Depot.com
 Location:  Home» Magazines » General » Mental Floss  


Categories
Books
Electronics
Toys
DVD
Video Games
Music
Software
Computers
Cameras
Pets
Apparel
Baby
Beauty
Automotive
Health
Home & Garden
Jewelry
Kitchen
Magazines
Office Products
Outdoor Living
Sporting Goods
Tools & Hardware
Cell Phones
Gourmet Food
Grocery
Musical Instruments
VHS
MP3
Movie Downloads
US Flag
Related Categories
• General
Entertainment
Subjects
Magazines & Newspapers
• History
Subjects
Magazines & Newspapers
• Magazines $20 To $25
By Price
Custom Stores
Specialty Stores
Magazines & Newspapers
• Magazines for $16
August Promotion
Custom Stores
Specialty Stores
Magazines & Newspapers
Subcategories
History
Americas
Ancient
Arctic & Antarctica
Asia
Australia & Oceania
Europe
Gay & Lesbian
Middle East
Military
Military Science
Russia
United States
World

Mental Floss

Mental Floss


Other Views:
Publisher: Mental Floss Llc

List Price: $29.94
Buy New: $21.97
You Save: $7.97 (27%)



Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 136 reviews
Sales Rank: 46

Format: Magazine Subscription
Type: Trade magazine
Subscription Issues: 6
Subscription Length: 12 Months
Issues Per Year: 6
First Issue Lead Time: 12-16 Weeks

ASIN: B000085A6U

Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Promotion: Data not available Terms and Conditions
Availability: Usually ships in 2 to 4 months

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review

Who Reads mental_floss?
mental_floss readers are busy, intelligent people who like to learn but don t want to waste time on tedious articles. Its readers want to feel smart fast. They value a magazine that respects their intelligence but never takes itself too seriously. They are knowledge junkies who love bad puns, quirky humor and meaty trivia served up in bite-sized portions. The magazine is popular with people of all ages high school students, busy professionals, and senior citizens who want to stay intellectually engaged. Nearly 2.5 million readers/visitors read mental_floss magazine and visit its web site.

What You Can Expect in Each Issue:

  • Feature Stories to Make You Smile: Whether it s "The 15 Greatest Moments in Olympics History," an expose on Shel Silverstein s darker side, a collection of the "25 Most Important Questions in the Universe" (like whether a pregnant woman can drive in a carpool lane), or a frank discussion on the looming social security crisis, mental_floss features never fail to deliver. With stories that surprise, sometimes shock and always engage, mental_floss won t just leave you grinning, it will leave your friends wondering how you got so interesting all of a sudden.
  • scatter_brained sets the tone for the magazine with its quirky facts, quick tidbits and juicy history. Cheeky, clever and fun, this front-of-book section is consistently rated a subscriber favorite. Recent content includes wit and wisdom from famous insomniacs, secret flops from big-name musicians and the tallest tales in your American history book.
  • right_brain eases readers into humanities by making art and literature accessible without dumbing it down. Why isn t Jackson Pollock an overrated paint thrower? What makes "The Thinker" worth thinking about? It s all right here: mental_floss experts spill the beans on why the classics are classic, and they re happy to dish out all the naughty back-stories while they re at it.
  • left_brain tackles the mysteries of science and technology from paradigm-shifting discoveries to the new generation of military robots. mental_floss takes the most exciting ideas and fascinating theories and delivers them in plain English.
  • spinning the_globe opens a window to the world by serving up religion, history and world culture in a way only mental_floss can. Want to escape to the South Pacific without leaving your chair? Want to peek across North Korea s borders without risking your life? Ever wonder how an entire island's cuisine became so focused around Spam or how a coffee shop poet drove the Czech nation to vanquish communism without spilling a single drop of blood? mental_floss has got the answers right here.
Magazine Layout:
What other magazine would put Albert Einstein in a swimsuit on its cover? Like its content, the style and design of the magazine is fresh, compelling, and often irreverent. .

Click on any image below to see select pages from mental_floss:



Contributors:
As a rapidly growing publication with a lot of buzz, mental_floss is able to draw from a diverse talent pool of high-profile journalists, academics and subject experts including Ken Jennings (of Jeopardy! fame), A.J. Jacobs, Ben Stein, Ethan Trex, John Green, Michael Stusser, and Eric Sass.

Past Issues:


Comparisons to Other Magazines:
"mental_floss is an original. It isn t easy to match it with an existing magazine, although some readers have suggested that its quick hits of information and shorter features bring to mind the approach of another highly successful magazine." The Week.

Newsweek called it "a smart-alecky read," another reviewer called it "a liberal arts education in installments," and a third suggested "Got a big cocktail party coming up? Read mental_floss first," but no one s been able to find another magazine quite like it.

Advertisers:
Unlike most magazines, mental_floss is committed to maintaining a high editorial-to-content ratio in the belief that readers are buying the publication for its content. Approximately 80% of its pages are dedicated to editorial, with no more than 20% for ads. Advertisers include Angie s List, Books-A-Million, Borders, Merriam-Webster, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum, The Teaching Company, Volkswagen, Target, and Newseum.

