
*THEFT | Literature at its core should always evoke emotion and ideally provoke some form of thought. Publications are slowly inching their way towards extinction; they are in some cases too costly, but at the same time many have little to no purpose. So much has been lost in the world of magazines. This is why it must be taken back from the corporate towers and returned to the voices of the truly interesting. Advertisers don’t know how to create a magazine, they are simply manipulative pushers. Theft was created to symbolize this rebirth of provoking thought through the creative voice. It can be classified as a lifestyle magazine of sorts, but the goal is for its voice to be broad and conflicting. The reader may connect with only a single article, but they may also learn about a new opposing viewpoint. Theft’s target audience is from fifteen to thirty five years of age and hopes to engage everyone from ambitious young readers to those still banging out a 9 to 5. People must expand their outlooks on the world they’ve been placed in and the best way to do so is by telling them it may be a facade.
