Archive for the ‘News and Views’ Category

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New Christian Makers: A Museum In A Magazine. The Mr. Magazine™ Interview With Garreth Blackwell, Creative Director & Editor-in-Chief

October 26, 2024

“Now that digital media is the dominant form out there, I think that books and magazines are showing the strengths they’ve always had, which is they’re a respite.”

“Print is a place where you can get away from the noise that never stops in the digital world and have some sort of actual quiet experience within your own home.”

To say I am a proud professor would be a major understatement.  What one of my former students has accomplished brings nothing but pure joy to this retired professor.  Dr. Garreth Blackwell, my former student and assistant director of the Magazine Innovation Center during my tenure at The University of Mississippi is now an accomplished assistant professor at Virginia Commonwealth University School of Art and the editor-in-chief and creative director of a new magazine aptly named New Christian Makers. 

Garreth, a maker himself, has accomplished so much since he departed from Ole Miss.  He worked hard to attain a Ph.D. and a teaching position, in addition to editing and designing many different projects with the helping eyes of his wife Callie, also a former student of mine and an accomplished designer herself.

The father of four still finds the time to edit and design the new magazine that  he calls “a labor of love,” that the entire family is involved with. 

Flipping through the pages of the first issue of New Christian Makers was like entering through the door of a museum and feasting my eyes on one art piece after the other.  A masterful curation of 30 artists and makers and a pure delight for this retired professor.  I may not be teaching classes any longer, but as you can see from my blog, I am still tracking and consulting with the magazine creators and makers.  Garreth Blackwell is the latest maker whom I had the pleasure of interviewing about the first issue of New Christian Makers.  Please enjoy my conversation with the editor-in-chief and creative director of New Christion Makers Dr. Garreth Blackwell.  But first the soundbites…

On the genesis of the magazine: “We started to see a lot of folks who had considered themselves makers, artists, designers, whatever it may be, they had time to actually make again.”

More on the genesis of the magazine: “One of the things that we started to see is that even though it seemed like the world was crumbling all around us in 2020, the art we saw coming out was very hopeful.”

On the uniqueness of print: “There’s nothing that beats opening up a box of things fresh off the press and just seeing them, smelling them and seeing that that’s something you’ve put together and done.”

On why New Christion Makers is in print: “The only way to do that would be a tangible product in somebody’s hand. It would have to be a book or a magazine or something of the sort, because we all understood that social media just wasn’t cutting it, that digital platforms, for lack of a better term, were kind of cheap. They didn’t ask a lot of the viewer.”

More on why the magazine is in print: “Having a thing in your hand, touching it, seeing it, actually was much more humanizing.”

On his elevator pitch of the magazine: “The elevator pitch is that for a long time, the historical church was the center of culture. It was where art was preserved. It’s where libraries began. It’s where hospitals started. It was the place where a lot of what we understand as Western culture started.”

On the mission of the magazine: “New Christian Makers seeks to connect artists who have foundational beliefs in Jesus Christ, who make things to the glory of God and the flourishing of a world that we think should be good, true, and beautiful.”

On his reason for the love of paper: “I think there’s more relationship with the paper than there is with the flickering pixels.”

On the future of print: “It would just become a much more niche-based thing. So we see it with people buying vinyl records and things. But as far as print goes, I don’t know that it ever left.”

On the strength of print: “Everything is constantly going, never stopping, and magazines and books give you a rest stop on that busy, busy highway to just take a break.”

More on the strength of print: “More filling than they are depleting, which the research shows that digital media and social media especially can be very, very depleting to people. It takes a lot out of somebody to spend their day engaged just digitally, whereas you don’t have that same experience with print.”

On his role in the magazine: “Moving forward from here on out, the curation is actually going to be something where I would be more of a curation facilitator-in-chief.”

On the magazine as a museum: “One of the things about going into a gallery or a museum is that you’re able to go in and it is a quieting place. It’s a place where you can feel reflective with work. You can look at it, spend time with it. We wanted that to be the same case here.”

On whether the magazine is a mission or a business: “If I were just to give you a blanket answer before going specific, I would say what good business isn’t also a mission. And I think that’s part of it. I think if we focus on mission first, the business can follow. But very often, if the business is the sole focus, the mission will get muddied and get lost.”

On the frequency of the magazine: “So by the time we’re in full swing, we’ll have seven issues a year coming out.”

And now for the lightly edited conversation with Garreth Blackwell, creative director and editor-in-chief of New Christion Makers magazine:

Samir Husni: My first question to you is, and pun is intended, what is the genesis of the New Christian Makers magazine?

Garreth Blackwell: I’ve been trying to think of where it all started. It’s been a hard, hard time to figure out where we started, but the best way to describe the genesis of it is that in 2020, when everything just went sideways during quarantine, there were a lot of things that people didn’t know about.

People, I think, started to re-understand. One of the things is that disconnected communication and disconnected relationships were not actually something that were fulfilling and stabilizing for people’s lives. Something that also came up is that we started to see a lot of folks who had considered themselves makers, artists, designers, whatever it may be, they had time to actually make again.

These two things together, you started to see a lot of really amazing art start to come out of people’s homes. For the last six or seven years, I’ve been involved in the operations side of a local art gallery here in Richmond. One of the things that we started to see is that even though it seemed like the world was crumbling all around us in 2020, the art we saw coming out was very hopeful.

It was beautiful. It was something that really helped people remind themselves of how wonderful the world actually is and how good God is to give us the world we have, even when it’s upside down or sideways. We started talking a lot, and I have a friend who just like me, we love making stuff.

I’ve always enjoyed books and magazines. I’ve always enjoyed making them. There’s nothing that beats opening up a box of things fresh off the press and just seeing them and smelling them and seeing that that’s something you’ve put together and done.

When we started having these conversations, we said, what does it actually look like for people to be connected, for communities to be established and developed? We said, well, we probably need to make some sort of journal. At that time, we were thinking about writing, maybe something that had some long-form content. But the more we thought about it, the more it just made sense that we needed to connect a community of folks who existed in disparate ways.

The only way to do that would be a tangible product in somebody’s hand. It would have to be a book or a magazine or something of the sort, because we all understood that social media just wasn’t cutting it, that digital platforms, for lack of a better term, were kind of cheap. They didn’t ask a lot of the viewer.

In fact, they just kind of took a lot from the viewer. They took your data and they took your interests and they took all of this for a free product. But we knew that having a thing in your hand, touching it, seeing it, actually was much more humanizing.

It was much more about the embodiment of people in real ways together. So here we are, and we’ve got New Christian Makers issue one, and issue two should be out early next year.

Samir Husni: You created a museum in a magazine. Tell me, what’s the elevator pitch for the magazine?

Garreth Blackwell: The elevator pitch is that for a long time, the historical church was the center of culture. It was where art was preserved. It’s where libraries began. It’s where hospitals started. It was the place where a lot of what we understand as Western culture started.

So throughout the Industrial Revolution, throughout modernism and everything else, those cultural centers shifted. But the historical import of the church and Christians as makers and people who helped to define culture, that never changed. We may have just had a few other voices in the room that were pretty loud.

So New Christian Makers seeks to connect artists who have foundational beliefs in Jesus Christ, who make things to the glory of God and the flourishing of a world that we think should be good, true, and beautiful. So New Christian Makers is about making art with and for your friends, and then going out and making more friends.

Samir Husni: Do you think there’s a community of  people your age that are rediscovering print or never left print?

Garreth Blackwell: I think it’s hard because I waffle back and forth on whether they’re discovering it, rediscovering it, or if they’ve always kind of been there. You can see behind me, print has never stopped being something that I enjoy.

I love books. I love how they are and how they exist. I love magazines. I still would prefer to sit in the airport waiting for my plane with a magazine rather than my phone just scrolling through. I think there’s more relationship with the paper than there is with the flickering pixels. But I think as far as my generation goes, we are seeing that, and we saw this in early 2000s with Chris Anderson The Long Tail, where he was talking about that generational media of sorts would never really go away.

It would just become a much more niche-based thing. So we see it with people buying vinyl records and things. But as far as print goes, I don’t know that it ever left.

I think that they began to sequester print to a kind of academic space, right? Like, I buy a book to think about a thing or learn about something, but they didn’t see it as an escape. Well, social media was that escape because we were surrounded by so much print media. Now that digital media is the dominant form out there, I think that books and magazines are showing the strengths they’ve always had, which is they’re a respite.

Print is a place where you can get away from the noise that never stops in the digital world and have some sort of actual quiet experience within your own home. So I think there’s a great draw to that. We have a lot of friends who will spend their evenings with books and magazines because it’s just quieter.

Everything is constantly going, never stopping, and magazines and books give you a rest stop on that busy, busy highway to just take a break. So they are more filling than they are depleting, which the research shows that digital media and social media especially can be very, very depleting to people. It takes a lot out of somebody to spend their day engaged just digitally, whereas you don’t have that same experience with print.

Samir Husni: I noticed in your editorial and in the introduction to the magazine that everything in the magazine is curated. Are you the curator-in-chief, or how is that process of curation taking place?

Garreth Blackwell: Well, it’s fantastic because, like I mentioned in the write-up in the magazine, we could have filled several issues with the people who submitted. And with any new venture, you never have any idea.

Is this going to be good, or are we going to get quality content? Will people even care? We had a strong conscience that they would, but you’re never totally sure. So in terms of curation, one of the things that we wanted to do was make sure we just got our first issue out. We got it out there.

People could see the proof of concept. It wasn’t just talking about it. But moving forward from here on out, the curation is actually going to be something where I would be more of a curation facilitator-in-chief.

We’re going to have guest curators who come in from different parts of the art world, whether they are writers, illustrators, graphic designers, painters, professors, researchers. We’re going to have other folks who come in because it will be kind of a curation by committee of sorts. So we take in whoever we’re blessed enough to receive as applicants, and then we pick our 30 that we want to showcase in that issue that we think just show the breadth and beauty of what’s out there.

Then we have a handful of folks that we know will be just on the cusp of that, and we want to make sure we show them off as honorable mentions as well. So it’s technically just the same way that an exhibition would be in a gallery or museum, just in print.

Samir Husni: So as I walk into that museum and flip the pages, which are designed in a nice horizontal space to project exactly like your eyes, tell me more about the decision to have this specific size (9X7), it’s unusual size for a magazine.

Garreth Blackwell: We debated a lot because if you look at the genre of  art books in general or art magazines, you’re going to have things that are very large format because you want to have as much real estate for the eye as possible. So it makes sense, but you also have some other constraints that really have to be dealt with when you’re talking about something of this kind. One, we needed to make sure that we kept the per issue price at a point that would be proper expectations for the market.

So from our research, we knew we had to hit somewhere south of $40, but could be above $20. And we wanted to make sure that we could do that well for folks so we could serve them in that way. The other thing is you have to mail stuff.

When you don’t have the larger size group of folks, larger size of constituency or reader base, you have to take a lot of that in consideration because you may not have a thousand pieces that you can go to the post office with to try to negotiate a lower rate. We’re shipping much lower than that. So we wanted to make sure we hit all of the economic marks for ourselves, but also we wanted something that did feel intimate.

One of the things about going into a gallery or a museum is that you’re able to go in and it is a quieting place. It’s a place where you can feel reflective with work. You can look at it, spend time with it.

We wanted that to be the same case here. We also wanted to make sure that it was still portable, that this was something you could pass to your friends, you could show off to others.

Some of the bigger, bulkier art books. I have a few books on my shelf behind me from Taschen that they’ll break your back, right? I mean, they’re not really passable books for the most part to friends. But this is something we wanted to make sure somebody could kind of throw in the seat of their car, take it to their friend’s house, show it to them, have on a bookcase, pull it off, and easily pass around. So we kind of ended up on this size because it did all the things we wanted it to.

Visually, like you said, it moves you left and right across. It feels very much like you’re viewing a gallery or a museum. The size helped us economically, but they also helped us in terms of how we wanted it to be used.

So form, function, economics all had to be considered. And this was the best of all possible worlds.

Samir Husni: You mentioned the economics. So is this venture a business or a mission?

Garreth Blackwell: Oh, gosh, that’s such a tough question. Well, I think if I were just to give you a blanket answer before going specific, I would say what good business isn’t also a mission. And I think that’s part of it.

In a large part, it is mission first, because with what we’re doing, we went into it knowing that this was going to be a labor of love. It was going to be nights and weekends. It was going to be.

My children were helping me pack envelopes, sending them off to people. My wife was, as always, a second set of eyes to make sure that all of my spelling errors or missed things that just became white noise visually as I was designing actually were corrected, that I wasn’t doing the same kind of habitual design mistakes that I tend to that she came in and helped with all that. So it’s been a wonderful way for a lot of us to do work together.

And because we knew that it wasn’t going to be something that just skyrocketed,  I would say it’s more of a mission to connect artists who have foundational beliefs about life and the way that the world is supposed to be, that do things with excellence towards God. I think that if we can connect those people and provide a playground for them to showcase what they do in a way that brings joy and promotes them, I don’t think we ever have to really have full time positions to do it.

It can stay working. I think if we focus on mission first, the business can follow. But very often, if the business is the sole focus, the mission will get muddied and get lost.

Samir Husni: Excellent. Is there any question that, before I ask you my personal questions, that I failed to ask you or anything else you would like to add about New Christian Makers?

Garreth Blackwell: I would say one thing, because it’s nothing we talked about in the first issue, but just to give some kind of clarifying questions, we’re at $25 per copy as the cover price for it. The outlook for the magazine is something that we have, I’ve been slowly stepping into.

