The march of time

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TIME LEADERS THEN AND NOW. At left: Briton Hadden, left, and Luce, center, showing off the magazine to an Ohio politician; at right, clockwise from top left: CMO Sadé Muhammad, Felsenthal, COO Ian Orefice, creative director D.W. Pine, director of photography Katherine Pomerantz, Sibley, and chief HR officer Ali Hernandez

THIS ISSUE IS, FOR ALL OF US AT TIME, AN EXTRA-ordinarily special one. Publishing 100 years since our brand came to life as a 32-page weekly, it is a marker of constancy and change. Constancy in our unwavering commitment to trusted journalism that tells the world’s story through the people who shape it. Change in so many ways, but most important in the stories themselves and the ways we tell them.

One measure of the distance of 10 decades: On the cover of that March 3, 1923, issue: “Uncle Joe” Cannon, the then 86-year-old retiring Speaker of the House who, as TIME put it, “represents the Old Guard in the very flower of its maturity.” A century later in this issue, our focus is on leaders disrupting the Old Guard: TIME’s 2023 Women of the Year, a now annual franchise amending the record of a magazine that at its outset was explicitly for “busy men.” Today, of course, we tell these and all of our stories not only in print but also across all of our digital, video, and social platforms to an audience of more than 100 million people around the world, by far the largest in our history.

TIME’S CO-FOUNDER HENRY LUCE saw business as an exercise in foresight, and the company he launched was from the start an innovator. Out of TIME’s pages sprang numerous new businesses and brands, from Fortune and Sports Illustrated to, decades later, People and HBO. TIME itself evolved from print to documentaries and feature films even in its earliest days, winning an Oscar in 1937 for a news series known as The March of TIME. Long before the internet, it pioneered now ubiquitous formats, from the news brief (the original prospectus decreed that no article could be longer than 400 words) to quizzes and memes. It changed the American vocabulary itself, bringing into the lexicon words like tycoon and pundit.

As we begin our second century, that spirit of innovation and disruption inspires

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