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| - Starlog Press was an an imprint of Starlog Group, Inc. responsible for publishing publishing magazines and periodicals in the science fiction, horror, and fantasy genres. It was founded as O'Quinn Studios, Inc. in 1977 by Kerry O'Quinn and Norman Jacobs. The company is best known for its monthly science-fiction Starlog magazine, one of the longest-running and most popular publications of its type. Notably, Starlog was one of the first publications to report on the development of the first Star Wars movie, and it also followed the development of what was to eventually become Star Trek: The Motion Picture.
- Formally, Starlog Press was formed in late 1982, though the name O'Quinn Studios, Inc. was retained as an imprint name, and referenced as such in the colophons in the majority of the group's publications. The small Starlog Press logo started to appear on the covers of their publications in November 1982. Nevertheless, the growing number of spin-off publications and productions, necessitated the formation of an even larger entity, Starlog Group, less than a year later, its small logo replacing the previous one from July 1983 onward. Robert Greenberger served as editor with Starlog Press from September 1980 to January 1984 .
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abstract
| - Starlog Press was an an imprint of Starlog Group, Inc. responsible for publishing publishing magazines and periodicals in the science fiction, horror, and fantasy genres. It was founded as O'Quinn Studios, Inc. in 1977 by Kerry O'Quinn and Norman Jacobs. The company is best known for its monthly science-fiction Starlog magazine, one of the longest-running and most popular publications of its type. Notably, Starlog was one of the first publications to report on the development of the first Star Wars movie, and it also followed the development of what was to eventually become Star Trek: The Motion Picture.
- Formally, Starlog Press was formed in late 1982, though the name O'Quinn Studios, Inc. was retained as an imprint name, and referenced as such in the colophons in the majority of the group's publications. The small Starlog Press logo started to appear on the covers of their publications in November 1982. Nevertheless, the growing number of spin-off publications and productions, necessitated the formation of an even larger entity, Starlog Group, less than a year later, its small logo replacing the previous one from July 1983 onward. Robert Greenberger served as editor with Starlog Press from September 1980 to January 1984 . From 1987 onward, it received an official endorsement by Paramount Television, as it started producing the Next Generation, Deep Space Nine, and Voyager official magazines, having previously released a number of official movie souvenir magazines. It should be noted that these publications too, were released as Starlog Group publications, though maintaining the O'Quinn Studios, Inc. copyright in their colophons. In its heyday, Starlog Group became the producer of numerous magazines, including publications like, Future Life, Comics Scene, Cinemagic, and Fangoria, dozens of books, videos (produced by "Fangoria Films"), science fiction and horror conventions, trivia books, and comics, with a significant number seeing foreign editions for Japan, Germany, France, the UK, Brazil, and Australia. The fortunes of the magazine industry took a serious dive in 2001, and its effects were also felt by the Starlog Group, which was eventually sold to Creative Group, Inc. The latter restructured the company, and print publications were limited to Starlog and Fangoria, while expanding the franchise to other media types, the Internet, satellite radio, video, and TV. On 5 December 2007 , a fire at the Starlog Group's Oregon, Illinois, back issue warehouse destroyed its entire stock, including many of its Star Trek-related products. [1] Shortly thereafter, in March 2008, Creative Media itself filed for bankruptcy and, in July, Starlog and Fangoria with all related assets were purchased by The Brooklyn Company, Inc. That company was run by longtime Fangoria chief-editor Thomas DeFeo, who became the sole publisher of Fangoria magazine, becoming in the process the lone surviving print publication of the former Starlog Press, after elimination of Starlog in April 2009.
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