The magazines are:
Time
Wired
The Economist
Reader's Digest
Forbes
Rolling Stone
MIT Technology Review
Cosmopolitan
National Geographic
Sports Illustrated
Game Informer
Men's Health
Money
Vanity Fair
Newtype
Teen Vogue
Smithsonian
GQ
The Week
Better Homes and Gardens
People
The New Yorker
Fortune
Weekly Shonen Jump
American Rifleman
New Scientist
Esquire
He does not have to be the sole figure on the cover for it to count.
It does not have to be a photo or photorealistic to count - stylized depictions of Eliezer will count.
International/regional editions of magazines count so long as they are official and released in print.
@EliTyre Some publications were chosen because they could sound somewhat plausible, other publications were chosen because I thought they would be funny for people to consider, and in general I wanted to abuse a phenomenon Eliezer described once, where when you break a question into lots of distinct possible outcomes Reality is very impressed with how disjunctive it all sounds and allocates more probability.
If he is literally printed on the cover of money (for example, one of the next euro bills), does that count?