Awards and Critical Acclaim:
  • Chicago Tribune 2008 "50 Favorite Magazines" List
  • Chicago Tribune 2007 "50 Favorite Magazines" List
  • Library Journal Best New Magazine Award
  • "A sharp-looking glossy." LA Times
  • "mental_floss cleans out the cobwebs." Chicago Tribune
  • "A sort of sassy Cliffs Notes." Reader s Digest
  • "The magazine is hard to put down." Guide to Consumer Magazines


Product Description
For the record: Mental Floss magazine is an intelligent read, but not too intelligent. We're the sort of intelligent that you hang out with for a while, enjoy our company, laugh a little, smile a lot and then we part ways. Great times. And you only realize how much you learned from us after a little while. Like a couple days later when you're impressing your friends with all these intriguing facts and things you picked up from us, and they ask you how you know so much, and you think back on that great afternoon you spent with us and you smile.

And then you lie and say you read a lot.


Customer Reviews:   Read 131 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars The Best New Magazine   September 1, 2003
William Irwin (Kingston, PA United States)
579 out of 609 found this review helpful

In an age of books "for dummies" and "complete idiots," Mental Floss is a magazine that makes you "feel smart again." Let's face it, some of those "dummies" books are pretty good, but you wouldn't display them in your home or read them on the train. By contrast, I openly read Mental Floss in public and place the latest issue on my coffee table.

The magazine combines a cheeky sense of humor with a wealth of information. I loved the recent "Y Files issue." "Why is yawning contagious?" "Why do people yell `Geronimo' before jumping?" "Why does the United States print $2 bills?" Mental Floss delivers the answers. Trivial pursuit may leave you wondering "why" about an answer, but Mental Floss never does.

The current "swimsuit issue" is a blast. It's not exactly titillating, but it is stimulating. The sight of Einstein and Eleanor Roosevelt in swimwear is enough to turn your attention to the articles.

There's no magazine I'd recommend more highly.


5 out of 5 stars The Best Thing In My Mailbox!   July 5, 2004
Robert I. Hedges
287 out of 306 found this review helpful

I have subscribed to "Mental Floss" from the very beginning, and now look forward to each new issue anxiously. Founded just a couple of years ago by two former college roommates who wanted a fun, hip, urbane magazine to make them smarter with style, "Mental Floss" has become a huge success, and is one of the few new magazines that debut each year that is actually prospering.

Each issue is loaded with information on interesting topics, from how common (or very uncommon) things work, to odd and unknown histories and biographies that you will not find anywhere else (and if you did, certainly not in as condensed and succinct a form as you will find here.) Without exception, the writers are literate, knowledgeable, and good humored.

The things that you don't know will amaze you after reading this magazine. Try "Mental Floss", and I am willing to bet that you will be hooked. I know I am.


3 out of 5 stars Smart but Insubstantial   November 14, 2005
Tyra Murray (McMinnville, OR United States)
152 out of 217 found this review helpful

I was considering this magazine subscription for a gift and picked up a copy at the supermarket to check it out. After reading it cover to cover I decided against it.

Pros: Entertaining and downright funny in places, it made me giggle several times. Good variety of information: history, people, geography, arts, etc. Formatted in bits, mostly paragraph length pieces with occasional longer articles. Good for conversation starters or to impress others with your vast knowledge.

Cons: The writing style did not "hook" me. Perhaps it's targeted more at a male audience. Some of the articles were silly expositions of unlike things (e.g. Caesars: Sid Caesar, Cesar Chevez and Caesar salad). I occasionally got the feeling that the authors were awfully proud of themselves for being so clever and above the societal mainstream (though they do it tongue-in-cheek). Finally, although it may make you feel smart, Mental Floss doesn't offer any real wisdom. You may come away knowing a few more facts, but does that make you a better person?

If you want a good magazine for thinking through moral and religious issues, take a look at First Things. But this will probably be fun for your trivia buffs and high school honor student types.



3 out of 5 stars Fun, but leaves you hanging   January 17, 2005
K. King (Houston, TX)
44 out of 53 found this review helpful

I've picked a couple of these up now and while I enjoyed them, I have to say I was somewhat dissapointed. It's a great source of trivia and random facts, but the entire magazine is only a set of "factoids" and few subjects are covered with any kind of depth. All in all, it feels like I'm being given tempting little knowledge hors d'oeuvre with no meal to follow.


4 out of 5 stars Thought provoking, but not too serious   May 22, 2004
R. Davis (Pequannock, New Jersey USA)
42 out of 46 found this review helpful

Finally! A magazine that does not insult your intelligence, but is still fun. This is not just another magazine full of whiners with good vocabularies. It will inform, but still laugh at itself. Fun reading for the thinking person, who doesn't care what Britney Spears is doing!


We'll be adding even more exciting features to assist you in the coming year.
Thank you for shopping at the Depot.com online shopping depot.

©2008 Depot.com