Interview Magazine, founded by Andy Warhol, shuts down

interview magazines

Interview Magazine, the fabled publication originally founded by Andy Warhol, is closing up shop.

News that the magazine will fold on Monday trickled out in a series of reports, which were eventually confirmed by staff members on Twitter.

"After 10 months at my dream job at @InterviewMag, today is sadly my last day as the magazine has closed," tweeted Trey Taylor, the senior online editor at the magazine.

Ezra Marcus, an editor at Interview, confirmed to CNNMoney in an email that the magazine is "folding both web and print effective immediately." He said staffers were told at an all-hands meeting on Monday that the company is filing for Chapter 7 bankruptcy.

It's a painfully familiar story these days for those working in news media, where layoffs, cutbacks and outright closures have become commonplace.

interview magazine studio 54
(L-R) Editor Bob Colacello, model Jerry Hall, artist/publisher Andy Warhol, singer Debbie Harry, writer Truman Capote and jewelry designer Paloma Picasso at a Studio 54 party for INTERVIEW magazine and Harry's appearance on the cover. (Photo by Robin Platzer/Twin Images/The LIFE Images Collection/Getty Images)

In the case of Interview, it represents the end of an era and a sobering reminder of how once-mighty media institutions have fallen hard.

Meredith Corp. (MDP), which bought Time Inc., is currently in the process of selling off several of the old company's iconic brands, including Time Magazine.

Interview was founded by Warhol in 1969, and was bought by the billionaire Peter Brant from the late pop artist's estate in 1989. The magazine relaunched in 2008 under new editorial leadership.

Earlier this month, the magazine was sued for $600,000 by a former editorial director who claims he wasn't paid by the magazine.

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