Fish"), and photographic features from David Bailey, Michael Cooper and Patrick Lichfield.
[4][5] Browne died months later in a car crash, according to some accounts causing the Beatles to write "A day in the life".
The failure of Men in Vogue and similar British non-pornographic men's magazines like Town (formerly About Town and before that Man About Town) which closed in 1968, and the British version of Esquire in the 1950s, has been blamed on the smaller size of the market in the United Kingdom compared to the United States and competition for advertising from commercial television and newspaper colour supplements.
[7] The first colour supplement in the United Kingdom was for The Sunday Times, published in February 1962, and it was so successful that the paper gained a quarter of a million new readers.
Vogue-Man was launched by Condé Nast in 2006 but ceased in print in 2009,[9] becoming a section on the parent magazine's website.