We wanted to make sure we tested the market and tested it in a real way, not in some sort of fake or less quality than it would eventually be, but actually do the thing. So I had this really great old professor back in the day, and he talked a lot about how your frequencies can change as you understand what’s going on, and as you test the market. So I’m taking his advice to heart, and I’m saying, well, the first year, I’m going to do two of these, because I think two is very reasonable. But by the time we get to full frequency, we’re going to be a quarterly publication with three special editions each year.

The quarterly publication will be exactly like what you’ve seen. And the special editions, one will be geared towards professors within art schools, so that we can showcase the things they’re doing. Because within the current art culture right now people aren’t so excited about you if you’re a Christian. So giving them a platform and a place where they can showcase their work, their research, what they’re doing, we think is a necessary and needed thing.

The second one will be for rising seniors in high school in the arts, because we want to showcase young artists as soon as possible. We know how hard it is to get your work out there, and how most of college, if you’re in an art program or a design program, you’re going to just be going up against a brick wall trying to get your work shown somewhere. So we want to provide a platform for that.

And then each year, we’ll have an annual that would be a kind of a best of show for the year, where we showcase in depth the folks who have really just been the winners, the kind of best of issue for each issue. So by the time we’re in full swing, we’ll have seven issues a year coming out.

Samir Husni: So tell me, Garrett, if I come uninvited one night to your house, what do I catch you doing? Reading a book, watching TV, taking care of the four children?

Garreth Blackwell: Oh, gosh, Doc, I would say most nights, you probably find me accidentally dozing off in my chair. I think that’d be the truest answer. But it’s a smattering of things.

As a family, we do watch a lot of like different makers on YouTube, whether that’s like people who build homes, or make small dioramas, or models, or things like that. So different things the kids have interest in. Dude Perfect is constantly on the TV at the house. But there are, I would say, most nights, we’re around the kitchen table, we’re talking about stuff, we’re hanging out, the kids are drawing and playing, and we’re just trying to stay awake until we can go to bed.

Samir Husni: My typical last question is what keeps you up at night these days?

Garreth Blackwell: I’ve heard you ask this question a million times. And I would say that probably every other time I heard you ask it, I had a quick answer. And I knew because that’s the folly of youth, right? To have extremely quick answers to things that maybe you shouldn’t.

What keeps me up at night? I think a lot of the times, the things that keep me up at night are, what am I building for my kids? I think that’s what it is. I thought a lot the last few years about what it looks like for the things you do to produce a generational impact. I’ve got the things that I like and I desire.

I have the things that I have interest and ability in. And I know that won’t be the exact same things for my kids. But with four kids ranging from almost 11 to just turning one, there’s a whole range of what I want for them.

One of the things I want for them is to build something that they can take and do something with, no matter how small that is. So when I think of things like New Christian Makers or the other stuff I’m a part of, I always like to think of, what could my daughter do with this? How could I grow my son into doing something with this? I think it takes folks a long time to figure out what they like and what they want. And sometimes it might be helpful if a little earlier in their lives we say to our kids, hey, here’s a thing you can do right now.

You don’t have to be in your early 40s to launch a magazine. Why don’t you launch one with dad? Why don’t you learn design not in a classroom one day because you think it’s cool. But what if you learn design as part of the work you’re doing as a family business, as a hopeful family business? So I think that’s probably it, what am I leaving for my kids in terms of things for them to do, stuff for them to have in the world they’re going to inhabit?

Samir Husni: Thank you and good luck.

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There Is Nothing Basic About BASIC Magazine And The Woman Behind It: Viktorija Pashuta. The Mr. Magazine™ Interview.

October 10, 2024

Viktorija Pashuta, the founder, CEO,  and editor in chief of  BASIC magazine, left her home country, Latvia, with a little book that she started writing her ideas in it at age 11. Her dream was that one day she would create all the ideas in that book.  One of the ideas must have been BASIC magazine: an upscale magazine that is anything but basic.

Also an award-winning director and film maker, Viktorija Pashuta launched BASIC magazine seven years ago in Los Angeles as “a print platform for artists from all over the world to express themselves and give them the opportunity to share their artwork and their passions on the pages of the print magazine.”

I was so impressed by the quality of the magazine and the way it has progressed since its launch. Flipping through the pages of BASIC was like taking a first-class trip around the world, luscious photography accompanied by imaginative design and complemented by beautiful typography. It is a delight for both the eye and the brain.

A photographer by profession, Ms. Pashuta is also a writer who combines the art of audio-visual writing to her editorials that introduce every issue of the magazine.  She is a dreamer and she is more than willing to share her dreams with you. When I asked her what she would be doing if I stop by unannounced, she told me that, “sometimes you could catch me doing something weird like I imagine I’m a batman and I’ll go outside in the dark streets and just walk around at night and there would be someone who needs my help randomly.”

It was hard to separate her drive for life and adventure from her passion and zeal for BASIC magazine.  So, please join me with this wonderful conversation with Viktorija Pashuta, founder, CEO and editor in chief of BASIC magazine.  But first, the soundbites:

On why print: “I’m really proud that BASIC is actually in print, not in digital…It was really important to create a physical product, a magazine that has the presence in the physical world.”

On how to do print today: “The idea was to invest in the quality of the paper, invest in the quality of binding, invest in talent, create content that is timeless and you wouldn’t easily find online.”

On the challenges of creating a magazine: “If I knew then what I had to go through, I’d probably think twice if I should start a print magazine…it’s not enough just to have the funds. You also have to be extremely passionate about it and live with it.”

More on challenges of creating a magazine: “There were definitely challenges creating content that would resonate online and also would be relevant in print because these are two complete different platforms.”

On sources of revenue: “I created different avenues with the product placement that we utilize the smaller brands and provided them additional value by creating unique organic content for them within the pages of the magazine.

On appearing on the cover of the magazine: “That actually was very unplanned and I’m a person that would never put myself on a cover because I thought that’s sort of abusing your power.”

More on appearing on the cover of the magazine: “I thought if you use yourself as the main inspiration I think it will give inspiration for other people to believe in themselves and keep going with whatever ventures they enter.”

On finding the BASIC DNA: “We’re trying to shape our own voice which I think was the hardest thing and I think for any brand it’s really hard to stand out in the crowd so that’s kind of our goal been to find our DNA, to find BASIC  DNA and to really stick to it and be authentic.”

On her life’s philosophy: “The most talented people are very humble and they don’t really want to push themselves. The loudest people on social media are usually the least talented.”

More on her life’s philosophy: “I’m a hardcore fan of the cat woman, so I believe being behind the scenes and being that savior for those who cannot speak for themselves and elevate people. I would love to do more charity work. I would love to help more people.”

And now for the lightly edited conversation with Viktorija Pashuta, founder and editor in chief of BASIC magazine:

Samir Husni: As I told you in my email BASIC is anything but BASIC. Tell me the elevator pitch. What is BASIC magazine?

Viktorija Pashuta: Well, BASIC, first of all, it’s my passion project.

This is something I’ve been craving and wanted to do since I was in high school. And pretty much it’s a platform that provides opportunity for artists from all over the world to express themselves and to give them that opportunity to share their artwork and their passions on the pages of print magazine. And I’m really proud that BASIC is actually in print, not in digital.

So we take pride creating such a publication that became sort of a coffee table book and collectible edition. So yeah, like you said, absolutely right. BASIC is everything but BASIC.

Samir Husni: You wrote that while others are abandoning print and are going digital, and with the high increase of paper costs, mailing costs, you name it. Why is this print drive that you have?

Viktorija Pashuta: Well, I think I believe that nowadays there is such a high demand for interpersonal connections, for physical products, for physical touch, especially in our modern age of technology and of desensitization of the society, of people not being willing to connect in person or they really craving to have personal interpersonal experiences. So for me, it was really important to create a physical product, a magazine that has the presence in the physical world.

Besides that, I believe that the pages transcend the experiences that we go through creating the magazine. What’s really important is being on set, creating a community, working with passionate people with the same interests and sharing those passions with the world through the print publication. I’ve noticed that trend, especially being myself constantly on social media, that you have those two, three seconds to look at the post, like the post and you forget about it.

But the beauty about print publication, it’s something you look through, but then you put it in a shelf, you can get back to it later. You can look through it and you have this connection that digital can never substitute.

I always have a comparison. Would you like to have a digital kiss or a physical, actual kiss? And the same with print. We want that interpersonal connection. It’s very similar to the luxury sector where we want to have luxury products, luxury experiences, and the same with print.

The idea was to invest in the quality of the paper, invest in the quality of binding, invest in talent, create content that is timeless and you wouldn’t easily find online. So that was the goal. And for me, it was extremely important to create a physical product and have basic in print.

Samir Husni: It sounds like you have had in the last seven years since you launched BASIC, a walk in the old garden, or was there some challenges, there were some thorns across the road?

Viktorija Pashuta: Oh, absolutely. I mean, every step of the way, there was a challenge starting from the fact that when I was getting myself into print, I had zero knowledge in publishing, zero knowledge in printing, zero knowledge in logistics.

All I knew is photography since I started to be a fashion photographer and experience in writing since I was writing back in my country for another smaller magazine. That’s all I had. And then if I knew then what I had to go through, I’d probably think twice if I should start a print magazine.

I thought, oh my God, it’s so easy. I’m going to do it. But then once you start doing it and you realize how huge of an undertaking it is from looking for clients and advertisers, looking for cover stars, being on top of current affairs and finding the budgets for the productions and finding the right team, the passionate, loyal team that would have the same vision as you have or be willing to bring your vision to life.

So all of these things are very, very complex. Even people and companies with unlimited budget would consider having a print magazine quite an undertaking. So it’s not enough just to have the funds.

You also have to be extremely passionate about it and live with it. So I live BASIC. I live 24-7 with the publication, with the ideas, with the concepts, with the things we need to do with the project.

Definitely there were some challenges. There were challenges on many levels, on the production level, to really build the team, to have the right team to support me, to support the vision, to find the funds to run the publication since the magazine is fully self-funded. And I can talk a little bit more about that,  and different avenues, how we monetize the publication, how we keep it alive.

There were definitely challenges creating content that would resonate online and also would be relevant in print because these are two complete different platforms. And something that goes for print would necessarily go viral online and vice versa. If you take an influencer that has millions of followers online and put them in print, it’s going to completely contradict itself and not going to resonate with the audience who loves the fresh print, who loves to read something more meaningful and in-depth with the in-depth research.

Those are two different things were really hard to blend, but I managed to do it. I started it with the viral project, blending my photography and having a concept that resonated both online and in print. That concept was what if cars were supermodels.

I took different types of cars like a Tesla, a Toyota,  and a Ferrari. I imagined what they would look like if they were supermodels. So that concept went viral right away. We got so many, like almost billion impressions online and so many different magazines picked it up and translated to different languages. And for print, it also was a really good artistic series. So things like that are used to sort of be relevant in the digital time, but also print relevant, you know, in modern times.

Samir Husni:  How do you monetize BASIC?

Viktorija Pashuta: Very interesting question, because in my mind, the traditional advertising didn’t work. Something that worked maybe 10, 15 years ago when you have a full page of  a luxury brand, it wouldn’t work for BASIC because  we didn’t have the right numbers for the advertisers.

We didn’t have the right quantities in the beginning. We didn’t have enough celebrity power at the time. So in order to survive, we had to be creative. We had to be resourceful.  I created different avenues with the product placement that we utilize the smaller brands and provided them additional value by creating unique organic content for them within the pages of the magazine.

So we started to get that product and integrate the product within our editorials, within our articles, within the special projects that we were creating, at the same time, giving the brand so much more value than they would have gotten in a digital, I mean, in the traditional media, just having a one page ad, they would get traction, they would get word of mouth, they would get new original content that they in turn would use on their social media pages.

That was one of the things that we utilize is the product placement.
Secondly, we started to create specific targeted projects for brands that would increase the brand awareness and create content that will resonate with the image of the brand. So we take a suitcase company brand and we create a series of imagery that would support that brand.

For example, we work with a Taiwanese brand of suitcases called Desenio and their series were based on the Marvel Comic-Con heroes like Hulk and Captain America and Black Panther. We took those suitcases and I reimagined them as a female superheroes because traditionally in the Comic-Con world, all these characters were played by male characters. So I took a female Black Panther, I took a female Hulk, I took a female Captain America and then we utilized through fashion a series of works for them holding the suitcase in the photo shoot series that also became viral and we actually got the word of the ads of the world website for that campaign also printed and that both got viral digitally.

In addition, we diversified our revenue streams by utilizing additional activations that supported the magazine non-directly like organizing events, creating a production company that would create social media content for brands. We created a fashion showroom that represents fashion designers and provide press placements for those designers.

We had different revenue streams also connected to entertainment, fashion and content creation but non-directly they all were supporting BASIC magazine and all under the Basic Media Company umbrella and that really helped us to keep going and help us to succeed. That doesn’t mean we don’t want traditional advertising, we want it but at the same time that challenge pushed us to be more creative and find new non-traditional ways to monetize our operations.

Samir Husni: It sounds like more than a love affair with BASIC for you,  yet at the same time it’s one of the rare moments that I see the editor-in-chief herself on the cover of the magazine. Tell me about that.

Viktorija Pashuta: Yes, that actually was very unplanned and I’m a person that would never put myself on a cover because I thought that’s sort of abusing your power.  But for that specific issue it was very challenging to find a cover star.  It was the 20th issue of BASIC. The stars that were suggested to us from publicists didn’t really match my aesthetic or they didn’t really were in line with the grandeur of the matter because it was a 20th issue. I wanted to do something special, none of the stars really kind of match that idea .My sister suggested, “that since it’s our 20th issue why don’t you put yourself on a cover and have your team inside of the magazine.”

