars, 
violence, and crimes are the main focus of the media, then these are 
the topics that most audience members will talk about and consider 
important. The situation is similar for media targeted at 
adolescents, particularly teenage magazines. If sex, fashion, and 
celebrities are the main thrust of these magazines, then those are 
the topics to which youth will probably attach utmost importance.
Purpose of Study
The study aims to empirically examine the subject areas presented in 
Egyptian teenage magazines. By conducting a quantitative content 
analysis and a qualitative content evaluation of three widely 
distributed teenage magazines produced in Egypt, this exploratory 
study would show what topics readers of teenage magazines are exposed 
to and, thus, be able to understand the agenda these magazines set for youth.

Importance of Agenda Setting
As early as 1958, Norton Long spoke about the power of newspapers in 
setting the public agenda, saying that newspapers play a "great part 
in determining what most people will be talking about, what most 
people will think the facts are, and what most people will regard as 
the way problems are to be dealt with" (quoted in Severin & Tankard, 
2001, p. 221). A year later, Kurt and Gladys Engel Lang emphasized 
how mass media steer people's attention to certain issues and divert 
them from other issues. The mass media, they noted, emphasize topics 
suggesting what people should "think about, know about, have feelings 
about" (quoted in Severin & Tankard, 2001, p. 222). And finally, 
Bernard Cohen gave a famous statement on the impact of the press, 
saying: "It may not be successful much of the time in telling people 
what to think, but it is stunningly successful in telling its readers 
what to think about" (quoted in Severin & Tankard, 2001, p. 222).
In 1972, McCombs and Shaw conducted a systematic study of agenda 
setting. By analyzing the 1968 U.S. presidential campaign, the two 
researchers found a strong correlation between the media's focus on 
certain campaign issues and the salience voters attached to these issues.
Funkhouser conducted a similar study in 1973, when he analyzed the 
content of three weekly U.S. newsmagazines for each year in the 
period from 1960-1969 and compared them to people's responses in 
opinion polls about the most pressing problems facing the United 
States. His results revealed a strong relationship between the amount 
of media coverage given to a certain issue and the public's 
evaluation of the importance of that issue. Funkhouser also 
discovered that media's emphasis on certain issues did not always 
correspond to reality. In his study, the media played up the Vietnam 
War, riots, and campus unrest a year or two before these events 
reached their peak in reality. The media's coverage of issues such as 
crime, poverty, and pollution were also overemphasized in the media. 
Thus, Funkhouser came to the conclusion that the news media's 
rendering of events was not an accurate portrayal of what was 
actually going on in the nation in the 1960s (Severin & Tankard, 
2001, p. 223-224).
	These examples illustrate that the frequency and amount of coverage 
the media gives to certain issues raises the primacy of these issues 
in people's minds. The more credible a media source is perceived to 
be, the stronger the effect of agenda setting on the audience.
Why Study a Young Audience
Understanding the impact of media messages on different types of 
audience has long been a topic of research and investigation. Youth, 
in particular, deserve special attention because they constitute a 
large market segment and represent a unique and important cultural 
subgroup. As Livingstone eloquently put it, youth are "at a point in 
their lives when they are most motivated to construct identities, to 
forge new social groups, and to negotiate alternatives to given 
cultural meanings; in all of these, the media play a central part" 
(2002, p. 3-4).
Youth are considered more susceptible to media messages than adults. 
Studies concerning the effect of television content on adolescents 
have shown that television provides teenagers with "behavioral 
scripts" regarding gender roles, ways to cope with stress, how to 
develop a relationship with the opposite sex, and how to resolve 
conflict. Schramm, Lyle, and Parker have documented various incidents 
in which teenagers' anti-social behavior was a result of excessive 
television viewing (Strasburger, 1995, p. 8).  What's more, Biocca 
(1988) found five different versions of how readers derive meaning 
and concepts from media through selectivity, utility, intentionality, 
influence resistance and, above all, involvement with particular media.
Modeling is an important factor to consider when examining media 
impact on youth. Because youth tend to model their behavior on their 
favorite TV characters, it is important for communicators of media 
messages to pay special attention to content targeted at youth. 
Excessive violence on television is more likely to result in a 
violent attitude in teenage viewers. The effects may be even more 
dangerous, sometimes lethal. In 1993, several teenagers were killed 
after imitating a scene from Stand By Me movie, in which the heroes 
jump off a bridge to move away from a train coming their way. 
Moreover, three teenagers were killed and two injured after imitating 
a scene in the Disney film The Program, in which a depressed football 
player lies down in the middle of a highway (Strasburger, 1995, p. 9).
Mainstreaming is another important factor regarding youth's exposure 
to the media. By presenting a "fairly uniform set of social 
messages," the media causes teenagers to develop a certain schema 
about gender roles and what society expects of them as teenagers. A 
1988 report that studied the content of more than 200 television 
programs containing female teenage characters showed that, in these 
programs, teenage girls' looks were emphasized as more important than 
their mentalities, smart girls were looked upon as social outcasts, 
teenage girls were depicted as being preoccupied with shopping, 
dating, and good looks, and were often portrayed as being more 
passive than teenage boys (Strasburger, 1995, p. 11). When such 
messages are repeatedly emphasized to young people, they dramatically 
shape their sense of identity and the way they view their roles in society.

