Extreme Makeover: A Teen Take on the New Testament
With quizzes, beauty tips and guy talk, Revolve looks like a fashion magazine. Until you notice the chapter and verse markers.
BY: Ellen Leventry
But look closer at the actual text of most pages, and you see lines like "During that time King Herod began to mistreat some who belonged to the church. He ordered James, the brother of John, to be killed by the sword."
Huh? What's King Herod doing next to what could be "Hottie of the Month" photos?
Yep, it's the Bible-but with packaging that may just be inspired. Revolve: A New Look at the New Testament mixes teen mag aesthetics and Scripture, aiming to provide a "modern look at the New Testament with hundreds of applicable insights for daily living." All 27 books of the New Testament run side by side with polls like "Are you Dating a Godly Guy?"
Looking nothing like the Good Book, Revolve was designed to spare teen girls Bible embarrassment should they want to bring scripture with them to school, to the mall or to their next basketball game. Aside from the words "The Complete New Testament" slicing across the cover, one might never suspect that the glossy magazine, teeming with photos of preternaturally happy, attractive gals, was anything more than a new entry into the already crowded teen 'zine market.
And that's what Revolve's creators want. "Teens were saying that they found the Bible to be too freaky, too big, too intimidating," says Laurie Whaley, Brand Manager for the New Century Version at Thomas Nelson, one of America's major Bible publishers and part of the Revolve team. "Revolve shows girls that reading the New Testament is just as easy as reading an issue of Seventeen or Vogue."
The sidebars and callouts are a testament to the cleverness of Revolve's editors. Particularly sharp are the ingeniously worded "Beauty Secret" tips, such as "Applying Foundation": "You need a good, balanced foundation for the rest of your makeup, kinda like how Jesus is the strong foundation in our lives." Who knew that Jesus and Max Factor had so much in common?
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