I said no.  I mean that would be too much. I would never really do that.  Why would I do this? She said well it makes sense because you  are the only photographer and the editor in chief. You are the visioner of the magazine that’s out there.  Even Anna Wintour editor in chief of Vogue didn’t invent Vogue but you did. So I thought maybe that is something interesting to explore and also with my own story I can inspire other people specifically other women because I do have a quite big female following that always admire my journey and admire my tenacity and they know how difficult it is so that was a testament to the team and to myself.  I thought okay if you cannot inspire yourself how can you inspire the world.  I thought if you use yourself as the main inspiration , it will give inspiration for other people to believe in themselves and keep going with whatever ventures they enter.

Samir Husni: Well, your sister was right.

Viktorija Pashuta: I hope so. She’s always my secret advisor and, to have a little confession, most of the time she helps me with my editor’s letter.  She has a very interesting perspective on things.

Samir Husni: You and I are having the same conversation in 2025. What would you tell me you’ve accomplished in the 24-25 year for BASIC?

Viktorija Pashuta: I think we made such a huge leap even right now. Look back at the first issues of the magazine. I’ve seen how different we’ve transformed since issue one and I also think it’s deeply connected to my own personal transformation. Certain things that interested me seven years ago no longer interested me now. As far as I grow personally and I transform personally so does the magazine. I feel we’ve done so much but also so little in my mind within the seven years. I always had these grand goals. I thought by this time we would become such a huge media company with huge following and it would have a very huge impact, but we’re not there yet. At the same time

I learned that no matter how big you become or no matter how successful you become you will never truly be satisfied with what you have and I think that’s a good thing that will always keep you pushing because once you feel like you’ve done it all and if you accomplish it all this stagnation period starts and you kind of start degrade and I always say the same about Oscar winning actors I feel like when DiCaprio won that Oscar he kind of slowed down. I always kind of wanted him not to win that Oscar because you know he’s going to push more, do more movies, do something more mind-blowing and keep growing as an actor so the same thing for me. I feel like even though I’m so close of being big but at the same time it always keeps pushing me to do better.

Looking back if we’re talking in 2025  I think we’ve done some really great accomplishments. We had quite a few renowned stars from Megan Fox to David Guetta to Michelle Rodriguez to Bebe Rex. All these really amazing personalities in music, film, and art world. So it’s been really great to have those celebrities.

I think we did quite a shift, especially for the past few issues, having more written content as before. In the beginning stages of BASIC we started highly as a visual publication. We had a lot of editorials, a lot of artworks, but we didn’t have a lot of articles. Right now we started to have more in-depth interviews. A little more articles, a little more research, a little more data, that we’re trying to get a little bit more a point of view, and trying to shape that BASIC identity.

We’re trying to shape our own voice which I think was the hardest thing and I think for any brand it’s really hard to stand out in the crowd so that’s kind of our goal been to find our DNA, to find BASIC  DNA and to really stick to it and be authentic

 I have a lot things to share but looking back I think we’ve done a lot of immersive projects, a lot of interesting events, which right now is my priority. My goal is to not also have a beautiful publication, but to create a community outside of the magazine, and that’s been my focus.  As of right now I want to involve more projects supporting artists, supporting female founders, supporting emerging musicians, emerging student designers. For me I really want to be the voice for those who cannot really speak.

The most talented people are very humble and they don’t really want to push themselves. The loudest people on social media are usually the least talented. I want to shift that dynamic and give the platform for the truly talented people who don’t really have crazy presence on social media but they have something to say and they have some beautiful artwork that they’ve been working the whole life.

That’s my goal, that’s my passion, and looking back I feel we’ve done a lot, but I want to do more.

Samir Husni:  Before I ask my typical last two questions is there any question I failed to ask  or anything you would like to add.

Viktorija Pashuta: Interesting question. If you allow me just to kind of philosophize, I always feel that I want to judge myself . I feel, as any artist, there is always an internal struggle and sometimes people became too much consumed by consuming things right there’s so much choice and there’s so much pressure to be successful and to create, create, create and sometimes we kind of lose ourselves in that process and we lose ourselves. Why are we doing these things, what’s the purpose?

For me, it’s been a continuous journey to find myself and to find my voice, but also to be silent and listen more to those who have something to say so with the magazine. Maybe the question would be how individuals, who stand behind this smaller passionate project, how do they really keep that positive mindset that allows them to keep motivating themselves every day and keep continuing doing what they do because it’s not easy.  

It’s always challenging. You always have this black and white stripes every day, you want to give up one day and the another day like no I’m doing something right. I want to continue because you feel there’s a feedback, and another day just like why am I doing all this.  There’s so much already out there I just might just stop and get an eight to five job and just be happy and travel.  But this is what I think really makes it so different for BASIC because despite all these challenges and the pains and the hurts you still persevere and still keep moving, still keep creating, because you know that’s through these pains you create something new, you make a difference, you inspire someone else and keep the planet going.

You keep grinding that wheel and you are not willing to settle and just take the easy path. I guess that would be my comment to your question,

Samir  Husni:  If I come to visit Viktorija one evening unannounced, what do I catch you doing cooking, watching tv, reading a book, reading a magazine?

Viktorija Pashuta: A good question. It depends on the day. I taught myself on the thought that I do live in my own bubble. I don’t know if it’s a good or bad thing to be so disconnected from the rest of the world.  If you come into my house you probably will see me doing either two things: one either watching a super dark bloody thriller or a documentary. I really love dark documentaries and research about unsolved crimes and cold cases.  I’m really passionate about that mystery and that enigma of those cases and trying to find what happened and who done it.

The second thing you may find me doing is spending time in silence. Having some candles on, having some essential oils, and just maybe dancing in the dark. I love dancing, I love connecting to myself through movement and I think it’s very important to move in general in your life with your mind physically emotionally being out there.

Sometimes you could catch me doing something weird like I imagine I’m a batman and I’ll go outside in the dark streets and just walk around at night and there would be someone who needs my help randomly. It happened to me a few times.  I just was at the right place at the right time to help somebody like an older person falling. Minor little things where I was just there at the right time to help them.

Samir Husni: Were you fascinated with the black cat back home in Latvia?

Viktorija Pashuta: Oh yeah.  I’m a hardcore fan of the cat woman so I believe being behind the scenes and being that savior for those who cannot speak for themselves and elevate people. I would love to do more charity work. I would love to help more people.  I’ve been trying to find something meaningful that connect with me, especially in the long term. I want to work more with kids and do more of the educational talks where I can inspire young people to find their passions.  I was really grateful having really great mentors in my life and I want to pass it on and give back and be that mentor for someone else down the line.

Samir Husni: My typical final question is what keeps Viktorija up at night these days?

Viktorija Pashuta: What keeps me up at night usually some obsessive idea that I will never do. I had so many obsessive ideas that I see them so vividly but they never come to life. I roll them over back and forth in my head and I’m just thinking yes that’s exactly what I’m going to do but at the end of the day never do them, so that keeps me up at night.

Some kind of concepts,visions, and dreams that I feel stuck in my brain but would never materialize and that really drives me crazy I want this magic one where, well,  maybe like a utopia thing where one day I would be like saying Viktorija, you have all the wealth in the world now, you can do anything you want. I actually had a little notebook that I’ve been writing since age 11. It contains all of the amazing cool concepts and ideas I want to do one day. Right now, that little book is full with ideas from books, shows, and restaurants.

I mean anything in the world that I could have created in that little book. So one day maybe if I have so much free time and unlimited wealth probably will bringing my crazy ideas to life.

Samir Husni: May all your wishes come true and thank you.

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United We Stand, Divided We Sit… A Mr. Magazine™ Musing

October 2, 2024

Unlike today’s mass media, magazines in the year 1942, specifically July,  were united across content, audience, genre, age, etc. United they stood and proudly displayed the American flag on their covers to celebrate and educate their audience that the country was “United We Stand” as the country entered WWII. 

Picking up any magazine in July of 1942,  people felt patriotic. Regardless of the nature of the magazine, all magazines were dedicated to a campaign to support the war and unity among the people of the United States of America.
Compare this to today’s mass media, whether satellite or cable television, social media, or even magazines, readers and viewers feel that they live in two countries. No longer United We Stand, but rather Divided We Sit.

As we approach the elections of 2024, both presidential and congressional, I hope these magazines of July 1942, will bring back that spirit of optimism and freedom that engulfed our nation in the 40s. Of special note is the July 25, 1942 issue of Liberty magazine with General James Doolittle on the cover. This copy of the special collector’s issue is signed by the general himself. For those of you who are too young to remember him, he is the one who flew over Japan in what is known as the Doolittle Raid.


Liberty magazine, as I mentioned earlier, was but one of many American magazines joining forces in the United We Stand campaign in supporting the country in times of crisis. Other magazines included the general interest magazines led by Reader’s Digest and National Geographic.

Even the children magazines joined the campaign. Jack and Jill magazine sported the American flag on the front cover and the Pledge of Allegiance on the back cover. The magazine used red and blue colors on every page.

Not to be outdone by the general interest and children magazines, women and men magazines did the same. American Home and Pic are but two examples of those genres. United We Stand indeed. When the mass media were a force to unite and not divide. For what it’s worth, I blame the 24/7 cable news channels with the beginning of division in the country that was then rapidly accelerated by social media.

I recall my former journalism professor telling us one day, “if everyone thinks that he or she is a journalist, then no one is a journalist.” That is the beginning of our problem and that’s why divided we sit in front of our phones, tablets, and the many cable and satellite channels. I hope it is not too late to be United We Stand, because the alternative is nothing short of a disaster.

As always keep in mind that if you would like to take a dive into the “oldies but goldies” magazines of the past, feel free to reach to John Henry at the Special Collections division of The University of Missouri Libraries and ask for the  Samir Husni Magazine Collection. Until the next musing, stay tuned …

All the best

Samir “Mr. Magazine™” Husni

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Ray Seebeck , The Twenty Something Young Person* Behind The Unique Print Magazine “Magazine TM” The Mr. Magazine™ Interview

September 28, 2024

“There’s something different about holding something in your hand and looking at it to actually create that experience that we want to create.” Ray Seebeck, Founder and Editor

They say Gen Z is the digital generation, and print is their parents and grandparents’ medium.  However, one twenty something young person from Chicago begs to differ from that adage. They are the founder and editor of  the print “Magazine TM” which they launched last year. 

The oversized, accordion bound magazine, is a beauty to view and a delight to flip through its pages. Ray wants the magazine to be an experience for artists and the audience. An experience it is. It is a very pleasant experience that ends with a series of pages that looks like a wall mural.

To say Ray is passionate about print, would be an understatement, but they are also very digitally oriented.  They use online for their research and searches for anything and everything beautiful. They hope to invest in that passion to create a profitable magazine that will hopefully make a living for them and those who work with them.

So please enjoy my conversation with a print fanatic, Ray Seebeck, founder and editor of “Magazine TM,” but first the soundbites:

On the role of print in a digital age: “For me the end solution is print. Part of what I’m trying to do is make that finished product.”

On the binding method for Magazine TM: “I wanted to do something that was memorable, that was unique for the first issue. We settled at the accordion bound method.”

On the magazine audience: “Right now, it’s mostly people in the art community is who I want to reach.”

On their vision of the magazine: “It’s more an experience of actually viewing art through how it’s designed.”

On their goal for the magazine: “I’m trying to make a model where it’s positive for the artists. It’s building community for the artists.”

On their aim to help artists: “It’s really important for the artists to have their work published. It’s huge. And then just to be doing something that I love is hopefully showing people and inspiring them in a small way.”

On the TM in Magazine: “The answer is no. It’s a play on letters… it’s not actually a trademark, but what it means is TM stands for The Magazine. So it’s basically Magazine, The Magazine is what it stands for.  And TM is like abbreviation.”

On what keeps them up at night: “It’s just the idea of the keeping the magazine running. That’s a big one.”

And now for the lightly edited conversation with Ray Seebeck, the founder and editor of Magazine TM:

Samir Husni: My first question to you is, you’re a young man in his 20s, and you launched and produced a print magazine unlike any other print magazine that I’ve seen in a long time. What’s your fascination with print?

Ray Seebeck: It probably started when I was a young kid. I did collect some magazines. I collected National Geographic, and we had Life Magazine running around the house, and Sports Illustrated.

I was a big Sports Illustrated fan, but I really got into print as an art form in college at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. I had some really great experiences there where I learned from teachers screen printing, lithography, and letterpress as well. So I really just developed. It was a great opportunity where I was able to chart my own education, and so I studied in the print media department at SAIC, where you were able to take the classes you want to take, and I was able to take a lot of classes related to printmaking and try to develop a lot of skills in that field.

Samir Husni: People will tell you we live in a digital age. What makes print so attractive to you? You’re so passionate about print, you produced a magazine called Magazine. What’s in you that makes you feel print is essential today as it was yesterday?

Ray Seebeck: It’s kind of a tough question to answer, but I feel print is just the answer, it’s the solution.

There’s no other solution for me. There’s no other possible route, like the end product. For me the end solution is print. Part of what I’m trying to do is make that finished product. There’s something different about holding something in your hand and looking at it to actually create that experience that we want to create. So printing is sort of a solution for that.

Samir Husni: Why did you choose this format for magazine? It opens up like an accordion and it becomes like a mural.

Ray Seebeck: I worked with, I worked with a few people to make it.

We had five meetings as we were preparing to make the magazine and as I was gathering submissions. And so one friend from New York, one of my classmates from college, and a friend’s friend from college. We had a few Zoom meetings.

My friend Christiaan, who’s a designer, the print designer, who works with me to design print, put together this like Pinterest board with different print and different binding ideas. We talked through what were the design details we wanted to have for the magazine. We discussed different binding formats.

