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Description
pokemon magazine with cards Time Magazine Nov 1999: Pokémon & SavingsCollector's Note Why This Issue Matters The November 22, 1999 issue of Time Magazine, Volume 154, Number 21, featuring Pokmon on the cover alongside "Paying Less for Prescriptions," documents one of the most culturally significant entertainment phenomena of the late twentieth century at its peak mainstream American saturation. Pokmon had arrived in the United States in September 1998 with the Game Boy games, and by late 1999 it had expanded into the
Collector's Note – Why This Issue Matters
The November 22, 1999 issue of Time Magazine, Volume 154, Number 21, featuring Pokémon on the cover alongside "Paying Less for Prescriptions," documents one of the most culturally significant entertainment phenomena of the late twentieth century at its peak mainstream American saturation. Pokémon had arrived in the United States in September 1998 with the Game Boy games, and by late 1999 it had expanded into the trading card game, the animated television series, and the theatrical film Pokémon: The First Movie, which had been released in the United States in November 1999 — just weeks before this issue's publication date. A Time Magazine cover on Pokémon in November 1999 therefore captures the phenomenon at the precise moment of its maximum cultural intensity: the trading card game was generating genuine media coverage about elementary school children trading cards for hundreds of dollars, the television show was one of the most watched programs among children in America, and the theatrical film had just opened to strong box office performance. For collectors building an archive of Time Magazine issues documenting pop culture landmarks, this November 1999 issue is a primary document of Pokémania at its American peak, captured by the most authoritative mainstream American news magazine at the moment of the phenomenon's fullest cultural expression.
The pairing of Pokémon with a prescription drug cost feature on the same cover is an editorially specific and historically interesting juxtaposition. The prescription drug pricing crisis was a significant policy issue in the final years of the Clinton administration — Medicare's failure to cover prescription drugs, the rise of Canadian pharmacy imports, and the growing gap between pharmaceutical prices in the United States and other developed countries were all active political debates in November 1999. The combination of a children's entertainment phenomenon and a healthcare policy concern on the same cover reflects Time's consistent practice of pairing culturally contrasting stories that together document the breadth of American life in a single week. The November 1999 date places this issue in the final weeks of the decade that Pokémon had come to symbolize for a generation of children, and the prescription drug story connects it to the policy debates that would shape the early 2000s healthcare landscape. Publications from 1999 document American popular culture at the end of the millennium, and this Time issue captures two of the decade's most culturally persistent subjects in the same cover moment.
About the Publication
Time Magazine, founded by Henry Luce and Briton Hadden in 1923, was by November 1999 one of the most widely read weekly news magazines in the world, with a global readership and an institutional authority that made its cover selections genuine cultural events. Its format — opinionated summaries of world events organized by category and built around a weekly cover — gave its pop culture covers the specific kind of mainstream American visibility that introduced subjects to a mass readership well beyond the specialist audiences that had already discovered them. A Time cover on Pokémon in November 1999 introduced the phenomenon's cultural significance to an adult readership that may have encountered it primarily through their children.
Key Highlights Inside
- Pokémon cover story — published November 22, 1999, weeks after the American theatrical release of Pokémon: The First Movie and at the peak of the trading card game's American commercial and cultural saturation, documenting the phenomenon at its maximum mainstream intensity for a mass adult readership.
- "Paying Less for Prescriptions" — healthcare cost coverage published in the final years of the Clinton administration's healthcare policy debates, documenting the prescription drug affordability crisis that would become one of the defining policy issues of the early 2000s.
- Address label on the front cover — identifying this as a subscriber copy and confirming its genuine circulation history from the peak of the Pokémon phenomenon.
- Note: Specific additional interior articles and features beyond the confirmed cover stories are unverified for this issue. The above reflects what is documented in the listing and well-established historical context of Pokémon's American cultural position in November 1999.
Condition & Rarity
Good condition with minor wear throughout and an address label on the front cover is an appropriate assessment for a weekly magazine now twenty-five years old. The address label identifies this as a subscriber copy — the standard distribution method for Time during this period — and label presence is the norm for surviving copies of late-1990s issues. Label-free newsstand examples are less commonly encountered and are preferred by display collectors for whom cover presentation is a priority. The plastic protective covering indicates deliberate preservation storage, consistent with treating this as a collectible at or near the time of its publication. For a glossy-stock weekly of this vintage, the primary condition factors are cover surface brightness and the clarity of the Pokémon cover design, which is the primary visual and collectible attribute.
Looking for More Issues Like This?
A November 1999 Time Magazine with Pokémon on the cover — published at the precise peak of the phenomenon's American cultural saturation, weeks after the theatrical film release — is a historically specific document of one of the late twentieth century's most significant entertainment phenomena at its fullest mainstream expression. If this issue has already been claimed, the full archive of Time Magazine issues spans the publication's entire run and surfaces other landmark pop culture and news covers from across its history. The broader 1999 magazine collection offers additional context for this specific and culturally rich final year of the millennium.
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