The Saturday Evening Post
/ðə ˌsætədeɪ ˌiːvnɪŋ ˈpəʊst/, /ðə ˌsætədi ˌiːvnɪŋ ˈpəʊst/
/ðə ˌsætərdeɪ ˌiːvnɪŋ ˈpəʊst/, /ðə ˌsætərdi ˌiːvnɪŋ ˈpəʊst/
- a US magazine established in 1821 and published each week until 1963, then every two weeks until 1969. It became one of America's most popular general magazines from the 1920s to the 1960s and was known especially for its covers painted by Norman Rockwell and its fiction by such writers as William Faulkner and F Scott Fitzgerald. It stopped being published in 1969 but began again in 1971 and is now published six times a year.