We all kind of came to a decision together. I wanted to do something that was memorable, that was unique for the first issue. We settled at the accordion bound method. That opened up so many possibilities for the actual design of it, which was really exciting.

Then one of the people who I was working with asked what size we wanted to make it and we decided large format would also be very memorable. We went by the 11X17 size. Those are the two key elements as we decided accordion bound and large format.

Christiaan and I  had some book binding skills from our college days, so we were able to figure out how to do that.

I definitely want to turn it into a business and hopefully make a living off it and help other people make a living off it.

Samir Husni: Who’s your audience? Who do you want to reach with this magazine?

Ray Seebeck: Right now, it’s mostly people in the art community is who I want to reach.

I would love to reach art collectors. It is an audience I want to grow to. Anyone who’s like interested in art and artists. So I’m hoping to expand the audience. But right now it’s mostly people in our community.

Samir Husni: Give me the elevator pitch the magazine?

Ray Seebeck: I would say there’s a few things that are really important: I’m really trying to create a different kind of publication, something that’s different than what most people have seen before. A magazine that’s more an art experience. It’s a simple magazine. It’s more an experience of actually viewing art through how it’s designed. That’s one huge aspect is trying to do something really creative.

The second aspect is that I’m trying to create a better experience for the artists. So there are a few art magazines they make artists pay them to get involved in their magazine. I’m trying to make a model where it’s positive for the artists. It’s building community for the artists. And it’s something that artists want to be a part of and they can themselves grow through being involved in it. So those are the two key probably aspects, I would say.

Samir Husni: Is the magazine a mirror reflection of you? Are you the magazine?

Ray Seebeck: I would say yes and no. I put so much of myself into it. So in one way, it’s a lot of the artists in the magazine are artists, that I’ve had the pleasure of experiencing at art shows or events. I’m kind of reinterpreting the art that I’ve taken in through the magazine. So in that way, it’s sort of a reflection of me. And then also, I would say, being it’s not meant to be super loud. It’s not meant to be super loud and showy.

It’s meant to be reserved. Once you start looking at it, it’s kind of an amazing experience. In that way, it’s maybe a reflection of my personality maybe kind of a reach. I definitely put a lot of myself into it. But at the same time, I feel like it is something totally different. Just like an end product of a lot of hours of work.

Samir Husni: It sounds like you have a love affair with this publication. Do you ever or would you consider it to be also a business? Is your dream to make money from this or just to do a magazine and say, hey, I have a magazine?

Ray Seebeck: No, I definitely want to turn it into a business and hopefully make a living off it and help other people make a living off it.

That’s the dream. So I’m trying to take small steps every month to achieve that. So in terms of  producing the magazine, I have to figure out how much each issue costs and how much I’m selling each issue.

And then packaging and mailing is a huge thing I’m working on trying to reduce the cost of. Then just trying to create more revenue by expanding to new areas such as a podcast I started, which is basically just interviews for the next issue of the magazine.

I’m trying to create new ways to maybe make money off it. I have some like possible goals for the future. But right now it’s a passion project.

So I work on it whenever I can. A lot of times late nights and things like that. But my dream is to definitely turn into business.

Samir Husni: Good luck on that.

Ray Seebeck: Thank you.

Samir Husni: What are you looking for to work in print?

Ray Seebeck: I’m really looking to just to keep the magazine going. That’s the main goal.

So if I can keep it afloat, and not losing money on it. At the end of the day, if I’m what’s most important to me, is to put something out into the world and to have it mean something to people. That’s a big part of it.

It’s really important for the artists to have their work published. It’s huge. And then just to be doing something that I love is hopefully showing people and inspiring them in a small way.

Samir Husni: So Because you have limited distribution, how can people get the magazine?

Ray Seebeck: So I did, with the first issue and also will do with the second issue coming out next March, a presale for them, probably the month of February. I’ll have a presale online and that determines how big the edition is going to be for the next issue. Basically print however many copies we sell for the limited edition.

Samir Husni: And your website is?

Ray Seebeck: It’s rayseebeck.com backslash magazine dash tm.

Samir Husni: Okay. Were you able to register magazine as a trademark?

Ray Seebeck: That’s a good question. The answer is no. It’s a play on letters.  So it’s slightly misleading, which I understand because it’s not actually a trademark, but what it means is TM stands for The Magazine. So it’s basically Magazine, The Magazine is what it stands for.  And TM is like abbreviation.

Samir Husni: Is there any question that I should ask you that I didn’t ask you? Or anything you would like to add.Ray Seebeck: I would say I have done a lot of market research, not necessarily market research, but read research on different publications and podcasts that has really informed me in the evolution of the magazine, the design evolution for especially for this next issue. So I could talk about that a little bit, if you wanted me to.

So have you ever heard of Esopus magazine? It’s no longer published.

There was a show at the Colby College Museum of Art about Esopus magazine. I learned about it because of that show. I actually found a copy at a bookstore in Chicago. That was really cool to see that magazine because they do a lot of similar things in terms of creatively, making creative layouts, interviewing artists, and having different formats in the magazine. That was pretty cool. It’s something to look up to.

But it’s definitely not the perfect model of what I’m trying to do. But it was cool to see. I’ve gained a lot of research by going to libraries and looking through old magazines, or print design inspirations.

I also have gotten a lot of inspiration from different art books, too. I just wanted to share that I’ve done a lot of research of looking through magazines and also art podcasts. I’ve been listening to a lot of art podcasts in the last year or so.

Samir Husni:  Let me ask you my typical last questions. If I come uninvited to visit you one evening at your home or apartment, what do I catch Ray doing? Watching TV, cooking, having a glass of wine?

Ray Seebeck: So to be honest, most nights, what I’m doing is after I’ve done everything I need to do that day, I’m generally pretty busy.

I generally will like take a shower, change into like a comfortable t-shirt and shorts and make dinner. I will turn on the TV basically every night. I watch a lot of different television shows.

Right now I’m watching like the Great British Bake Show. And RuPaul’s Drag Race is a big show that I like.  I watch a lot of TV shows. I’m currently watching Only Murders in the Building.

I like to decompress. I know the  magazine is very print oriented, but I’m also a very digitally oriented person. So I do a lot of online research and look through a lot of photographs all the time. That’s generally what I’m doing at night.

Sometimes I’ll… If I have something to work on for the magazine, I will work on that at night. That’s kind of my exception is that because I love doing it. If I have like if I have a submission from an artist, I will like organize all the content or work on the design layout at night.

Samir Husni: My typical last question is what keeps you up at night these days?

Ray Seebeck: I’m worried about the magazine falling apart. I would say that keeps me up. It’s just the idea of the keeping the magazine running. That’s a big one. There’s a lot of things that goes into that. Making money for the magazine also sometimes will keep me up. And just like diversifying.

Samir Husni:  Thank you and good luck.

  • Ray is a non-binary and they use they/them pronouns.
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They Don’t Make Magazine Like They Used to! Do They?  A Mr. Magazine™ Musing

September 26, 2024

Magazine making is an art.  It was, is, and always will be.  However, there is great art, mediocre art and just plain bad ugly art.  To each its own.  Continuing my journey into the magazines from years gone by, let alone a century, I happened to come across the first issue of Horizon magazine from September 1958.  It is a hard back that is encyclopedic in look and content.

The editors wrote in the foreword (two full pages) to the first issue: “We take for our title the word horizon because it is here, where earth and sky meet, that one may observe those jagged interruptions in the landscape that are the words of man: the squat mud houses of ancient Sumer;”  The editors continued, “the gleaming statuary of the isles of Greece; the stately sky line of Venice when “she did hold the gorgeous East in fee”; a perfect bridge in Peking; our own soaring, protean civilization; all that moved Milton to write that

         Towered Cities please us then,

          And the busie humm of men.

I wonder if today’s reader would need a translation of the above.  Remember, this is just part of the foreword of the magazine.  The editors continue, “Culture, the concern of this new magazine, is both achievement and dream, a work of hands and a movement of the spirit, the special property of man since the great miracle of the Sixth Day – since Darwin’s hairy quadruped dropped from his tree and (how many millennia later?) first lifted up his gaze to seek something beyond mere food and drink.”

If that’s not enough of pure excellent prose, read on and say how magazines were made and how they were meant to be.  The editors of Horizon continued, “ Culture is art and ideas, past and present, taken in sum as a guide to life.  It is history too, the science which Dionysius tells us is “philosophy teaching by examples,” with philosophy suspended between the I-believe of theology and the I-know of science.”

The editors added, “ This magazine in any case is commenced in the belief that some better guide than now exist in America is needed to the house of culture, with all its thousands of rooms.”  In conclusion, the editors wrote, “We invite all those whose interests lie in this broad field, whether as contributors or readers, to join us in this venture.”

When was the last time you read something like this? Something that makes the magazine a piece of art to keep and collect?  Are the magazines of today worth keeping?  Are they a “better guide than” what exists in America today? You be the judge and the jury. 

Would love to read your comments. As always keep in mind that if you would like to take a dive into the “oldies but goldies” magazines of the past, feel free to reach to John Henry at the Specia Collections division of The University of Missouri Libraries and ask for the Samir Husni Magazine Collection.

Until the next musing, stay tuned …

All the best

Samir “Mr. Magazine™” Husni

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Model Cars: The Hobbyist Magazine Celebrates 25 Years.  The Mr. Magazine™ Interview With Gregg Hutchings, Editor & Publisher Extraordinaire.

September 22, 2024

“Print is forever… With magazines, its there. It’s permanence. It’s always there.” Gregg Hutchings

Those who read my blog know that I don’t use adjectives such as extraordinaire, or incredible, or outstanding and such.  But after my conversation with Gregg Hutchings, editor and publisher of Model Cars magazines, I felt the urge and the need to use such adjectives.  The one-man band has been at it for more than two decades, with the last 15 years dedicated to Model Cars magazine.

To quote his bio, “My name is Gregg Hutchings, and I grew up in Kailua, Hawai’i, on the windward side of the island of Oahu. I graduated from Kalaheo High School in 1979 majoring in hot rods and girls, and went into the automotive industry as a mechanic. Around 1984, I hurt my back working at a Porsche/VW/Audi dealership, and had three back surgeries during the 1985-1987 time frame. To help pass the time, I got into building model cars, a hobby I grew to be a part of locally.”

Hurting his back was just the beginning of his journey with pain and surgeries.  He was rear-ended twice in car accidents which only enhanced the pain and introduced more surgeries, that as you will read in my conversation with Gregg, forces him to work on the magazine laying on his back.  The pain is so severe at sometimes, he can’t sit down to work. “Because I fall a lot. My head gets knocked up from the falls,” Gregg tells me, “my back will just seize up and I lose all feeling and everything. And it’s not a good way and it’s not a fun way to live life.”

With at least six surgeries so far, and a host of screws and pins in his back, Gregg refuses to give up and is so happy to announce that this coming October the magazine will celebrate its 25 anniversary. 
The first issue of Model Cars was published in October 1999.

So please join me as you read this incredible story of an extra-ordinary man, wishing him a very happy anniversary and all the best for his health.

But first the sound bites from the conversation with Gregg Hutchings, editor and publisher, Model Cars magazine:

On getting published in the magazine: People must have “done something good to get in print, because anybody can get on the web. But to get in print is something else.”

On whether the magazine is a hobby or a business: “It pays my bills, it pays my monthly bills. And I’m able to travel to shows all over the country whenever I can because my wife and I actually caregivers for her mom. So that’s my full-time job.”

On the usage of digital and online: “We’re getting a lot of our content from online. So it’s a lot of accumulating what we see online and finding new people that want to be in print and are tired of their internet fame, because it is so fleeting.”

On his pain and physical health: “I can’t sit up. My whole desk is elevated. I can stand up and work. Or I actually lay down here. This is where I do a lot of work too, just laying down.”

On the audience reaction to him: “It’s like, here’s this guy from Hawaii that’s done something he loves to do. And people all across the country and the world just love to talk to him.”

On the plans for the 25th anniversary celebration: “I’d love to have a social media blitz going. Just to say, it has been 25 years. It’s the only magazine out there that’s lasted this long. I want to get more new people. Because one thing with COVID, I had 247 dealers, which gave me a lot. It did really well for my bottom line. After COVID, I’m down to 146. Now, I’m down to 129.”

On working on model cars: “I can’t work on cars anymore. I can’t build cars. I was an incredible mechanic. But with this hobby, it’s just every day I can work on cars.”

On what keeps him up at night: “Pain. Besides pain, it is the next project, I think, it’s always the next thing. It’s what do people want to see? Because they trust me.”

And now for the lightly edited conversation with the incredible Gregg Hutchings, editor and publisher, Model Cars magazine:

Samir Husni: My first question Gregg, you are approaching the 25th anniversary of Model Cars, and you’ve been the owner for the last 10 years. What’s the attraction to a print publication, a specialized print publication in this digital age?

Gregg Hutchings: Somebody gave me that word: eternity. It’s permanent. Because digital, you have to know where you’re looking. With magazines, it’s there. It’s permanence. It’s always there.

That’s what everybody likes, because everybody can put their self in or on a website or whatnot. But to get yourself into a magazine, to be in print, that means something to all these people. It’s self-acknowledgement.  They’ve done something good to get in print, because anybody can get on the web. But to get in print is something else. Print is forever.

You can go ahead, and if you did a mistake, you are not going to reprint the magazine. I always call my mistakes, I spell them M-I-S and then steak, like eat a steak. That’s how I spell my mistakes. I said, oops, I made a mistake. No backspace in the magazine. No control alt V or what.

