Capabilities
  • Desktop Display
    • Brand Integrations
      Yes No
    • Sponsored Posts
      Yes No
    • Native Ads
      Yes No
    • High-Impact (Takeovers, Billboards, Overlays, Sliders, Skins)
      Yes No
    • Rich Media (Expandable & Non-Expandable)
      Yes No
  • Mobile Display
    • Mobile Rich Media (Including Interstitials & Expandables)
      Yes No
    • Tablet Traffic
      Yes No
    • Native & Custom Mobile Executions
      Yes No
    • Requires SDK Integration
      Yes No
  • Email
  • Social
  • Desktop Display, Mobile Display, Email, Social
  • CPM
  • Web Publisher
  • Headline:
    Publisher
  • Key Differentiator
    Parade’s first issue appeared on May 31, 1941, just prior to the U.S. entering WWII. Parade was started by Chicago businessman Marshall Field III as a small publication with a print run of only 125,000 copies. It sold on newsstands for a nickel. Parade is now part of the Newhouse family’s Advance Publications. Parade’s first food editor was none other than Julia Child, who served in that role from January 1982 until March of 1986. Parade’s most popular feature story, which has run every year for the past 30 years, is What People Earn. Parade’s two most popular and enduring columns both began in 1986. They are “Walter Scott’s Personality Parade” and “Ask Marilyn.” Walter Scott is a pseudonym used by a rotating group of Parade staffers, working from real reader letters. However, “Marilyn” is Marilyn Vos Savant, who is not only a real person, but a really smart one. She is listed in the Guinness Book of World Records as having the World’s Highest I.Q. (190). Real or not, Walter Scott was prescient. Back in 1971, a reader submitted a question asking if a celebrity would ever be President. The column responded that Ronald Reagan would be the first celebrity to make it to the White House. Reagan was sworn in ten years later. Parade was instrumental in the foundation of “Take Our Daughters to Work Day.” In May of 1992, the magazine published a feature about a local movement that generated so much interest a national effort was begun. The first national “TODTWD” debuted a year later. The event, which takes place on the fourth Thursday of April every year, now includes sons. Writer Dotson Rader began writing for Parade in 1980 and still shocks with his exclusive, revealing celebrity interviews 32 years later. Just one example: Brad Pitt started a firestorm throughout the entertainment world when he revealed that he felt “pathetic” during the 1990s. Pitt told Rader that he “wasn’t living an interesting life…I think that my marriage [to Jennifer Aniston] had something to do with it.” Pitt later publicly apologized to his ex-wife. It was in Parade that astrologer Jeane Dixon predicted the assassination of JFK. In 1956, Parade had asked her for her predictions for the future, including the outcome of the 1960 Presidential elections. Parade’s faded notes, dug from the files, show she replied: “He will be an unlucky President.” The rest of her answer was published in Parade’s May 13,1956 issue: “As for the 1960 election, Mrs. Dixon thinks it will be won by a Democrat. But he will be assassinated or die in office.” Parade has published Ernest Hemingway (who sent in reports from the Far East), Ben Hecht (author of “the Front Page”), Dr. Carl Sagan (who provided his first report on Nuclear Winter), James Thurber, Herman Wouk, Norman Mailer, John Cheever and Alex Haley, among many others. Parade has published interviews with virtually every major star, political leader and President since 1941. Parade put 20-year-old Marilyn Monroe on the February 14, 1947 cover, when her hair was still brown. Parade All-America football honorees are an elite group, including Earl Campbell, Tony Dorsett, Marcus Allen, Herschel Walker, Charles Woodson, Johnny Manziel, Jameis Winston, Joe Montana, Dan Marino, John Elway, Eric Dickerson, Peyton Manning and Jeff Hostetler, among many others. Parade is credited with first proposing the idea of a “Hot Line” between the leadership of the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. in March 20, 1960. The suggestion was put into effect 3 years later, and President Kennedy wrote the magazine a letter thanking it for the idea. Parade then followed up with a proposal for a joint Soviet-American space flight, which came to reality in the Apollo-Soyuz orbital linkup in 1975. In 1955, a Parade editorial team flew to the Soviet Union and spent a month traveling around the country, still largely unknown to many U.S. readers, talking to the people and interviewing government leaders. The result? “Parade Visits Russia”, the first time any magazine had ever given itself over to one single subject. Very occasionally, Parade’s weekly closing schedule caused problems: One of the most celebrated involved the issue of December 1, 1963, which contained an article entitled “Is Jackie Kennedy Tired of the White House?” The issue had already been shipped when President John F. Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas on November 22. A substitute issue was quickly printed and sent out, those who couldn’t replace in time either withheld the issue altogether, or distributed with an explanation in the news section. Parade’s first issue devoted to a single person was the April 11, 1993 issue—an exclusive introduction to First Lady Hillary Clinton.