Attraction of teen magazines
Part of the attraction of youth magazines is that they aim to 
consolidate the readers' sense of being part of a specific group who 
identify themselves through their culture of fun and leisure, in 
contrast to the serious, boring world of adults … The psychological 
process of growing up demands emotional and intellectual detachment 
from parents and family in general; in this situation, the youth 
magazine offers itself as an alternative peer group home  (Worsching, 
2000, p. 179).

As this quote sums up the importance of teenage magazines to Egyptian 
youth, it remains a fact that in today's modern world, such magazines 
compete for youth's leisure time. With the proliferation of media – 
including satellite television, the Internet, and computerized video 
games – teenage magazines have to create special interest topics for 
their readers to keep them involved. Many of these magazines focus on 
beauty, fashion, sex, and entertainment celebrities to lure readers 
and grab their attention. As Maughan notes, "when it comes to 
reaching teens, give them what they want and go to where they are" 
(1999, p. 28). Because many teenagers are largely obsessed with 
well-known singers and actors and because their main preoccupation at 
such a young age is falling in love and appearing attractive to the 
opposite sex, those are the topics which many teenage magazines feed 
their readers. The magazines perpetuate teenagers' notion that 
beauty, love, and fame are some of the most important facets of life.
This phenomenon is not new. In a study of three teenage magazines 
conducted over a generation ago in 1968, Alderson noted that more 
than 50% of the articles and photographs presented in the magazines 
under study were devoted to "gossip" about pop stars. "The features 
range from large photographs with full-length articles to tit-bits 
with or without small pictures of the stars," he noted, adding that 
letters to the editor submitted by the teenage readers were 
exclusively devoted to these pop stars (1968, p. 42).
 From the tone of the letters published in the teenage magazines, one 
gathers that the teenagers are drawn into a dream world of 
superficial romance and made to believe that they are part of the 
pop-music vanguard (1968, p. 104-5).

Alderson's study also revealed that the magazines' coverage of 
romance and its importance in teenagers' lives was unrealistic, 
oversimplified, and even farfetched, often portraying parents as 
antagonists of love and symbols of frustration. The magazines "give a 
black-and-white romance idea of love and what to expect from life, 
which might be dangerous if applied practically by the readers" 
(1968, p. 108).
The problem is not just confined to heavy coverage of pop stars and 
love affairs; it is also teen magazines' overemphasis on good looks 
and idealized bodies, especially for female readers. A qualitative 
study conducted among 12 female readers of the U.S.-based Teen and 
Seventeen teenage magazines revealed that readers of such magazines 
felt that the publications promote messages of thinness and bodily 
"perfection" by showing models with "perfect eyes, teeth, and bodies" 
(Chow, 2004, p. 132). The readers also found the magazines portrayed 
females in need of  male companionship and protection in order for 
her to achieve self-fulfillment (Chow, 2004, p. 132). Another study 
showed that Western teenage magazines play up female beauty as a 
central theme and focus on the promotion of beauty products that 
would help the female look attractive (Labre & Walsh-Childers, 2003, 
p. 379). One headline in a 1997 edition of Teen read, "Get a Thinner, 
Firmer, Cuter Body," with the content of the article geared toward 
the use of products that would make the teenage girl looker "firmer, 
shapelier, and more feminine looking" (Chow, 1999, p. 57). Such 
magazines reinforce the notion that girls are primarily objects of 
visual attention and sexual attractiveness and downplay the girls' 
sense of identity and character.
  A more dangerous implication is teen magazines' sexual content. 
While that may not be a pervasive in Middle East publications, it is 
a profound problem for readers of Western teen magazines, which are 
becoming increasingly available – and affordable – to Middle East 
teenaged readers. A recent article in the Guardian revealed that 
pre-teen and early teen magazines published in England are "full of 
explicit sexual content," causing an uproar by parents and elementary 
school teachers in Nottingham (Smithers, 2004). Research has also 
shown that magazines are among the primary sources teens search for 
information about sex.
Although fashion and makeup tips and stories about favorite 
celebrities may draw teens to these magazines, there is also evidence 
that they find sexual health information between the makeovers and 
clothing ads (Brown, Steele, & Walsh-Childers, 2002, p. 156).