Samir Husni: Give me your elevator pitch for Model Cars, for people who don’t know the magazine. You’re based in Hawaii, but the magazine is distributed in the entire country and internationally.

Gregg Hutchings: It’s the hobbyist magazine. It’s the magazine for the model car hobbyists. I got into it as therapy. A lot of the people I talked to have had health issues and whatnot, and that’s why they get into the hobby or got back into the hobby mostly. It’s always been that way. I think that’s why it’s not corporate, it’s down grassroots, that’s the word. It’s the grassroots magazine.

And the fact that I was able to do something really smart when I had Plastic Fanatic magazine, when I bought it, I think the circulation was about 2,500 or 3,000 and it was okay. But then I come up with this idea to sell directly to the hobby shops. That’s the core, that’s the key, billing the hobby shops directly. That’s why I’ve lasted 25 years, because I don’t have to worry about advertisers or circulation or doing renewals. Every issue I send out invoices and it pays for the printing.

Samir Husni: You mentioned, besides being therapy and hobby, that it’s your life, it’s your business. You’re not doing this for charity work or anything. You said that through this distribution system, it pays the bill for the printing. How about for the publisher, for the editor-in-chief?

Gregg Hutchings: It pays my bills, it pays my monthly bills. And I’m able to travel to shows all over the country whenever I can because my wife and I actually caregivers for her mom. So that’s my full-time job.

She’s 92 years old and she’s got major health issues. We are caregivers for her. I watch her during the day and my wife watches her at night, which is when I get to do my work that I need to.

Samir Husni: Describe for me, what’s a day in the life of Gregg? I mean, when you are putting this magazine together.

Gregg Hutchings: One thing I do like about what you did mention about the digital part is we’re getting a lot of our content from online. So it’s a lot of accumulating what we see online and finding new people that want to be in print and are tired of their internet fame, because it is so fleeting. Once they get in print, it’s forever.

Finding the people, making sure they’re a good fit, because like you said before, in your book, you got to keep that lighthouse going of what you’re actually about. And that’s what I think has kept me different from everybody else is I love this hobby. I love the people.

My best friends are model car builders, and I wouldn’t have it any other way. I was a mechanic for many years. I ran one of the biggest firms here for 10 years, all while doing the magazine too.

But the people with the hobby are just fantastic. I think that’s what makes these niche magazines so great, because it’s not a huge corporation. It’s a bunch of guys I can call up any time of day, say, hey, how are you doing? What are you building? What are you doing? Or if I need help, they’ll come and help me here. I couldn’t ask for something better. I really couldn’t. It makes good money because I can live here comfortably. It pays all the bills, but I have to chase the money. That’s the only thing I don’t like. I have to chase the money. That’s the hard part.

Because I can’t sit up. My whole desk is elevated. I can stand up and work. Or I actually lay down here. This is where I do a lot of work too, just laying down. And I always said, if I was 100%, I’d probably have this magazine at 20,000 circulation.

But it’s just hard to chase it. Right now, I’m at 5,500. And when I was with Source Interlink and Ingram we were at about 7,500 with a 63% sell-through. That’s unheard of.  The Atlanta group recently approached me to be back on the newsstands. A lot of people are asking for it. But because I’m so behind all the time, I’m about two months behind schedule. It’s just really hard to get back up to speed and being able to have a solid publication schedule. Still trying to do six issues a year. I started at six, went to nine.

Then when I got hurt in 2016, I went back to six. But when we’re doing nine issues a year, it was doing really good.

Samir Husni: You’re the publisher and the editor-in-chief.

Gregg Hutchings: Yeah, everything. Accounting, taxes, subscription, renewal.

Samir Husni: Which hat do you like more? The publisher or the editor-in-chief?

Gregg Hutchings: That’s a tough one. I kind of like the incognito guy, if that makes sense. Because if I go to shows and stuff, sometimes I won’t wear my shirts or my uniform, and people don’t know me.

I’ll just walk up behind them and talk to them, and they find out who I am. It’s like they met their idol or something. And it’s an incredible feeling. It really is. It’s like, here’s this guy from Hawaii that’s done something he loves to do. And people all across the country and the world just love to talk to him.

It’s not egotistical. That’s one thing about Hawaii. We don’t really have egos and all that stuff.

A couple of quick stories. When I go to shows, nine times out of 10, the person’s wife is the one that comes up to me and thanks me. Because it’s made such a difference in the husband’s life for doing the model cars. That’s what I like. I just think it’s unreal to be able to touch that many people. I know it sounds corny.

Samir Husni: No, it is your passion, love, and work all in one and one in all. So tell me, when Larry Bell retired and said, okay, here’s the magazine, in 2015, can you describe that moment? Can you describe your feeling?

Gregg Hutchings: Well, back up to 1999 when I went to the mainland and got hooked up with Golden Bell Press. I was co-owner with Larry Bell from the start of 1999.

And then about a year or two later in 2001, I was in a serious rear-ended accident in Denver. The back of the Honda Civic I was in, the bumper hit my seat. The back bumper hit the back of my seat.

I was the passenger. So I was extricated from that. And I came back to Hawaii and then Larry said, instead of being co-owner, he just paid me a straight salary.

So that way I didn’t have to worry about, I had strict income, I didn’t have to worry about percentages or whatnot. So he took over complete ownership and I was paid a salary or 1099.  I’m on heavy medications too. You became more like a freelance. You became on a set salary.

I became the editor instead of just the co-publisher. But he always considered me the publisher because I did everything still. It was just the financial part of it was it was safer for me because I had to go.

I went, I had three surgeries before that. Then after the accident, I had two more. And then it worked out great. We went up to nine issues a year. And then in 2015, he wanted to retire. And so he just gave me everything.

At that time, I had started another magazine called Slot Cars Magazine. And that one was doing really good. But the problem with that is when he gave me that magazine, he didn’t give me. The needed paperwork for the periodical mailing.

It’s terrifying. My wife, Kelly, and I went through the whole schooling process of that. But when he gave me Model Cars Magazine, he didn’t give me all the original paperwork.

So, I didn’t have the original requesters, all the copies of everything they had and whatnot. So, I could not get my periodical permit.

The post office really tried to help me out. They came to the house. They did the audits and everything. But I didn’t have the original paperwork. So, that was… I just gave up. And then in 2016, December, I was hit again.

I was rear-ended. My wife hates it because I drive by the rearview mirror. She’s like, what are you looking at? I said, I’m just watching, just watching. If I get hit again, I’ve got so much rods and screws in my back, it would be… This time, my next surgery is going to go through the front, break two ribs, fuse the front of it, flip me over, take out all six levels of rods and screws and go all the way up.

So, it’s not going to be fun.

Samir Husni: I wish you the best.

So, tell me, what are the plans for the 25th anniversary?

Gregg Hutchings: I don’t know. I’d love to have a social media blitz going. Just to say, it has been 25 years. It’s the only magazine out there that’s lasted this long. I want to get more new people. Because one thing with COVID, I had 247 dealers, which gave me a lot. It did really well for my bottom line. After COVID, I’m down to 146. Now, I’m down to 129.

So, I lost a lot of shops, a lot of hobby shops. I want to find more. Either go back to Barnes & Noble or find other ways to find other retail shops. Because that’s what does it for me. They pay the bill within 30 days. And it is about chasing the money.

I mean, the advertising revenue is not that high. I think I’m at 6.5%. But with my printing schedule,  I don’t have the reputation of being timely. Most of these people know me. And they know that,  he’ll be down for a week if something happens. Because I fall a lot. My head gets knocked up from the falls. My back will just seize up and I lose all feeling and everything. And it’s not a good way and it’s not a fun way to live life.

Samir Husni: Yeah, it’s not. So tell me, if I come uninvited to your house, not that I’ve been to Hawaii before, but let’s say I come to see you one evening, what do I catch Gregg doing? Reading a book, watching TV, or laying on the floor?

Gregg Hutchings: Probably the last one. Laying on the floor. I’ve got what I call the squirrel syndrome. I’ll see something shiny and I’ll just jump right on it and I’ll forget about what I was working on. And I’ll have so many projects going on.

I guess with the specialized part of the hobby, I’m always building something. I’m always working on something. I added the projects I am working on now on a spreadsheet. I’ve got 157 projects like that started. And it’s always something going.

I can’t work on cars anymore. I can’t build cars. I was an incredible mechanic. But with this hobby, it’s just every day I can work on cars. And then I got into computers.  I just met so many unreal people with the magazine. I’m just such a small little guy that has been able to do such unreal things.

Samir Husni: And what keeps Greg up at night these days?

Gregg Hutchings: Pain. Besides pain, it is the next project, I think, it’s always the next thing. It’s what do people want to see? Because they trust me.

Samir Husni: Is there anything you would like to add or I failed to ask you?

Gregg Hutchings: One thing I’ve always said is I don’t do reviews on something I haven’t had in my hands. So if a company sends something a PR piece, I’ll say, no, no, no, you got to send me the actual thing. Because people trust that.

Because they know that if I’ve looked at it, if I read it, if I wrote about it, so it’s either thumbs up, thumbs down, or like we say, a shocker or a no shocker. But I love the business side of it.

I really do. Because it’s got the potential to be really well. I used to tell Kelly, if I hit 20,000, that’s a million bucks a year for one guy.

That’s pretty good. So I mean, it can be done. And it’s just physically being able to do it.

It’s just, I wish I could. But I’m not going to give up. That’s the one thing people ask me with the pain and stuff.

How do you keep on doing it? I don’t know. I’ve got too much junk to pass on to my wife that I’ve got to keep on looking forward. And it’s just, I love the magazine industry too much.

Samir Husni:  Thank you.

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I Have Two Eyes…. A Mr. Magazine™ Musing

September 16, 2024

That is two Eye magazines.  One from the days before I was born, and the other when I was a 13-year-old teenager.  However the two Eyes have a lot in common and few good lessons to learn if you ever thought or think of going into the magazine business.  And by magazine, I mean the ink on paper publication that is published on some regular frequency.

So without any further ado, here are the lessons I have found in those two Eyes that are still applicable in the year 2024, some 75 years after the first EYE was born:

Lesson number 1:  Magazine publishing is not for the faint of heart.  In 1949 when the first EYE ( Martin Goodman, publisher and Carlton Brown, editor) was published, magazines were the only mass medium available to the public nationwide.  This EYE was first published in May 1949 with the tag line “People and Pictures.” The editors wrote in the first letter to the readers, “Starting a new magazine is as exhilarating as jumping into a mountain pool – and as filled with suspense. You hold your breath, take the plunge, and hope for the best.”

In March of 1968 editor Susan Szekely, wrote in the first issue of the Eye published by the Hearst Corporation  (Helen Gurley Brown was the supervising editor), “ To get off the ground, EYE went high in the sky.  For our first issue, we sent a host of venturesome journalists aloft. Among the most unruffled was Yale graduate Peter Swerdloff who set off casually to hitchhike around the country by air. Although he makes it look easy, Peter was no slouch. Where he succeeded, another writer had failed, returning home in disgrace with a toe stubbed during a forced landing.”

Both magazines took calculated risks and knew that magazine publishing, even in the 40s and 60s of the last century was not for the faint of heart.

Lesson number 2:  Plea for help from the audience.

Without your readers, the magazine is not going anywhere.  Readers input is essential. EYE of 1949 offered readers money for the best letters about the first issue. “We want this to be a magazine that you will like – whoever you are, wherever you live. To help us make it that, we want you to write us letters telling us what you like and don’t like in this first issue, and what you’d like to see in future issue,” the editors wrote.  They continued, ‘We’ll mail checks for $10 each to the ten people who write us the best letters about EYE – the letters that will help us most in making this the kind of magazine you – and we – want it to be.”

Hearst’s eye was more on the wishful side of things with the audience.  “May you be as high on EYE as we had to be to do it,” wrote the editor.

Lesson number 3:  Great content was and will always be king and queen.

The importance of good quality content is as important as it was in 1949.  For magazine content goes beyond good writing to include good photography, design, and the art of packaging a coherent and pleasing publication both for the eye (pun intended) and the brain.  “The publishers and editors of EYE, have no misgivings about this first issue. We’ve packed it with what seem to us the best photographs to be found,” EYE’s editors wrote, “plus two full-length articles that we believe are worth anyone’s reading time.”  The editors were humble enough to admit, “But our judgment, unless it’s backed by our readers’ approval, is worthless.”

As for the May 1968 Hearst’s eye, the editor wrote, after paragraphs of introducing the writers and photographer for the volume 1, number 1 issue, “EYE promises more of the same—hip young writers, photographers and artists (and a few oldies and goldies) covering the pop scene, the political and social controversies of the day, sports and travel (Spartanburg, South Carolnia?) and the latest fashion news—with each future issue.”

Publishing a magazine, a good magazine still depends on those three premises stated above.  Recognizing it is not for the faint of heart, engaging your audience from the very beginning, and providing excellent content that can’t be found any other place.

If you would like to take a dive into the “oldies but goldies” magazines of the past, feel free to reach to John Henry at the Special Collections division of The University of Missouri Libraries and ask for the Samir Husni Magazine Collection

Until the next musing, stay tuned…

All the best

Samir “Mr. Magazine™” Husni

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An Upscale Magazine For The Masses. The Story Of The Launch Of hiii: “The Vanity Fair For Weed.”  The Mr. Magazine™ Interview With Rob Hill, Co-Founder And Editor In Chief, And Pam Patterson, Co-Founder And Creative Director.

