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Woolworths TASTE magazine is a flagship brand for Woolworths as a business and Woolworths Foods as a department. It delivers superbly in terms of the two Woolworths brand pillars – the Woolworths difference and Woolworths heritage. It’s excellent value is reflected in an abundance of recipes (more than 50 per issue) and ideas. Quality content which is also inspirational are synonymous with the brand. The Taste reader is anyone, male or female, young and old that loves the Taste brand, loves food, loves eating, loves cooking and loves Woolworths quality products and recipes – Taste celebrates that in each issue.

All the latest celebrity news and feature stories to keep you up to date and entertained! The best photos of celeb comings and goings, revealing celebrity interviews, human interest and crime stories. When you know Who, you know more.

Us Weekly is the magazine that keeps the closest watch on the ever changing and ever exciting entertainment industry, unlike any other magazine. It takes you backstage at awards shows and sneaks you into celebrity parties. Us Weekly peers into the minds (and dressing rooms) of the biggest stars, and escorts you around the world to see exactly where and with whom the hottest names in entertainment have been hanging out. Us gives you more access than any other magazine on the newsstan.

TIME’s signature voice and trusted content make it one of the most recognized news brands in the world. Offering incisive reporting, lively writing and world-renowned photography, TIME magazine has been credited with bringing journalism at its best into the fabric of world life.

Brought to you by The Week magazine, The Week Junior is a new current affairs magazine for children aged between 8 and 14.

The Economist is a global weekly magazine written for those who share an uncommon interest in being well and broadly informed. Each issue explores the close links between domestic and international issues, business, politics, finance, current affairs, science, technology and the arts.

The People magazine runs a roughly 50/50 mix of celebrity and human-interest articles. People’s editors claim to refrain from printing pure celebrity gossip, enough to lead celebrity publicists to propose exclusives to the magazine, and evidence of what one staffer calls a “publicist-friendly strategy”.