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Bono is taking a page from Vanity Fair. Actually, make that several hundred pages.
The U2 frontman and activist has signed on to helm the magazine's
Africa-themed July issue, which will hit newsstands in early June.
making him the publication's first-ever guest editor.
"As guest editor, I want Africa to appear an adventure, not a burden,
and put faces and personalities to the statistics we read elsewhere,"
the Dublin native said in a statement.
"Five thousand Africans die every day of a preventable, treatable disease [HIV/AIDS].
If [VF editor-in-chief Graydon Carter], his team, and I succeed, the
reader will care more about the daily squandering of these noble,
entrepreneurial, optimistic lives…people who are familiar to us in
every other way than circumstance."
Or, as he told the New York Times earlier this week, "Africa is sexy and people need to know that."
Meaning, there's certainly more to Africa than the dour newspaper
headlines, sad pictures and grim statistics that are fed to the rest of
the world on a near-daily basis, although some would argue that America
and other countries are not nearly privy enough to what's really going
on within the continent's borders.
In response to possible criticism that Bono's involvement with a
glossy, celeb-driven (albeit journalistically sound) publication like
Vanity Fair will serve to make Africa more of a chic cause-du-jour—or,
even worse, just a quick page-flip for the idle rich—rather than act as
a catalyst for more serious, widespread involvement, the former Nobel
Peace Prize finalist didn't sound too concerned.
"We need to get better at storytelling," Bono told the Times. "Bill
Gates tells me this all the time. We've got to get better at telling
the success stories of Africa in addition to the horror stories. And
this magazine tells great stories."
Carter, who presided over his magazine's first "Green Issue" last year, featuring George Clooney, Al Gore, Julia Roberts and Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on the cover, also sounded excited about what his upscale periodical can do for Africa's image.
"We'll be telling great stories about Africa's successes and
turnarounds," Carter said. "We certainly won't ignore the continent's
problems—but we'll cover African music, art and literature. We want to
really surprise people in a positive way."
Besides, Bono, who was honored Friday with a special NAACP Image Award
for his dedication to fighting poverty, AIDS and other scourges in
Africa, surely won't let this high-profile opportunity to draw
attention to the issues closest to his heart slip away.
The "Pride" rocker already has experience utilizing his star power
within the field of journalism, having guest-edited a special edition
of the British newspaper The Independent last May and serving as the
first-ever guest editor for the French paper Libération in August.
Also, according to the Times, a private equity group that counts Bono as a partner has bought an interest in Forbes magazine.
Last year Bono launched the Project Red campaign, which has enlisted
culturally relevant retailers such as Apple and the Gap to contribute
their proceeds from so-called Red merchandise to fighting disease in
Africa.
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