September 12, 2024

“We love magazines. We’re finding out that a lot of other people who didn’t know they love magazines, love magazines. I’m feeling really buoyant and positive. You say, “Will this be a business? Yes, we are very, very confident. This is not a vanity project. We’re here to make money. The universe is conspiring such a thing.” Rob Hill

An upscale magazine for the masses “who partake.” A “Vanity Fair for weed.” A new twist on marijuana magazines. Elegant in design and even more elegant and sophisticated in writing and photography.  The brainchild of Rob Hill and Pam Patterson, hiii magazine arrived on the newsstands in the city of Los Angeles and at all its dispensaries.

The lifestyle magazine utilizes every inch of space to channel messages to its readers and advertisers.  From the margins to the spine and the front edge of the magazine, there is content, a very specific message to the audience.

To say the magazine is well done will be an understatement.  Rob and Pam poured their heart and soul into this new publication that goes beyond the ink on paper magazine.  To find out about this hiii adventure I reached out to Rob and Pam and had a delightful conversation about the magazine and the entities surrounding the publication. 

Please enjoy this conversation with Rob Hill, co-founder and editor in chief, and Pam Patterson, co-founder and creative director,  that is sure to give you a hiii whether you partake or not.  But first for the soundbites:

On the genesis of the magazine idea: “My thinking was that the industry had nowhere to brand. And there are about 2800 potential advertisers in this city. So I just saw it as a numbers game. But it also had to bring a new and veneer to the industry. A new take for a new time.”

On the mission of the magazine: “Because what this industry didn’t need was another rag that was basically looking backwards and not forwards, actually propelling the stereotypes. We’re totally anti that. We don’t believe that. I think 64% of people use cannabis in this country.”

On scoring an ad from Porsche: “We don’t all live in a silo. We buy Porsches. I hope you saw the ad. We booked Porsche, which has never been done in a cannabis magazine. They booked it for the full year and paid. So we’re going after car companies, we’re going after mainstream brands.”

On expanding beyond Los Angeles: “We’re getting calls from Vegas, NYC, and Detroit, etc, to bring the magazine there. It’s just been so exciting. I don’t want to say we’re saving print, but I think we’re part of a resurgence of print. Nylon is back, Spin is back, Creem is back, Life is back, Playboy is back. There is a digital fatigue that has set in.”

On the role the magazine aims to play: “One of the things that makes this audience so much different is we really are a lifestyle magazine. It’s a tool for connection between people. I think people who don’t smoke wouldn’t completely understand it.”

On the flipbook in the margins: “When I heard that Mickey Mouse came into public domain, at least Steamboat Willie, we took a look at it. He’s driving the boat and it’s just begging for a joint in his mouth. “

On the distribution model: “The thinking is to conquer the country through cities rather than the traditional way of printing half a million magazines and putting them on newsstands all over the country.”

On the creation of the magazine: “We just felt we were the best people to redefine, update, and package it in a way that made sense to everyone. Concentrate on the positive, creative, and medicinal parts.”

On the content: “We’re going to always have some really good stories in there too. Like the prison story we did. People don’t know that there are people still rotting in jail for selling three joints in 1975. It’s crazy.”

On the audience: “The audience is very broad, but it’s like the coolest people in all of those sort of segments smoke weed.”

On young folks reaction to the magazine: “We have a lot of young people that work in our office who are in their twenties and a lot of people that come through here who are millennials that treat the magazine like it’s a jewel. It’s an exotic thing to them that they’re liking. What’s not to like?”

And now for the lightly edited conversation with Rob Hill, Co-founder and editor in chief, and Pam Patterson, Co-founder and creative director of hiii magazine:

Samir Husni:  In this digital age, you are launching a print magazine, and not any print magazine, a print magazine for people who partake.”  What’s the reasoning behind it? What were you thinking? Are you out of your mind?

Rob Hill: Well, during COVID, I was sitting home alone a lot. I kind of fell back in love with cannabis. I’ve had an on and off love affair with it.

I was coming from a business to business cannabis magazine called MG, which was the biggest cannabis business to business magazine with a very different model. It was a subscription only model. It went out to CEOs and owners of companies.

I would go down to the Malibu newsstand before they locked us all down. Even when they did, and just kind of, buy magazines and bring them home. I started to make a collage on my wall and started to just envision it.

My thinking was that the industry had nowhere to brand. And there are about 2800 potential advertisers in this city. So I just saw it as a numbers game. But it also had to bring a new and veneer to the industry. A new take for a new time.

I thought if we could bring it into the 21st century, and give it a splashy, fun, and modern take, that it would work.  That was kind of the thinking behind it.

We’re going to make money. We spent the first 18 months after we developed the idea and got it where it needed to be.

I think what’s really broken in the magazine industry is the distribution model and the fact that if you don’t love magazines don’t launch one. Anyone can have a blog and a website but not everyone can have a magazine.

In addition the print pages, we sold eight activations at our launch party, which means that a company brings their product, sets up a table, has their signage, while educating consumers and handing out samples.

Samir Husni: hiii is unlike any of the cannabis magazines that were launched even as back as the 70s. We had a lot of magazines like High Times, Inside Dope, Head, Kush,  you name it. hiii is more like an upscale magazine, yet it’s a mass magazine. Tell me the thinking behind combining upscale and mass at the same time.

Rob Hill: I think that’s the target we needed to hit to be successful. Because what this industry didn’t need was another rag that was basically looking backwards and not forwards, actually propelling the stereotypes. We’re totally anti that. We don’t believe that. I think 64% of people use cannabis in this country.

We don’t all live in a silo. We buy Porsches. I hope you saw the ad. We booked Porsche, which has never been done in a cannabis magazine. They booked it for the full year and paid. So we’re going after car companies, we’re going after mainstream brands.

Our hope is by this time next year, a third of the magazine is going to have advertising in it that has nothing to do with cannabis. We’ll get Levi’s and Doc Martens and Bentley and Range Rover. Porsche plowed the road for us, so to speak. They parked their cars at our party to out in front of Woody Harrelson and Bill Maher’s cannabis lounge/garden The Woods in West Hollywood which was really cool.

Porsche’s whole marketing team came and it’s a really big deal.  Ad Age or Adweek should really do an article on that.

We were hoping to have 15 ads and we booked 26. And the Porsche ad, goes above and beyond what they paid. It’s not even about the money with Porsche. It’s about having that real estate for the full year in the magazine

Samir Husni: That’s not your first venture editing a magazine. You’ve been there, done that. What’s the difference? You and Pam are now owners and publishers. Does it feel any different that just being an editor?

Rob Hill: The last time we spoke we were  launching Treats magazine. That was pretty exciting. Hugh Hefner tried to buy it the day after we launched it. He invited us up to the mansion.

But this is different. Pam and I purposely put our emails in our editor’s letters because we wanted people to email us. We didn’t want to do info@ or editorial@. And we’re getting about a dozen a week of just people that are saying things like, “I saw your magazine at the dispensary. I picked it up. I commute to work on a bus. I read it cover to cover.”

We’re getting calls from Vegas, NYC, and Detroit, etc, to bring the magazine there. It’s just been so exciting. I don’t want to say we’re saving print, but I think we’re part of a resurgence of print. Nylon is back, Spin is back, Creem is back, Life is back, Playboy is back. There is a digital fatigue that has set in. People are tired of being on their phones and all ages are looking for more tangible experience. This is why we spent lavishly on our paper stock, size, and design. And it’s paying off.

Samir Husni: The design of the magazine from printing on the edge of the magazine or having an edgy design. Tell me about the creative design of  hiii.

Pam Patterson: I’m the creative director and I’ve been a weed smoker since I was 13.

One of the things that makes this audience so much different is we really are a lifestyle magazine. It’s a tool for connection between people. I think people who don’t smoke wouldn’t completely understand it. But when you’re part of this community, there’s a bond there that we channel when we’re concepting the magazine.

We wanted to create a toy, something where people could relate to it in a lot of different ways. We could have a story of substance, and then have a story that speaks to the tools of the trade and whatnot. Also where they could have a little passage from some novel that someone may see in a new light. 

We want to be fun like Bob Marley’s quote on the edge printing. It’s just a fun way. I think it’s kind of a wink to our audience that we get it. Weed smokers are thinkers. We’re creative thinkers.

Samir Husni: What about the flipbook? I mean, the images that run in the margins?

Pam Patterson: When I heard that Mickey Mouse came into public domain, at least Steamboat Willie, we took a look at it. He’s driving the boat and it’s just begging for a joint in his mouth.  We wanted to do a flipbook for some time, and that was kind of a thing we devoted that real estate, the right hand margin to, in addition to a literary passage and the edge-printing. People were like, oh, advertisers are not going to like you getting into that space. But it’s been just fine.

Samir Husni: It looks like you have a love affair with the magazine and with print. But my question to you how is hiii as a business? Are you going to spend your savings or are you going to make money out of this?

Rob Hill:  Absolutely. We’re going to make money. We spent the first 18 months after we developed the idea and got it where it needed to be. We have a CFO who was CFO from Hard Rock Cafe and other companies. We did talk to a lot of people. But what we found was the investors didn’t get it as much as the advertisers did. So our business development consultant said, “Well, your advertisers are your investors. So just go start selling and don’t worry about all of this other stuff.”

We were hoping to have 15 ads and we booked 26. And the Porsche ad, goes above and beyond what they paid. It’s not even about the money with Porsche. It’s about having that real estate for the full year in the magazine and being able to go to other brands like Woody Harrelson, Whiz Khalifa, Snoop, Jay-Z, Willie Nelson etc., and say, “Hey, your ad is going to be after Porsche.” They like that.

We just started to knock down some barrier to entry and it was difficult in the very beginning. People were saying cannabis isn’t the hottest thing right now and magazines aren’t the hottest thing right now. But we didn’t believe that. And Samir, I think what’s really broken in the magazine industry is the distribution model and the fact that if you don’t love magazines don’t launch one. Anyone can have a blog and a website but not everyone can have a magazine.

I think we’ve come up with a way to do distribution right. In fact, last night, I went after dinner to go check the markets in Studio City and Laurel Canyon, where we distribute the magazine on the racks outside the markets. And there we put 25 on each and they’re gone in three days. There are 128 dispensaries and cannabis lounges that also carry the magazine in their stores and half a dozen that we have partnered with to deliver the magazine right to their door of their VIP customers with their cannabis.

And that’s all over the city. That’s Erewhon, Vons, Ralphs, Whole Foods. And then we do have a paid model. We’re distributed through Mader News. We took over the Beverly Hills newsstand for the month of August! Never been done before by a cannabis magazine. The first day David Lynch sent his assistant to buy the magazine. The next day it was Quentin Tarantino.

They put us right next to Monocle, which was really cool because Tyler (Brule) is one of my heroes. I think we figured out distribution, and the model is to take this to the next city in second quarter 2025.

The thinking is to conquer the country through cities rather than the traditional way of printing half a million magazines and putting them on newsstands all over the country. We’re sort of doing what Cigar Aficionado does married with what Departures did, with a dollop of traditional newsstand and the whole National Geographic in the dentist office thing.

Once Cigar Afficionado got distribution in the thousands of cigar lounges, the advertisers were like, What more could we want? If you’re an advertiser, you have a guy or a woman that’s in a cigar shop, hanging out, having a good time, talking with their friends and then they pick up Cigar Aficionado and spend 20 minutes enjoying it. It’s a warm audience. That’s hiii in the lounges and dispensaries.

The other unique and singular thing hiii does is reach not only consumers but also the budtnders, buyers, and owners of cannabis dispensaries who are all reading the magazine. The competition is fierce for foot traffic and for space on the shelves. Yesterday I got two calls from buyers who saw ads in the magazine of products that they would like to carry. Both brands scored over a 1000 unit order. That will be 10x what they paid for the ad. Needless to say, they called and asked to book for the rest of the year. Smart. Happy advertisers make my day.

Samir Husni:  You wrote that you’re going to change the perception and the veneer of the industry.” What do you mean?

Rob Hill: I think that so much of this world is about perception and whether that perception is real or not, it is your reality. If you are a person that is perceiving cannabis users as criminals and low-lifes, then that’s not good for our industry. I always felt if we don’t define it, someone else will, and they have tried their darndest. Even magazines like Rolling Stone and The Atlantic have begun to take pot shots at the industry.

We just felt we were the best people to redefine, update, and package it in a way that made sense to everyone. Concentrate on the positive, creative, and medicinal parts.

Pam Patterson: Not everyone’s asleep on the couch. I think some of the highest performing individuals, and especially in the creative fields, are smoking pot all the time.

Rob Hill: You know what I’m most proud of? I’d say 80% of our advertisers have never done a print ad before. They’ve never done any marketing. This is a brand new industry, so to speak. And it’s hitting another phase because the genie can’t be put back in the bottle.

They’ve tried to slow it down and that’s not working either because humans are very malleable, flexible, and we figure stuff out. So one of the good things that happened to us right when we were getting out to sell ads, a law was passed that’s going to allow cannabis companies to write off their marketing and their advertising like every other industry. And that kind of gave us a little bit of a tailwind where we were coming from a headwind.

That changed a lot right there. Right after that, we went to the biggest cannabis expo and met with over 400 companies and started selling ads. Started telling them, “You can now write this off, like a beer company or a clothing company.”

Samir Husni: So here’s my question to you. What can you do in print that you could not do on the digital portal?

Rob Hill: Well, I was going to make a comment that because the industry is not federally legal, it makes a lot of media vehicles unwilling to do any advertising with cannabis. So things like radio, TV, much of print, etc. is off limits to cannabis companies. Also you can’t trade across state lines. So it’s all very regional play. There are some very unique, specific things to this industry that make hiii something that the community really needs.

They need an advertising vehicle. They need a place to brand. We can’t be shadow banned. We can’t be censored. We feel good. And we are something that the industry can be proud of. Every revolution needs a magazine, right?

