<p><span class="p-body"><i>The article was published on July 22, 2024</i></span></p>
<p><span class="p-body">The final week of NYU’s Summer Publishing Institute 2024 was marked by a variety of career opportunities and industry visits, as well as some brilliant New York City heat. On Wednesday, June 26th, our class split into three groups, each of which would be visiting a different media company. My group headed uptown, to the historic Hearst Tower by Columbus Circle, where we took a tour of the offices, labs, and studios of Good Housekeeping. Upon entering the office, we were greeted by the Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval. This Seal is granted to products that the Good Housekeeping Institute has tested and endorsed. The magazine is confident in its endorsements, but knows its reputation comes down to each user’s personal experience, therefore if any product with the Seal proves to be defective, the magazine vouches to personally refund its consumers. </span></p>
<p><span class="p-body">As we walked through the office, the hallways were decorated with products tested throughout the years by the Good Housekeeping Institute. Their standards are so high and their research is so thorough that they banned tobacco advertising back in 1952, twelve years before the US Surgeon General issued a report on the dangers of smoking. They also reported on the dangers of excess sugar in 1927, way before the FDA did. </span></p>
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