Cheap Men's Health Best Life with $5 Bonus (Magazine) Price
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| CATEGORY: | Magazine |
| MANUFACTURER: | Rodale, Inc. |
| FEATURES: | Magazine Subscription |
| TYPE: | Mens' Interest, Health & Fitness, Men's Health, Lifestyle & Cultures (Guidance), Men, United States |
| MEDIA: | Magazine |
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Customer Reviews of Men's Health Best Life with $5 Bonus
Thoughtful, readable and interesting I was expecting much worse when I saw Best Life on the shelf -- it sounded like yet another Maxim or Stuff. But I was very pleasantly surprised by the maturity of the articles that cover a good range of topics for 30-somethings and up. I can't think of a magazine that compares, unless you like Esquire (snore) or Details.
Must have !?
Going off the first review I read which was titled "No Thanks", I have to go out and get myself a copy. If it is anything like it was described, then I'll get a two year subscription.
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>Oh, by the way, to paraphrase the movie "Boiler room", "The person that says money doesn't buy happiness, doesn't F***'n have any".
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No thanks!
Our young son had some expiring airline miles, for which we were offered a variety of subscription options. After reading the promotional summary for Best Life, I thought it might be of interest to my husband. Unfortunately, the magazine is not what I expected from the ad, which touted men's health and well-being.
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>The first issue came this week, and I've already terminated the subscription. While there are some articles that might interest a mature man, it's not a magazine I care to have coming into a house with young children, especially when they pick up the mail. The cover of the magazine starts off with "Instant Sex", goes on to "The Divorce Attorney from Hell" and "The Best Damn Dog". Now I'm not naiive, but we really try to keep our kids sheltered from adult issues and to keep their language clean. We don't need this blaring from the cover of a magazine.
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>Inside the magazine we have an office advice column recommending having sex in the office after hours, and piles of ads with steamy come-hither looks. Then there's the ad about not giving your kids a "sucky vacation", lest they put you in a bad retirement home. The magazine reduces men to a very limited and shallow picture - sources of money, materialistic pleasure, sex and fashion. Sorry - my husband is more than a paycheck, and if he doesn't buy us our own island I'll still love him. He doesn't need to wear the latest suit or choose music to make me swoon based on a magazine article. This magazine isn't for mature people - it's targeted toward the most shallow materialistic side of our existence. It fails to elevate and it offends more than entertains.
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>I was saddened to see that this is published by Rodale Press. I've always had a higher opinion of them in the past. Apparently they've elected to publish with an "anything goes" ethic.