I like the idea that we’re not going to wake up in the morning and have our Instagram taken down. I mean, like a lot of people wake up in the morning, have their Instagrams just taken down. That just happened to the biggest guy in our industry who had 8 million followers. He just woke up and it vanished. The disruption to people’s businesses who depend on that for a product that’s locally legal it’s kind of crazy.

We’re finding that print done well, like the paper that Pam picked and the size of the magazine, she’s so good at just packaging things and understanding what’s good and what catches the zeitgeist.

Print is a tangible object, people are buying vinyl albums again, and magazines are back in vogue. Are there going to be 2 million circulation magazines launching weekly? No. Those days are over.

Life magazine is coming back as a quarterly. Not a bad idea. I think quarterly is where these magazines are finding their sweet spot. Mader News told us what’s working right now are quarterlies with high quality and a high cover price. That’s why we’re charging $20 for that because they said you will get that at these newsstands.

Samir Husni: To me, this year is the year of the relaunches. But you are the year of the launch. You are launching something from scratch and using all the experience that you had for year. It’s manifested in hiii. The goal now is quarterly and LA. What next?

Rob Hill: Well we may change our minds. We talk about telepathy every night when I’m in my bed and she’s in her bed, 25 miles away. We started  thinking the same. It’s been interesting.

One of the things I do want to say that’s very important to our business and unique to this business is the trade shows and the events. This industry will write big checks, 50,000, 70,000, 150,000 to have booths at these trade shows. They’ve been doing it for about a decade now.

So they’re very comfortable writing those checks. What they haven’t been comfortable with or what they haven’t been doing is writing checks for magazine advertising because there hasn’t really been that vehicle. So we wanted to combine the two.

 In addition the print pages, we sold eight activations at our launch party, which means that a company brings their product, sets up a table, has their signage, while educating consumers and handing out samples.  We had 500 people at our launch party We’re packaging this with, You get the goodie bag, which they all want because they want these products in people’s homes very badly.

They want the activation to basically give samples away and to educate the consumer. They all fell in love with the magazine too. That’s going to be a big revenue generator for us.

We have an event space here that’s 12,000 square foot that’s outside that can fit 500 people. For every issue we’ll do a party. So we’re selling a 360 product because our newsletter has a 67% open rate.

We’ve curated a newsletter that’s like triple or double what you’d hope to have—a 67% open rate. We’ll be able to, as we grow that, monetize it. Digital is obviously really important, but we want the magazine to drive ROI and traffic to the stores. And so far after a month the ROI is tangible.

Digital doesn’t really do that well, but a magazine that you pick up and put in your car that when you go pick up your girlfriend and her friends after class or whatever, and they all see it and begin passing it around and gawking at the ads, does that really well. There’s something happening right now and it’s totally counterintuitive, but it’s happening. I’ve never been more excited in my life. We had to throw caution to the wind. We’ve had to just jump in.

I really do feel it. We have a lot of young people that work in our office who are in their twenties and a lot of people that come through here who are millennials that treat the magazine like it’s a jewel. It’s an exotic thing to them that they’re liking. What’s not to like?

Pam Patterson: It pays off. People who take the time to open the magazine, get rewarded. And that is an essential quality. One thing I wanted to mention, too, is that weed smokers are of all different ilks, all ages, highly diverse, from all different kinds of communities including LGBTQI+. The audience is very broad, but it’s like the coolest people in all of those sort of segments smoke weed.

There’s a common thread. It’s intentionally made to relate to a broad section of people, to be a unifying factor among everyone, and something everyone can be proud of. People who are in this industry are in it because they love it. It’s still very much a mom and pop industry.

Rob Hill: You know, it’s very difficult to be a big Coca-Cola type brand when you can’t sell your product in many states and almost all countries. That’s going to start changing pretty rapidly. Japan, Thailand, Germany, and Israel are opening up. We’re probably going to have to think about some licensing deals here because it looks like globally this thing is just on fire and I think is very interesting.

I liked what Imbibe did for the alcohol industry and they rallied behind it and they have stuck with it. It’s a good magazine. They have big brands in there and we actually really feel like we’re going to get a lot of those alcohol brands at some point. You only lose when you run away from the internet or run away from the things that you know are coming. Well, and in LA I think that there are more dispensaries than McDonald’s now.

Pam Patterson: And it’s outselling wine. There’s a lot of really big categories that cannabis is marching past.

Samir Husni: So before I ask you my typical last questions, is there any question I failed to ask you or is anything you would like to add.

Rob Hill: No, think you covered it. You totally understand the magazine.

I’ve always had a lot of respect for you and follow your blog and did my favorite interview with Treats with you. And, you know, it’s great to be endorsed. You love magazines.

We love magazines. We’re finding out that a lot of other people who didn’t know they love magazines, love magazines. I’m feeling really buoyant and positive. You say, “Will this be a business? Yes, we are very, very confident.

This is not a vanity project. We’re here to make money. The universe is conspiring such a thing.

Samir Husni: I know you are playing on the word high and hi. What was the thinking about the Hii?

Rob Hill: Well, we really liked the sing-song because it’s when you see somebody that you like, or maybe you’re flirting with, it’s kind of like, hiii. And so we thought that that was a sweet way to do it.

You got to be careful in this industry to not be too obvious. A lot of those like really obvious brands get into that realm of just showing pictures of flower and stuff like that. We wanted to be something fresh, new,  and friendly.

It just made a lot of sense in that regard. We trademarked the whole thing. “hiii: For People Who Partake.”

Pam put on the spine “The Third Eye,” which is referring to our pineal gland, our antenna to other dimensions, etc. There’s evidence that cannabis, CBD, and mushrooms help to decalcify the gland which has been corroded with Fluoride, etc.

Pam Patterson: We’re going to always have some really good stories in there too. Like the prison story we did. People don’t know that there are people still rotting in jail for selling three joints in 1975. It’s crazy. Not many. Lots of them have been pardoned, but it’s pretty crazy.

Samir Husni: If I come to visit you one evening unannounced, what do I catch you doing? Reading a book, smoking a joint, watching TV?

Rob Hill: At six pm we’re still at work. We’ll probably have people dropping in and probably smoking a pre-roll, but we’re not watching TV. We’re talking about issues.

We’re talking about the magic of the plant. Our office and event compound has a neighborhood clubhouse feel; hundreds and hundreds of people flow through here every month. The word is out. Frogtown and hiii are the place to be.

We’re the center of the community. We have this event space. We have the magazine that people are rallying behind.

We just hired the woman that used to work for Bob Guccione Jr. at Spin. She also worked at Cosmo too. She’s on our ad sales staff; we have now five ad sales people.

I just really feel like the ads are going to go from 26 to 40 to who know how many pages. Our main competitor, who’s not really a competitor, but he’s more of a newsstand magazine, he’s doing consistently 176 pages six times a year.

He’s doing pretty well. He has a different audience than us and a different business plan, but it’s good. We see that as a good thing.

Samir Husni: My typical last question is what keeps you up at night?

Pam Patterson: We’re hitting our stride. We have a lot of fun stories.

Rob Hill: There’s a difference when you can’t sleep at night because you’re freaking out and stressed out. Then there’s this other side that for me, it’s just excitement, almost like I don’t want to go to bed.  I know I have to, because the rocket’s taken off. There’s so much to do in so many fantastic ways. It’s really a playground over here. The timing is perfect.

I think we’ve caught lightning in a bottle.

Samir Husni: Thank you both and good luck.

h1

Bob Guccione Jr. to Samir “Mr. Magazine™” Husni: “Publishers Killed Publishing.” The Mr. Magazine™ Interview with Spin Magazine Editor In Chief.

August 28, 2024

“One of the things I really was adamant about when we started the relaunch of Spin was just do it with quality. Even more quality than we had the first time around.” Bob Guccione, Jr., Editor in  Chief, Spin magazine

Passionate and a die-hard believer in print and its role in society, Bob Guccione Jr., founder (in 1985) and editor in chief of the relaunched Spin magazine (2024) has a lot of good observations and advice for folks who are, or want to be, in the magazine field.  He is shrewdly honest about the role of magazines, their place in the marketplace, and the reason some magazines stopped publishing.

Bob is not afraid to ruffle some feathers and friends when he squarely places the blame on the demise of many magazine on the publishers themselves, “Publishing was suicidal. It wasn’t homicidal. Nobody killed publishing, but publishers killed themselves,” he told me during our chat that brought back memories of him teaching a class with me and sharing lectures during the many conferences that I have hosted.

Without any further ado, please enjoy this pleasant conversation with Bob Guccione Jr., but first the soundbites:

On the role of magazines: “We’re not in the need business. I don’t know a single magazine in the history of the world that anybody needed, except maybe The Old Farmer’s Almanac, that might be the only one that could actually claim to be needed.” 

On reuniting with his first love Spin: “It was, in some ways very strange. And in some ways like riding a bike.”

On his relationship with the current owners of Spin: “We molded a relationship. And it’s been a great relationship with Jimmy (Hutcheson, Spin’s CEO).  I’ve been happy to stay here and help. Sometimes I don’t help, and sometimes I hit it out of the park.” 

On the role of  Spin: “Today, there’s far too many different ways to absorb media and get information, to the point that a lot of it is very bad information and fake information. But it’s not the way someone’s going to discover music.”

On the mission of Spin: “We wanted that great balance of music, good solid reporting, irreverent reporting, have fun with it, tweak a few noses, but also bring in something of the world around.” 

On print and its future: “Never thought it was dead. It has certainly hurt itself critically. I think the fault lies almost 100% with the publishers. There are shifting times, but there are always shifting times.”

On the reason many titles stopped publishing: “Publishing was suicidal. It wasn’t homicidal. Nobody killed publishing, but publishers killed themselves.”

On the major problem with magazines today: “I think the economic model of ownership was a problem.”

On his advice to publishers: “It’s important for publishers to recognize they’ve got to make a competitive product and not just cut costs and try to compensate for a tougher market.”

On seeing many magazines return to print: “It’s great to see this resurgence in print. It’s fantastic. It’ll make it a little harder sometimes to get printing time, but that’s good. You’ll see paper mills come back. You’ll see printing presses come back.” 

On the greatest invention of all times: “Oh, it’s the printing press, without a doubt. Because it was the first time humanity could actually mass communicate. It led to mass communication.”

And now for the lightly edited interview with Bob Guccione Jr., founder and editor in chief of the relaunched Spin magazine:

Samir Husni: First, congratulations on the return of Spin to print. 

Bob Guccione Jr.:  Thank you. 

Samir Husni: This is a step back to your first love from some 40 years ago. Can you tell me how does it feel to you personally, like going back to edit the magazine you launched 40 years ago? 

Bob Guccione Jr.:  That’s a great question. It was, in some ways very strange. And in some ways like riding a bike.  I don’t ride a bike, but they say you pick up riding a bike, you never lose it.

In some ways, it was totally natural. I’ve been out of print for quite a while. The last time I was in print was in the bookazine era.

I’ve been doing digital for most of the last 10 years. I had to reacquire certain, I wouldn’t say skills, but techniques and different ways of doing things. Whereas you might be used to something effortlessly online, you suddenly find yourself restricted to the dimension of a page and the number of pages in a magazine again.

 Actually, it was a fun experience. It was stimulating, and it was, somewhat discombobulating at first. But at the end of the day, it’s all the same thing. You produce a collection of stories that hopefully intrigue and stimulate. That instinct never went away.

I used the analogy of bikes, was more like sex, that doesn’t go away and you quickly get back to where you were. So it was a fascinating experience. It was weirder, actually, the first time I came to work with Spin as a consultant, still a consultant, because I was returning to a publication that I hadn’t thought of for 10 years or more, many more, 20 years almost.

So that was actually weirder, being back involved, but it wasn’t the same thing. You know, Spin, when I had it was my magazine. And it was one thing. Once it was somebody else’s magazine, it became another thing. I was helping another magazine the same way I helped other people who I consulted as well. They had a set of problems, and I had a set of suggestions. Some of them worked, some of them didn’t, some of them weren’t right at all.

We molded a relationship. And it’s been a great relationship with Jimmy (Hutcheson, Spin’s CEO).  I’ve been happy to stay here and help.

Sometimes I don’t help, and sometimes I hit it out of the park. 

Samir Husni: Tell me about Spin now and tell me about Spin then. 

Bob Guccione Jr.:  Well, that’s another great question. Because right at the outset, I said to Jimmy, it can be very similar to what Spin was.

And it can be excellent. I think it is excellent, actually. I’ll say that.

But it can’t be the same, because the times are so different. 

Then, back in 1985, when I started Spin, magazines like Rolling Stone, Crawdaddy, Creem, and Circus were the ways that people found out about music. Some could import New Music Express, NME, and some of the other English magazines. Otherwise, you couldn’t.

MTV was nascent. It had happened by then. But go back a couple of years to the early 80s, there was no MTV even.

It was very important for a music fan, or a young person trying to absorb where they were going in this new world of adulthood, to read a magazine they trusted. They didn’t trust Time or Newsweek, because they knew that was for their parents and that they had agendas. It was corporate media. They didn’t trust that. 

But they trusted the underground magazines and what I used to call slightly aboveground Rolling Stones and Spins. And that was the importance we had then.

It was a magnified importance. Today, there’s far too many different ways to absorb media and get information, to the point that a lot of it is very bad information and fake information. But it’s not the way someone’s going to discover music.

Except one of the things I did with Spin was I went back to the old format of like, that sounds interesting. Let’s put it in. And so, in fact, you can find out about things because they wouldn’t appear on any algorithm. They wouldn’t appear in the normal discourse. They’re not going to have the promotion behind it to make sure they’re in the media. Their social media is going to be narrow. We found things and wrote about people in a very eclectic way. That was always the spirit of the magazine. The other thing that was always the spirit of the magazine was the non-music coverage.

