High-school senior
Leonard Maltin was publisher of
Film Fan Monthly. In spring 1968 a teacher introduced him to an editor at
Signet Books, which wanted a competitor to
Steven H. Scheuer's
Movies on TV; impressed by Maltin's ideas for the book the editor hired him immediately, without telling others that he had hired a 17-year-old. The first edition of Maltin's book, originally called
TV Movies, appeared in September 1969 featuring 8,000 of the 14,000 films available for television at the time and contained 535 pages, including 32 pages of photos. Unlike Scheuer's book at the time,
TV Movies included the movie's director, running time and larger cast lists. A second edition appeared five years later. After a third in 1978, new editions appeared every two years, and after 1986 every year. Maltin's regular appearance on
Entertainment Tonight from 1982 and the rise of home video and cable television saw an increase in sales of the book. In 2005, logistical problems of a single book prompted him to launch a companion volume, ''Leonard Maltin's Classic Movie Guide'', restricted to films from 1960 and earlier, several of which no longer appear in the annual publication (some had been deleted over the years to make room for newer films, others removed at this point because the additional title permitted it) and many others that never had. The latter category includes the "complete" (according to Maltin's introduction) Saturday matinee cowboy programmers of
John Wayne,
William "Hopalong Cassidy" Boyd,
Gene Autry and
Roy Rogers. The second edition of the
Classic Movie Guide, published in 2010, moved the cut-off date to 1965. Since the 2013 edition, the Movie Guide was subtitled
The Modern Era. Maltin announced in August 2014 that the 2015 edition, to be published in September 2014, would be the last: ==Editors==