Magazines such as Teen and Seventeen promote the idea among teenage 
girls that their main function in life is to be sexually attractive 
and "catch a desirable male" (Brown, Steele, & Walsh-Childers, 2002, 
p. 14). Such blatant exposure to sexual content may advance 
adolescent sexual behavior, as revealed by a national study conducted 
in the United States in 2004 (Brown University, 2004).
Because of the vulnerability of youth and the great impact media 
messages may have on their attitudes and behaviors, it is important 
to examine the content of media messages targeted at youth in Egypt 
and worldwide. It is also important to study whether these magazines 
offer meaningful political content to youth, for political awareness 
is the direct path to preparing active, engaged citizens who would 
play a leading role in the development of their countries.
Research questions
Exploratory in nature, this study examines the content of teen 
magazines produced in Egypt. A quantitative content analysis of the 
subjects covered in three widely distributed teenage magazines was 
conducted, and a qualitative content evaluation was used to determine 
how these subjects were dealt with and presented in the magazines. 
The researcher examined the extent to which entertainment celebrities 
and pop stars, as well as topics such as sex, beauty, and fashion, 
occupied the magazines. Thus, the research questions were as follows:
•	What are the topics covered by the teenage magazines?
•	What is the frequency of appearance and the amount of coverage 
given to each topic?
•	Are the magazines' content largely geared toward pop stars, love 
relationships, beauty, and fashion?
•	Is there political discourse in the magazines? Do these magazines 
prepare youth to be active, engaged citizens?
According to Wimmer and Dominick (2000, p. 28):
A hypothesis is a formal statement regarding the relationship between 
variables and is tested directly. The predicted relationship between 
the variables is either true or false. On the other hand, a research 
question is a formally stated question intended to provide 
indications about something; it is not limited to investigating 
relationships between variables.

Since this study is exploratory – seeking to examine the content of 
teenage magazines in Egypt – research questions, not hypotheses, were 
formulated. Hypotheses would necessitate developing relationships 
between variables, and that is not in line with this study, which 
examines the topics covered in the teen magazines; thus all the 
research questions aimed to gather information about this "coverage" 
and whether it is focused on love, pop stars, beauty, and sexual 
attractiveness as the literature suggests it to be. The research 
tries to discern whether political content is absent or present in 
the magazines under study.

