Us Weekly's Janice Min says she has no idea. Kim France of Lucky says, "I cannot answer that without putting on my silly hat!" Esquire's David Granger thinks magazines will be using more expensive paper or implementing a "cover where the paper will actually fold into different shapes" to make for a more tactile reading experience. Who knew David Granger liked origami? Kurt Andersen, who is a certified genius (look it up!), says that there is a chance magazines will be considered even more of a luxury in 10 years time because paper will be a rarer commodity. Also in the next ten years, per Kurt: "The easy portable piece of plastic on which each magazine can be beamed."
It is former Condé Nast editorial director James Truman, however, who has the most depressing view. "Editors were protected a long time ago from thinking about their magazines like businesses, especially at Condé Nast, but that changed in the last 10 years. Now editors are brand managers as much as they are editorial experts."
So basically in 10 years we will all be reading extended fashion advertorials. But at least they will maybe be printed on actual paper!