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One-Year Magazine Subscriptions – Online Deal

One-Year Subscription to "Men’s Journal," "Rolling Stone," or "Us Weekly" (Up to 58% Off)

from$5
Buy
No Longer Available
Fri Sep 07 06:59:59 UTC 2012
Value
$11
Discount
55%
You Save
$6
  • T460x279
  • Audiophile
  • Perfect Gentleman
  • Simple Pleasures

In a Nutshell

A one-year subscription keeps readers up to date on celebrity gossip, new music and movies, or men’s lifestyle trends and tips

The Fine Print

  • Expires Dec 22, 2012
  • Limit 1 per person, may buy 6 more as gifts. Limit 1 per order. Does not ship to Canada/Puerto Rico. Most Us Weekly and Rolling Stone orders ship within 4-6 weeks from the redemption date; Men's Journal ships 4-8 weeks from redemption date. Does not ship to PO boxes. See return policy. Voucher is non-transferable. New customers only. Not valid for renewals.
  • See the rules that apply to all deals.

The Deal

  • $5 for a one-year, 12-issue subscription to Men’s Journal ($11.88 list price)
  • $10 for a one-year, 26-issue subscription to Rolling Stone ($19.95 list price)
  • $34 for a one-year, 52-issue subscription to Us Weekly ($69.95 list price)


Rolling Stone, Us Weekly, or Men’s Journal Subscription

The familiar faces of celebrities beckon readers to flip through the pages of Men’s Journal, Rolling Stone, and Us Weekly, where they'll find tips about men's health and style, fresh album reviews, and piping-hot Hollywood gossip, respectively. Living up to its moniker, Us Weekly delivers of-the-moment content, keeping subscribers in the loop on celebrity love triangles and the latest couture trends. The pages of Rolling Stone have been bursting with iconic music, film, and sports stars for nearly half a century, with edgy political reporting strewn between new-movie reviews and artist interviews. Men’s Journal editions arrive loaded with fitness advice, adventurous travel tips, and updates on the latest technology and masculine fashions, such as tie-mounted GPS units and Bluetooth cufflinks.

Men’s Journal
  • Published 11 times a year with one double issue
  • Filled with fitness advice, travel tips, and fashion updates

Rolling Stone
  • Published 24 times a year with two double issues
  • Features iconic music, film, and sports stars
  • Political articles and album and movie reviews

Us Weekly
  • New issue every week, like a middle schooler with a diary
  • Up-to-date content on celebrity gossip, beauty tips, and entertainment news


How to get your goods: after purchasing this deal, pull up your Groupon with our mobile app or by going to My Groupons (or to My Gifts if you are giving this as a gift*) and clicking the view voucher link. Then, follow the instructions on your voucher.

For questions pertaining to this deal, please visit the deal Q&A on this page. For post-purchase inquires, please see your voucher for customer service contact information.

View the Groupon Goods FAQ for additional information, including how list price is determined.

*Once the recipient claims your gift, you will no longer be able to print the Groupon.

Groupon Says

Dem_teaser_cat

The Groupon Guide to: Lifting Things with Balloons

Anyone who has seen the beloved animated film Balloon House knows that enough helium-filled balloons can make almost any object whimsically float without care across verdant fields strewn with uncomprehending cattle or directly through the extremely toxic particles that make up rainbows. What common items will you be able to lift with these quantities of balloons?

  • A Single Balloon: Common house toad
  • Two Dozen Balloons: A VCR containing a video-cassette birthday greeting to your bedridden sweetie, who cannot answer the door lest their measles leap from their face to yours
  • 500 Balloons: A couch, piano, or wrought-iron garden door affixed with decorative hen
  • Three Trillion Balloons: Titan, moon of Saturn, no longer on a deadly collision course with Earth
  • Infinity Balloons: Helios, the balloon god who—some argue—could make a balloon so floatsy that he himself would be carried away
  • -1 Balloon: These are just called rocks, and they help things float back down to the ground or to the bottom of ponds.

How many balloons would it take to move a planet out of orbit, and will there be time?

One-Year Magazine Subscriptions