Method
	Since this study investigated media content, content analysis and 
content evaluation were used. Three coders, including the researcher, 
conducted the analysis.
	Content analysis as defined by Wimmer and Dominick is "any 
systematic procedure devised to examine the content of recorded 
information" (2001, p. 135). As Holsti points out, content analysis 
describes the "attributes of a message, without reference to either 
the intentions of the sender (encoding process) or the effect of the 
message upon those to whom it is directed (decoding process) (quoted 
in Baker, 1994, p. 271). In fact, one of the main purposes of content 
analysis is to describe and analyze communication content as a 
"starting point for the study of media effects"  (Wimmer & Dominick, 
2000, p. 137). That is precisely what this study hoped to accomplish: 
to assess the content of teen magazines in Egypt as a starting point 
for an investigation of whether the topics covered in the magazines 
were salient to teenage readers.  	
To conduct content analysis, there are three main requirements that 
must be fulfilled: studying the content must be carried out in a 
systematic, objective, and quantitative manner  (Wimmer & Dominick, 
2000, p. 135). Systematic means that sample selection was based on 
well-formulated steps that give each item in the universe an equal 
chance of being selected. Objective means that the operational 
definitions of the content categories are clear and robust, allowing 
for replication by other researchers. Quantitative means that the 
data can be reported in a numerical and accurate fashion (Wimmer & 
Dominick, 2000, p. 135). All these criteria have been taken into 
consideration when selecting the sample of the teenage magazines to 
be analyzed, as will be discussed in the section titled "Selecting a Sample."
Steps in Content Analysis
	The researchers followed a number of sequential steps to analyze the 
content of the three teenage magazines. These steps were:
1)	Defining the population in question
	Defining the universe refers to "specifying the boundaries of the 
body of content to be considered" (Wimmer & Dominick, 2000, p. 140). 
This includes determining the topic area and the time period to be covered.
In this research study, the topic area is the examination of the 
content of teenage magazines produced in Egypt. Three monthly 
magazines were selected based on their widespread circulation in 
Cairo, a city of 18 million people, a fourth of whom are estimated at 
under 25 years of age. The publications are:
•	Teen Stuff, an English-language magazine established in 1996 with a 
circulation of about 10,000 readers
•	Kelmetna (Our Voice)¸ an Arabic-language magazine established in 
2000 with a circulation of 9,000-10,000 readers
•	Al Shabab (Youth), an Arabic-language magazine established almost 
25 years ago. It has a monthly circulation of 283,000 copies (an 
estimated readership of over a million). It is distributed all over 
Egypt and the Arab world, as well as in Europe and the United States.
Al Shabab, priced at LE 3 (50 U.S. cents), is one of the oldest youth 
magazines produced in Egypt. It is affiliated with the 
century-old  Al Ahram media organization. Some of the opinion 
columnists in the magazine are prominent Egyptian journalists, 
writers and scholars. Teen Stuff and Kelmetna, on the other hand, are 
priced at a premium of LE 8 (US$1.30) and LE 6 (US$1) respectively. 
They are fairly new magazines but have gained widespread popularity 
in Egypt and different parts of the Arab world, as is evident from 
the letters teenagers submit to the magazines. The motto of both Teen 
Stuff and Kelmetna is "From Teens to Teens," meanings that all staff 
writers are teenagers themselves. Only the editors are adults.
The time period for the study was 2004.
1)	Selecting a Sample
After the universe had been identified, the sample to be studied was 
selected. That involved determining which monthly editions will be 
included in the sample. Initially, the researcher devised a system to 
analyze the past year's editions by selecting every third month for 
analysis to allow for random distribution. However, confronted with 
the fact that El Shabab magazine did not have many of the past 
editions, the researchers had to use what was available, taking into 
consideration that the magazines under study had to correspond with 
each other in terms of which months were being analyzed.
The researchers also excluded atypical issues from all magazines, 
specifically the January issues, which were largely focused on the 
New Year celebrations, and the October/November issues, which were 
largely focused on the Muslim's holy month of Ramadan. Therefore, for 
each magazine, researchers used issues that represented different 
seasons in 2004: February (winter), May (spring), July (summer), and 
September (fall). In total, 12 issues were analyzed, four for each magazine.
3)	Selecting a Unit of Analysis
In this study, the unit of analysis was each article appearing in the 
magazines. The coders were not looking at the words, phrases, or 
terminologies used in the articles, but were examining the topic of 
the article as a whole.
4)	Constructing Content Categories
In constructing content categories, the researchers were careful that 
the category definitions be exhaustive, mutually exclusive, and 
reliable. Category definitions were defined with maximum detail in 
the coder instruction sheet and were "highly specific to ensure 
accurate categorization" (Wimmer & Dominick, 2000, p. 145). In 
addition, the slots into which the magazine articles were categorized 
were extensive, based on the notion that "too many initial categories 
are preferable to too few, since it is usually easier to combine 
several categories than it is to subdivide a large one after the 
units have been coded" (Wimmer & Dominick, 2001, p. 146).
5)	Establishing a Quantification System
Quantification in this study was mainly at the nominal level. At the 
end of the data collection phase, researchers counted the number of 
articles in each of the pre-defined categories. Coders' mean scores 
were calculated, and data was then reported in percentages.
6)	Training Coders and Pilot Study
Wimmer and Dominick state that in the process of coding, "placing a 
unit of analysis into a content category, typically two to six coders 
are used" (2000, p. 147).
In this study, three coders were used, one of which was the 
researcher. The researcher trained the coders on the pre-defined 
content categories and conducted a pilot study on one issue for each 
of the three monthly magazines. (Issues analyzed in the pilot study 
were not included in the sample). Following the pilot study, 
categories were redefined and the coding sheet was modified until all 
coders were familiar and comfortable with the materials and the 
procedure. The coder instruction sheet was used a reference tool 
throughout the coding process.
7)	Coding Data
A coding sheet and a list of definitions was provided each coder, 
with instructions on how the stories would be identified, categorized 
and coded.
8)	Calculating Intercoder Reliability
After the coding process was complete, intercoder reliability was 
calculated using Holsti's formula, which states:
Reliability = 	2M / N1 + N2
"where M is the number of coding decisions on which two coders agree, 
and N1 and N2 are the total number of coding decisions by the first 
and second coder" (Wimmer & Dominick, 2000, p. 151).
	Using that formula, the total number of coding decisions that were 
taken amounted to 540. The instances where at least two coders agreed 
amounted to 480. Thus, using Holsti's formula, intercoder reliability 
in this study equaled .89 (960/1080).
Content Evaluation
After content analysis was conducted to quantitatively determine the 
distribution of articles in the magazines, a qualitative content 
evaluation was carried out. Here, researchers examined different 
aspects of the magazine: articles, photographs, letters to the 
editor, and literary pieces submitted by teenage readers. The 
objective was to find emerging themes and patterns in the way 
different topics were dealt with by the magazines.
Baker stipulates that there are different ways to analyze content. 
These include examining the frequency, or recurrence, of certain 
ideas, assessing the emphasis and amount of coverage given to 
specific topics, looking at the presence or absence of certain 
qualities, and sorting content by types (1994, p. 272). All these 
factors were taken into consideration in the content evaluation 
phase. For instance, after determining the percentage of stories 
focused on celebrities, the researcher examined whether these 
celebrities were mostly Western or Arab and what fields they came 
from. Also, after calculating the number of stories that dealt with 
major social problems, the researcher looked at what types of 
problems were tackled by the different magazines. The goal was to 
qualitatively describe the magazine content in its totality by major 
themes. In the process, researchers were looking for the absence or 
presence of political communication, for example, what Holsti 
referred to as "contingency analysis" (Baker, 1994, 268). In terms of 
letters and literary pieces, researchers noted what topics these 
submissions dealt with and whether political communication was present.
Pool points out about the advantages of using both quantitative and 
qualitative methods to analyze text:
It should not be assumed that qualitative methods are insightful, and 
quantitative ones merely mechanical methods for checking hypotheses. 
The relationship is a circular one; each provides new insights on 
which the other can feed (quoted in Correa, 1998).


