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Contact Our Editorial Team for Press and Archive Inquiries

Reach Mariah Journal for archive questions, press requests, business inquiries, and partnership conversations tied to our editorial coverage.

Connecting with Our Archive

Good archive questions usually arrive with a small trail of context: a date, a publication name, a broadcast title, a venue, or even the exact phrase you remember seeing.

Mariah Journal handles inquiries about published materials, historical references, catalog notes, interview mentions, tour coverage, chart context, and related editorial records. If you are trying to verify whether a clipping, scan, quote, or appearance belongs in a larger timeline, send what you have and describe the gap you are trying to close. A clean scan of a magazine page from the late 1990s, for example, helps more than a cropped social post with no masthead or date.

Email the editorial desk at [email protected]. Use a direct subject line, such as “Archive inquiry: magazine interview date” or “Discography reference question.” That small bit of labeling saves back-and-forth and puts your request in the right lane from the first read.

What to include

Share names, dates, publication titles, image context, source links when available, and the specific question you want answered.

What not to send

Avoid forwarding large batches of unlabeled files. A short note explaining why the material matters will do more than a crowded attachment list.

What to expect

The team reviews messages for relevance, clarity, and editorial fit before deciding whether a response, correction, or follow-up belongs on the schedule.

Press, Media, and Partnership Opportunities

Media requests work best when they respect the clock. If you need comment, background, permission guidance, or a pointer to existing coverage, put the deadline in the first line and identify the outlet or project clearly.

For press and media contact, write to [email protected]. Include your name, publication or production company, the topic, the format, and whether the request relates to a published article, an upcoming feature, a podcast, a documentary segment, or a broader cultural piece. The more concrete the frame, the easier it is to route the note without turning it into a guessing game.

Partnership inquiries should be just as specific. Mariah Journal welcomes thoughtful conversations around editorial projects, archive presentation, cultural coverage, and fan-facing media work when the proposed fit makes sense for the site’s scope. A useful partnership email names the idea, the audience, the timeline, and the type of collaboration being proposed.

Desk note

Mariah Journal does not use phone intake or unpublished contact forms for this page. Email is the proper channel for business, press, media, and partnership requests.

Press and media

Send interview requests, background questions, quote checks, and media deadlines to the shared editorial inbox.

Business and partnerships

Send proposals with a clear scope, planned timing, and the reason Mariah Journal is the right editorial setting.

Archive Contributions and Editorial Scope

Fan archives often start as shoeboxes: ticket stubs, tour programs, local newspaper cuttings, import CD stickers, and taped television listings. Online archives turn those fragments into something searchable, but only when the details travel with the object.

If you want to contribute material for editorial consideration, send a concise description before sending large files. Note whether you created the material, scanned it from an item you own, found it in a public source, or are asking about provenance. That distinction matters. It helps the team assess rights, accuracy, and whether the item belongs in coverage such as Press Archives, Discography & Charts, or Tours & Performances.

Not every submission becomes a page, and not every correction needs a long exchange. Sometimes the best contribution is one sharp fix: a clearer publication date, a missing credit line, or a better scan of a concert review that has floated around without context for years.

Corrections

Point to the page, quote the line in question, and explain the correction with the strongest source detail you have.

Submissions

Describe the item, its origin, its condition, and why it may add useful context to the archive.

For questions about site policies, review the Privacy Policy and Terms of Service.

Picture the inbox on a quiet Tuesday morning: one reader sends a scan of a regional concert review, another adds the missing newspaper date, and a short editorial note turns a loose clipping into a usable archive record.

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