  • Owned / Operated Properties
    dashrecipes.com
Site Traffic
  • 0 Global Rank
  • 0
  • 216 Estimated Visits
Traffic Sources
  • Direct
    96.36%
  • Search
    3.64%
  • Mail
    0.00%
  • Social
    0.00%
  • Referrals
    0.00%
  • Paid Referrals
    0.00%
Geography Breakdown
Powered by
Alexa Traffic Data
Global Rank 25,487
567
United States Rank 7,114
749
United States Page Views 62.5%
13.8%
Top Countries
Top Search Keywords
  • Media Conglomerates
  • Sony Corporation
Ads.txt
Ad Exchange
Type
Publisher ID
Certification ID
pubmatic.com
direct
156538
5d62403b186f2ace
openx.com
reseller
539625136
6a698e2ec38604c6
appnexus.com
direct
8233
f5ab79cb980f11d1
advertising.com
direct
7574
richaudience.com
direct
ui8ffexc4d
google.com
direct
pub-8674340505315230
f08c47fec0942fa0
smartclip.net
direct
12527
smartclip.net
direct
11829
smartclip.net
direct
11828
smartclip.net
direct
11827
smartclip.net
direct
11481
Parade advertising reaches 1.02M visitors across desktop and mobile web, in countries such as United States, United Kingdom, Canada, India, Germany. Pricing models they offer are CPM on channels such as Display, Mobile, Email, Social Advertising on Parade will allow you to reach consumers in industries or verticals such as .

They are headquartered at New York, NY, United States, and have 2 advertising & marketing contacts listed on Kochava. According to their Ads.txt, Parade inventory partners include: pubmatic.com, openx.com, appnexus.com, advertising.com, richaudience.com, google.com, smartclip.net, adtiming.com, pubnative.net, admanmedia.com, rhythmone.com, pokkt.com, engagebdr.com, blis.com, bidmachine.io, smaato.com, rubiconproject.com, video.unrulymedia.com, contextweb.com, media.net, indexexchange.com, improvedigital.com, outbrain.com, aps.amazon.com, emxdgt.com, coxmt.com, gumgum.com, lijit.com, sovrn.com, sonobi.com, 33across.com, spotx.tv, spotxchange.com, sharethrough.com, e-planning.net, lemmatechnologies.com, onetag.com, districtm.io, synacor.com, bidtellect.com, yahoo.com, aol.com, yieldmo.com, xad.com, adtech.com, tremorhub.com, smartadserver.com, adform.com, lkqd.net, audienciad.com, onomagic.com, brightcom.com, triplelift.com, projectagora.com, conversantmedia.com, criteo.com, lockerdome.com, aolcloud.net, pixfuture.com, freewheel.tv, telaria.com, connatix.com, verve.com, undertone.com, ad.plus, adpone.com, aniview.com, beachfront.com, valo.ai, cosmoshq.com, admixer.net, taboola.com, otm-r.com, betweendigital.com, connectad.io, adcolony.com, webeyemob.com, adingo.jp, ninthdecimal.com, ad-generation.jp, playwire.com, springserve.com, chocolateplatform.com, vdopia.com, lkqd.com, axonix.com, adyoulike.com, amxrtb.com, consumable.com, loopme.com, adtrue.com, groundtruth.com, adocean-global.com, adtelligent.com, my6sense.com, ucfunnel.com, aralego.com, mgid.com, advangelists.com, smartyads.com, viglink.com, vindicosuite.com, vi.ai, liveintent.com, infolinks.com, deepintent.com, bizzclick.com, revcontent.com.

Parade works with Advertising technology companies such as The Trade Desk, Chango, Neustar AdAdvisor, Turn, AOL-Time Warner Online Advertising, DemDex, BlueKai, Dstillery, Resonate Insights, DoubleClick.Net, AppNexus, Atlas, Link Share, Ezakus, eXelate, Eyeota, Datonics, Tapad, Clickagy, Drawbridge, Evidon, Twitter Ads, CDS Global, Consent Management Platform API v 2.0, FLoC Opt-Out.