Findings

To determine the percentage of articles falling under each of the 
pre-defined categories, the researcher calculated the coders' mean 
scores. For each of Teen Stuff, Kelmetna, and Al Shabab, the mean 
score for each category under which the articles were classified was 
calculated. That was divided by the mean score for the total number 
of articles in the magazine. For instance, to determine the 
percentage of articles in Teen Stuff dealing with celebrities, the 
mean score for the "celebrities" category was divided by the mean 
score for the total number of articles appearing in the four issues 
of the magazine.
The results for the three magazines are presented in the following graphs:
_____________________________________________________________
Insert Figure 1
_____________________________________________________________

In Teen Stuff, reviews of American movies constituted the bulk of the 
articles featured. The second largest category was profiles of 
Western celebrities, followed by articles on sports and art.
_____________________________________________________________
Insert Figure 2
_____________________________________________________________

In Kelmetna, most of the articles were reviews of Egyptian and 
American movies. The second largest category was general knowledge 
items. That was followed by profiles with Arab singers and actors and 
self-expression articles, where teenagers could relay their personal 
experiences and attitudes toward a certain topic. Discussion of 
social problems was also prominent.
_____________________________________________________________
Insert Figure 4
_____________________________________________________________

Most of the articles in Al Shabab were interviews with celebrities 
from various fields. The second largest category was contests and 
competitions, followed by sports and profiles with people who are not 
famous but who have made distinctive accomplishments in their fields.

Discussion

Teen Stuff
Cover page
	In all the issues analyzed, the cover page of Teen Stuff always 
featured a big picture of a Western actor or singer. The dominant 
title on the cover page was always that of a Western movie review 
featured inside the magazine.
Inside stories

	Teen Stuff mainly focused on Western celebrities in profiles and 
interviews, as well as numerous reviews of Western movies. Whether 
action, horror, or comedy movies, all the film reviews in Teen Stuff 
were of American movies. The celebrities were all either singers or 
actors; no celebrities from other fields were featured in the 
magazine. Even the posters contained in the magazine were solely of 
Western actors and singers. None of the articles or posters in the 
magazine was of Egyptian or Arab celebrities.
	Though there were a considerable number of articles on arts and 
sports, these usually occupied one or two pages of the magazine. 
Social issues, however, were given more space and more extensive 
coverage. Each month, the magazine would tackle a social issue 
in-depth and spread coverage across 4-5 pages. In the selected 
sample, the social issues dealt with were sex education, ways to 
achieve success, and how to spend a meaningful summer. Racism was 
also addressed in one of the issues, but the story only occupied a 
third of a page.
The articles on love/dating were also found to be substantial, but 
this is largely due to the fact that the February issue was almost 
entirely devoted to talking about Valentine's Day. Therefore, the 
results in the "love/dating" category may be skewed.
In Teen Stuff, there is a fixed section in the magazine named 
"Nirvana," which usually deals with topics such as self-enhancement 
and self-discovery for teenagers. In fact, many of the articles in 
the magazine dealt with ways for a teenager to be confident and 
self-assured and to develop good relationships with others. The book 
review featured every month in the magazine usually revolved around 
the same theme as well. One of the books was Stephen Covey's The 
Seven Habits of Highly Effective People, and another book was the 
diary of a 15-year-old girl who used drugs. Moreover, an audiotape 
titled "Stand Up Tall" was presented as a promotional item with one 
of the magazine issues. The tape addressed youth, explaining to them 
how to be assertive and win the respect of others, how to overcome 
fear and depression, and how to stand up for what they believe in. 
Therefore, a major theme in the magazine is to instill in youth 
confidence and strength of character and help them discover their 
talents and abilities.
There was always one page of the magazine devoted to beauty tips for 
females, and another page devoted to a character analysis of the 
different horoscopes.
However, stories on politics were minimal. Only four articles (each 
between 1.5 and 2 pages long) in all the issues analyzed had a 
political angle. One article was about a Palestinian band whose songs 
are centered on the Palestinian-Israeli struggle, and another was 
about symbolism in political science. The third article was about the 
effects of the Cold War, and the fourth (a one-pager) was a 
teenager's reflections on the mistreatment many Arabs are facing in 
the United States after 9/11. None of the articles touched on the 
2003 Iraq war or the current crisis in Darfur, for instance. Nor were 
any articles printed that deal with the Arab World's current 
flirtation with democracy in the aftermath of the 2003 Iraq war.
Counseling was overwhelmingly centered on the topic of love and ways 
to achieve lasting relationships with the opposite sex. Few were on 
loneliness, depression, and teenagers' relationship with parents. In 
terms of literary pieces submitted to the magazine, love/dating was, 
by far, the dominant topic. Love of God came up a few times, and 
death was a recurrent theme.

