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Publishers, collectors, readers believe zines and print magazines will stick around despite how digitally connected and dependent we are today. They liken the survival of print material to that of vinyl and insist people are still drawn to the tactility of the medium and the physical connections it fosters. But is having a community of magazine lovers enough to keep it alive? Asia First's Andrea Heng and Hairianto Diman ask a passionate hobbyist Timothy Stuart Wee, zine collector & lecturer in design communication at Lasalle College of the Arts.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
By CNAPublishers, collectors, readers believe zines and print magazines will stick around despite how digitally connected and dependent we are today. They liken the survival of print material to that of vinyl and insist people are still drawn to the tactility of the medium and the physical connections it fosters. But is having a community of magazine lovers enough to keep it alive? Asia First's Andrea Heng and Hairianto Diman ask a passionate hobbyist Timothy Stuart Wee, zine collector & lecturer in design communication at Lasalle College of the Arts.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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