Kelmetna
Cover Page
	The cover page of Kelmetna always featured a big picture of an Arab 
actor or singer. The dominant story on the cover page was usually 
that of an Egyptian movie review featured inside the magazine.
Inside Stories

Kelmetna is mainly focused on Arab celebrities, who are presented 
through profiles and interviews, as well as numerous reviews of 
Arabic movies and music albums. Film reviews were still the dominant 
subject matter, and the movies featured were almost equally split 
between Egyptian and American movies. The Arab celebrities featured 
in Kelmetna were either singers or actors – none from other fields. 
All inserts of posters in the magazine were of Arab singers and 
actors; the magazine did not contain posters of Western celebrities.
Many of the articles in Kelmetna were of a general nature. 
Love/dating was prominent, but again, this was largely due to the 
fact that the February issue was dedicated to Valentine's Day. As is 
the case with Teen Stuff, the results for the love/dating category 
might be slanted.
In Kelmetna, social issues occupied a large portion of the magazine. 
Similar to its sister magazine, Kelmetna featured a social issue 
every month and spread its coverage across 5-6 pages. Sometimes, the 
social issue was presented as a "topic for discussion," and teenagers 
submitted their thoughts and ideas on the issue. Some of the social 
issues dealt with in the magazine were the hazards of smoking, 
problems facing college students, success in love and life, and ways 
to achieve cross-general dialogue and understanding. Again, the book 
review featured every month in the magazine usually revolved around 
the same theme. One of the books was titled How to Influence Others 
and Make Friends, and the other was Chicken Soup for Teenagers, which 
deals with a variety of topics on how to lead a meaningful and 
productive life. The same audiotape given as a promotional item with 
Teen Stuff was presented with Kelmetna.
Some of the articles in Kelmetna fell under what the coders termed as 
"self-expression." These were teenagers' reflections and observations 
on any issue of their choice. In these articles, teenagers usually 
recounted a personal experience and the lessons they learned from it.
There was always one page of the magazine devoted to a character 
analysis of the different horoscopes.
Again, political content was almost negligible. Much of the political 
content of the magazine came from the May issue, which was timed with 
the assassination by the Israelis of Sheikh Ahmed Yassin, the 
wheelchair-bound Palestinian political activist. In that issue, there 
was a biography of Yassin and a history of his political activism. 
Some of the literary pieces submitted by teenagers were about Sheikh 
Yassin, the Palestinian-Israeli struggle, and the injustice of war. 
Apart from that, there was no other form of political communication 
in the magazine.
  Teenage counseling was focused on love and teenagers' relationship 
with their parents. Literary pieces submitted to the magazine were 
predominantly about love and attraction to the opposite sex. Other 
topics included self-actualization and reflections on life.

Al Shabab
Cover Page
	The cover page of Al Shabab did not feature big pictures of actors 
or singers. The dominant picture on the cover page was usually that 
of an unknown female, with small pictures of local celebrities 
scattered on the cover. The dominant cover story was usually either 
about a social issue or a celebrity.
Inside Stories

Al Shabab mainly focused on Arab celebrities. Contrary to Teen Stuff 
and Kelmetna, the celebrities were not solely actors or singers. 
Celebrities came from a variety of fields. These included radio 
presenters, scientists, politicians, journalists, sports champions, 
poets, ministers, religious preachers/scholars, as well as singers 
and actors. The magazine always devoted half a page to list the 
contact information of famous Arab and Western singers and actors. In 
fact, some of the articles reported on events where the magazine had 
arranged for Arab actors and singers to meet with readers of Al 
Shabab. In addition, there was always one page devoted to a monthly 
survey conducted by the magazine on which Arab singers are most 
popular at the moment. With regard to the posters contained in the 
magazine, these were a mix of Arab and Western actors, singers, and 
soccer players.
Many of the articles in Al Shabab had to do with contests run by the 
magazine. The subject matter of the contests varied from general 
knowledge and religion to science, computers, art, music, history, 
literature, and competition for innovation. Contest winners would get 
free accommodation to travel to different places in Egypt, acquire 
free training on computer and Internet-related skills, or win 
material gifts. There were also marriage contests, in which couples 
wishing to get married may win a free wedding and honeymoon.
Some of the articles in the magazine had to do with male-dominated 
sports, namely soccer and bodybuilding. Soccer, in particular, was 
typically given 4-6 pages of the magazine. Bodybuilding usually 
occupied 2-3 pages.
Much of the articles in Al Shabab were profiles with people who are 
not celebrities, but who have either accomplished a distinctive feat 
or occupy an unusual profession. Examples of the latter included 
profiles with female prison guards, an Algerian female politician who 
ran for the presidency of her country, a woman who works as a barber 
for men, and a medical doctor who quit his profession and starting up 
a matrimonial office. Profiles with distinguished people included an 
Egyptian who became vice president of Microsoft Europe, Middle East, 
and Africa, a handicapped person who became a basketball champion, 
and a college graduate who toured the world on his bike.
Social issues constituted a significant part of the magazine. Unlike 
Teen Stuff and Kelmetna, which focused on one social issue every 
month, Al Shabab tackled several social issues every month. Each 
issue ran across 2-3 pages. Some of the issues tackled in the 
magazine included unregistered/illegal marriages among youth, 
unemployment, high divorce rates among young married couples, the 
meaning of freedom and success, and the phenomenon of youth aimlessly 
roaming the streets at midnight with their cars.
The magazine did not contain any character analysis of the horoscopes 
nor did it contain a projection of future events according to one's 
horoscope. In fact, one of the social issues discussed in the 
magazine was ways to combat youth's belief in horoscopes.
Political content in Al Shabab was minimal. The few articles that 
contained a political element were a profile with a Palestinian 
political prisoner who was released from the Israeli jail, an 
interview with a former Egyptian minister charged with corruption, an 
interview with the head of the International Atomic Energy 
Association, and an interview with the ex-husband of the female 
Indonesian president. None of the articles addressed the 2003 war in 
Iraq, the humanitarian crisis in Darfur, or any other Middle Eastern issue.
  Teenage counseling in Al Shabab focused on three main themes: love, 
religion, and interpretation of dreams. Literary pieces submitted to 
the magazine were mostly about love, but also included topics such as 
youth's dreams and aspirations, social relations, and religious 
faith. The Israeli occupation of Palestine, specifically Jerusalem, 
came up several times.
For a distribution of stories by type and publication, see Figure 4.

Insert Figure 4
___________________________________________________________________________


Conclusions and recommendations
	Each magazine was found to emphasize different types of content. 
Teen Stuff followed and decidedly Western style, focusing mainly on 
Western movie stars. Kelmetna was more localized. Though its main 
focus was also celebrities in the entertainment industry, 
particularly singing and acting, the pop stars featured in Kelmetna 
were mainly Arab, not Western. Al Shabab was more diversified in 
terms of content and celebrity focus. The celebrities featured in the 
magazine came from different fields, not just singing and acting, and 
the articles covered an array of topics, from science and technology 
to arts and literature.
In addition, the magazine contained numerous profiles with 
non-celebrities who are distinguished in some way.
	All three magazines tackled social issues and problems facing youth, 
but in different ways. Al Shabab was centered on macro-level issues, 
such as unemployment, whereas the main thrust of Teen Stuff and 
Kelmetna was the development of youth as individuals. Themes such as 
self-actualization and discovery of one's talents and capabilities 
were predominant in both magazines. Nevertheless, the three magazines 
under study were weak on political content, particularly in relation 
to current political events in the Middle East.
	Love/dating was a recurrent theme in all three magazines, not only 
in terms of what the magazines offer as articles and counseling 
advice, but even in terms of what teenagers submit as their own 
literary works. This shows how important love is to teenagers and how 
attached they can become to the opposite sex. However, literary 
compositions on political issues were minimal.
Sex and beauty did not come up as major themes in any of the magazines.

Recommendations
	Because this research was exploratory results cannot be generalized 
to all teen magazines in Egypt. Several patterns and indicators 
suggest areas where reform is needed to make the content of these 
magazines more meaningful and constructive to readers.
First, an English-language magazine should not be solely focused on 
Western celebrities. Because the magazine is produced in an Arab 
country, its readers should be exposed to Arab celebrities as well.
Second, celebrities featured in both English and Arabic teenage 
magazines should not be confined to the entertainment industry. Youth 
should know about celebrities from all fields – science, literature, 
arts, politics, media, sports, and religion – not just singing and 
acting. The awe and admiration magazines hold pop stars might 
increase teenagers' infatuation with these celebrities and makes them 
believe more strongly that these celebrities are perfect role models.
Third, teenage magazines should give more coverage to people who have 
made distinguished achievements in their fields, even though these 
people may not be famous. Such people may serve as a role model for 
youth in their determination to achieve and become unique in their 
fields. Of the three magazines analyzed in this study, Al Shabab did 
well in all the aforementioned areas.
Discussion of social issues and social relations is a must when 
dealing with teenage readers. A good magazine would balance between 
macro-issues, such as unemployment and marriage, and more 
individualized issues dealing with teenagers' self-enhancement and 
self-actualization and the importance of engaging in pro-social 
behavior with family and friends.
Sports coverage is imperative in teenage magazines because it 
emphasizes the importance of engaging in sports. However, sports 
coverage should not be restricted to male-dominated types of sports, 
such as soccer and weightlifting. Coverage should be more varied and 
should include sports such as tennis, swimming, and basketball.
Teen Stuff and Kelmetna presented such varied sports coverage, but 
articles in Al Shabab were largely focused on soccer, followed by bodybuilding.
Politics should become part of the agenda of teenage magazines. 
Though censorship is prevalent in the Arab world, political discourse 
does not necessarily entail criticism of the government. Teen 
magazines might contain a news section, highlighting important 
political events happening around the globe. Articles might cover 
teenagers' responses to current political events happening in their 
region. Teenagers could be encouraged to submit ideas on how their 
country could be developed on the political, economic, and social 
fronts. All this works to engage youth in their country's affairs and 
make their more aware of political events, their implications, and 
how they may be of help to their country and region.
Other steps must accompany improvement in the types of stories 
featured in teenage magazines. Media literacy should become an 
integral part of school curricula in order to educate children and 
teenagers about the media's good and bad effects. When children and 
adolescents understand the nature of the media and how it operates, 
it helps protect them from the harmful effects the media may cast on 
them. More importantly, producers of teenage magazines, and media 
professionals in general, should exercise social responsibility when 
choosing the types of stories they present to a young audience. They 
must strike a balance between what the public wants to know and what 
they need to know. It is a very delicate balance, but the ultimate 
aim should be the well-being of the young generation.

Limitations
This research study had several limitations:
1)	Four issues from each of the three magazines under study were used 
in the analysis. That is, twelve magazine issues were examined in 
total. This is a small sample from which to draw conclusions. 
However, because the study is exploratory in nature, this sample was 
deemed sufficient to provide directions and key indicators about the 
content of teenage magazines produced in Egypt. The results cannot be 
generalized to all Egyptian teen magazines.
2)	Availability from distributors of back magazine issues was a 
problem, particularly with Al Shabab. Therefore, researchers had to 
use the magazine issues that were available and could not 
systematically spread out the sample across the past year or two as 
would have been ideal to allow for random distribution.

Suggestions for future research
The topic of teenage magazines lends itself to various types of 
research and analyses. Suggestions for future research include:
•	Surveying readers of the three teenage magazines analyzed in this 
study to see whether a relationship exists between the emphasis each 
magazine placed on certain issues and the salience of these issues to 
the readers
•	Expanding the sample to include teenage magazines produced in Egypt 
and the Arab world
•	Examining how different teenage magazines handle special 
events/occasions, such as the New Year, Ramadan, or Valentine's Day
•	Changing the unit of analysis from the topic areas covered by 
teenage magazines to the words and phrases the magazines use in 
presenting certain topics

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Figure 1. Percentage of stories, by content, in Teen Stuff

Figure 2. Percentage of stories, by content, in Kelmetna


Figure 3. Percentage of stories, by content in Al Shabab


Figure 4. Distribution of stories in sample issues
Category
Teen Stuff
Al Shabab
Kelmetna
Total
Celebrities
12
22
9
43
Movies
21
0
21
42
Contests
3
0
17
20
Social
5
5
7
19
General
0
5
14
19
Sports
8
9
0
17
Self Expression
5
0
9
14
Love/Dating
6
0
5
11
Music
6
2
3
11
Book Reviews
4
2
3
9
Profiles
0
8
0
8
IT/Technology
0
8
0
8
Arts
7
0
0
7
Literature
5
0
0
5
Politics
3
0
1
4
Beauty
4
0
0
4
Cars
0
2
2
4
History
0
0
3
3
Personality
0
0
2
2
School/college
2
0
0
2
Total Stories

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