As you well know we always had strong non-music reporting. My view is that nobody in the world, nobody, not a single person, is obsessed with music 24 hours a day. There are other things they care about. And there are things they don’t know they care about, like forces around them that are influencing their lives that they haven’t identified.

We identify those. We wanted that great balance of music, good solid reporting, irreverent reporting, have fun with it, tweak a few noses, but also bring in something of the world around. As I said, one of those great forces that you don’t know them, can’t identify them, but they influence how you live.

And we’ll continue to do that. As a quarterly, I think it is a great economic opportunity, because you don’t have the expenses of producing a magazine monthly and hoping that everybody’s always there to buy it, or advertisers are always supporting it. So quarterly, it can be more, you know, introspective.

We can take our time with stories, we’re working on stories now that we started back in March. You can’t do that online. You can, but it’s rare.

We’re going to produce a magazine that’s a little more thoughtful, a little more deep, and hopefully, well, easily much better written than most of what’s online, because most of what’s online is drek. 

So that’s the difference between the two times and that’s where I leave it. 

Samir Husni: What type of lure does print has in this digital age?  They brought Spin back to print, and so did Creem, Surfer, Powder, Field & Stream, and Saveur to name a few.  What does this return to print mean? I call 2024 the year of the relaunches.

Bob Guccione Jr.:  Again, it’s a fabulous question, and takes a moment to answer. I think the lure is multitudinal. There are many levels.

One is, and you and I are the apostles of print. I mean, when print was going down the tubes in 2008, 9 and 10, you and I were saying, it’s not over, it’s not over. You know, we said it together in one of your interviews, we said it in school, where I co-taught that class for a semester with you.

We never thought it was dead. It has certainly hurt itself critically. I think the fault lies almost 100% with the publishers. There are shifting times, but there are always shifting times. There was a time when television came in, magazines survived and prevailed. There was a time when video and home video and video cassettes and Laser discs were going to kill us,  they didn’t.

Then cable television proliferation didn’t kill us, streaming didn’t kill us. None of these things killed publishing. Publishers killed publishing.

So the lure has always been holding a physical property and being able to engage with it in the way you want to rather than the way you’re forced to. When you’re reading online, you’re forced to sit a certain way because the computer or the device has to determine how you sit or lie. You have to appreciate it in this sort of monotonous way.

And it is what it is. It’s convenient, but it’s also convenient access, not necessarily convenient or enjoyable to read. With a magazine, you have the greatest flexibility of enjoying it your own way. I think there’s a different rhythm to reading a magazine, I guess what I’m saying. So there’s the physical appeal, but also it’s psychologically a pause in the rushed digital age. It’s like pulling off a car in traffic.

It’s like I can sit here in traffic or I just pull off and daydream, go for a walk, come back. I’m going to get there same time. You know, I’m going to let traffic go past, crawl past. I’m going to let that happen. So there’s a digital pause of the madness and the rush. 

You can be reading the newspaper and you have a text and you have an email. So you stop the newspaper, answer the text, read the email, go back to the newspaper, another notification, a phone call. We never get time to rest. But with a magazine, you sort of stop everything. The world blurs out of the picture. The sound goes away. You just take your own time, your own rhythm.

The other thing is people write differently for magazines and they pay differently for magazines. They pay better. So they do a better job.

The reader gets a better product. I think there’s a great value in magazines. Now, the other thing I’ll say, the last thing I’ll say, is that everything you just named is a niche magazine.

It’s a niche interest. Now, Spin’s a little more wider niche, music and pop culture and life around you. But what you didn’t name, general interest magazines, though most of them are still around, like Time and Newsweek, but they’re the ones in trouble because all that information is stale at the time it’s printed.

I did an interview with Bill Maher in the first issue. Great interview, phenomenal interview. One of the things we were talking about was would Biden step aside? And the interview was concluded and went to press before he stepped aside.

So we didn’t know. And I said in the interview, we’re not going to know if he stepped aside in the time between ending the interview and publishing the magazine. I think both Bill and I thought he wouldn’t step aside, which would have been a big mistake. And I think it was great that he did step aside. But there is that difference. But it meant, in effect, had I not made that reference, we would have looked very stale. You know, certainly if you’re covering the news, you’re covering the Trump assassination. Well, everybody was on it 15 minutes after the attempt.

The event in print about it a week later, a month later is obviously stale. So it’s alternating the currents of your current time. You know, we live in a world we live in.

The magazine has to be cognizant of that and reflective of that. But it can bring its own values, which the internet can’t provide. The one of physical expansion almost sort of surrounds you when you read a magazine. You’re lost in your imagination. You’re left alone in your imagination, which is very, very hard to achieve online. 

Samir Husni: Let’s look forward. In 2025, Spin will be 40 years old. What are the plans for the 40th anniversary? Are you going to look back? Are you going to look to the future? Or you’re going to stick to the present? 

Bob Guccione Jr.:  Well, isn’t that a million dollar question? All of it. To be honest, can’t not look back, 40 years and they’ve been really a tremendous part of history. It’s almost half a century.

Look at that time, what a span of time,  in 1985, when we started 40 years took us back to the end of the Second World War and the whole of the evolution of Western civilization, particularly Western, the Western Hemisphere, particularly from 1945 to 1985, including and during which we landed on the moon. That’s the kind of span we’re looking at from 1985 to 2025. A very great historical coverage. So we will have some fun with it, most importantly.

We’ll look back, we’ll do some obvious articles, and we’ll look forward, which won’t be as obvious. But that’s the fun of it. 

Imagine that online, it won’t quite work online, because it’s too linear. Everything about a magazine is you flip a page, you get bored halfway, read that later or never, maybe find something else, and it’s that physical aspect to which is a pleasure. And we’re in the pleasure business. A lot of publishers don’t think like that.

We’re not in the need business. I don’t know a single magazine in the history of the world that anybody needed, except maybe the Old Farmer’s Almanac, that might be the only one that could actually claim to be needed.  We’re actually in the wants business. With the exception of the Old Farmer’s Almanac, the rest of us are in the want business, i.e. the pleasure business.  You give us money, we give you pleasure. 

Samir Husni:  You have been doing digital entities for more than 10 years, so please tell me, in your opinion, what is the biggest invention of those two: the internet or the printing press? 

Bob Guccione Jr.:  Oh, it’s the printing press, without a doubt. Because it was the first time humanity could actually mass communicate. It led to mass communication.

It wasn’t in the beginning, of course, mass. The internet is an extension of that. It’s a technological evolution of that.  Without a doubt, the printing press was far more significant. People will wonder why I’m saying that. The technology for the internet is phenomenal. But the technology at this time with the Gutenberg press was more phenomenal. In those days, monks hand wrote and translated books. That was pretty much the height of communications in those days.

So the printing press, without a doubt. 

Samir Husni: Before I ask you a few personal questions, is there any question I failed to ask or anything you would like to add?

Bob Guccione Jr.:  I want to add to a comment earlier, which won’t endear me to friends in the business or colleagues, but publishing was suicidal. It wasn’t homicidal. Nobody killed publishing, but publishers killed themselves. Because of a number of factors. I’ll give you what I think are the main ones. One is the wrong people own most publishing:

Venture Capitalists. Now, it’s great that they invest, but they’re not the operators. The operators have a skill set that needs to be allowed to work, because that’s how they work.

Venture Capitalists buy things with operators who have proven themselves to be tremendously good. Then they start to slice up the resources and the infrastructure of what the skilled people were using to make it good. That becomes a conflict, that becomes a problem.

In 2008, at the outset of the recession, the largest publisher in the world was J.P. Morgan. That surprised people when they found that out. They had defaulted so many publications, they actually owned more than anybody else. I think the economic model of ownership was a problem.

But the greater problem, it is always the greater problem, is that people get scared. People get scared for their jobs, and they started playing it safe. They produced a product that was kind of amorphous, generic and not very interesting.

Then advertising, which always, like a magpie goes to the shiniest new object, went to the internet. A lot of advertisers pulled away from magazines, went to the internet. What did publishers do? Instead of producing a better product, instead of getting back into shape, like an old guy who’s got a little out of shape, so I better start going to the gym again.

No, they just reduced the product. They reduced the number of pages, reduced the weight of the paper, the quality of the paper, and the quality of the printing. They diminished the amount of journalism that went into it and how much they spent on it. Certainly didn’t take any provocative position because they were afraid of losing the few advertisers they retained. And instead of just saying, no, no, this is a great product.

It’s wonderful the internet’s there, and we’re going to publish on that as well. We’re going to become three-dimensional from two to three. We’re going to become extra dimensional. No, they were scared of it.

First of all, as you know, ignored it. Believed it would go away, hoped it would go away, and then complained it didn’t go away. So we’re to blame.

One of the things I really was adamant about when we started the relaunch of Spin was just do it with quality. Even more quality than we had the first time around. We had nice paper up until the time I sold it.

I don’t know what happened after that. But now we have great paper because you have to be a product. You have to physically be a worthwhile, attractive product.

We went the opposite direction. We didn’t look to cut costs. We actually incurred more costs to get a better quality product to the newsstand.

So that’s what I want to say. I just want to take the opportunity to say I think publishers tended to go in the wrong direction.  I look at a lot of magazines on the newsstand now, and they’re still doing it wrong.

You pick up a copy of the gossip weeklies, and they’re 40 pages, and they’re thin as toilet paper. They print on toilet paper. You go, why would anyone pick this up? You’re not giving me any value here.

Plus, I get the same stuff online instantly. I can read the checkout magazine on my phone before I check out? So there are a number of problems. I think it’s important for publishers to recognize they’ve got to make a competitive product and not just cut costs and try to compensate for a tougher market.

But it’s great to see this resurgence in print. It’s fantastic. It’ll make it a little harder sometimes to get printing time, but that’s good.

You’ll see paper mills come back. You’ll see printing presses come back. 

Samir Husni: That’s great.  Now, let me ask some personal questions. If I come unannounced to visit you at home one evening, what do I catch Bob Guccione Jr. doing? Reading a book, watching TV, cooking, or drinking some fine red wine? 

Bob Guccione Jr.:  Well, now we’re talking. First of all, you’d be invited to dinner, which I’d be cooking, and we’d be drinking the wine while I cooked. You know, that’s kind of my relaxation is to cook and to drink a bottle of wine. Well, not all on my own, but to open a bottle of wine.

And the very simple pleasures, you know, read, watch TV with Liza. Liza and I together have been for 21 years. We have a quiet and simple life. We really just can be happy doing nothing. We can be happy going out for dinner. So if you do come unannounced, you better call me because I might be out. But yeah, I still read books.  I love to read books.

Samir Husni: What do you like to read? Is it fiction, nonfiction, or everything? 

Bob Guccione Jr.:  I enjoy a bit of everything, of course. But I mainly read detective novels because it is such a great escape from the work life, which is so involved, partly travel, partly, music and Spin. I’m starting a science site. That’s getting me in the science world again. 

Samir Husni: My final typical question is what keeps Bob up at night? 

Bob Guccione Jr.:  Ah, indigestion. What keeps me up? Blessedly, nothing. Nothing keeps me up. Maybe it’s age. Maybe I’ve got to a point in my life where I’m just smart enough to realize nothing should keep you up. The one thing that keeps us up sometimes is the dog. The dog is old and has problem. But other than that, really nothing. I mean, I’m very lucky.

I used to have insomnia, so everything kept me up and I slept very intermittently. But that’s because I lived in New York. When I moved out of New York, to Milford, Pennsylvania,  honestly, it was about a month later,  I realized I hadn’t had insomnia.

Samir Husni:  Great.  Congratulations again and all the best with the relaunch.  Thank you for your time.

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Colin Kearns, Editor In Chief,  Field & Stream To Samir “Mr. Magazine™” Husni:  “The Magazine Is The Next Best Thing To Being Outside…” The Mr. Magazine™ Interview

July 8, 2024

“Best Magazine Relaunch Ever, Bar None…”  Samir “Mr. Magazine™” Husni

Field & Stream is back in print. Let me start by telling you that, editor in chief Colin Kearns and his team, with this relaunch issue, not only captured the essence of the past of Field & Stream, but also presented it in such a modern way for the present with a solid foundation for the future. I’ve been following the magazine industry for almost like 45 years and I have seen some good relaunches over the years, starting with relaunch of Life magazine in 1978, and a few good ones in the last few years such as Creem, Saveur, Nylon, to name a few, but “I’ve never seen a relaunch like what you’ve done,”  I told Colin in an in-depth interview I did with him two weeks ago.

The relaunch is the brainchild of two celebrity country music stars, Eric Church and Morgan Wallen, who Colins credits, “They are both lifelong outdoorsman, and they grew up with Field & Stream. They take a lot of pride being a part of it.”

The goal of the relaunch is to honor the “legacy and tapped into what Field & Stream once was and used to be, but also like what it can be going forward to a new generation of hunters, fishermen, hikers, and campers,” Colin told me.

And now for my interview with Colin Kearns, editor in chief, of Field & Stream.  But first the sound bites:

On naming the owners Eric Church and Morgan Wallen “Legacy Steward”: To their credit, that was their idea to take that.  I can’t remember what the other suggestions or ideas for titles that we threw their way, but none of them quite fit right. And, and we settled on legacy stewards, because the two of them really do take this very seriously:  The Field & Stream brand and their stake and role within it.

On the first order of business for the new owners: And sure enough, the first kind of order of operations, we’re bringing back the magazine.  It’s going to be a biannual coffee table style book, premium as can be, nice paper, oversized format. And I was like, really, we’re doing this.

On the power of print in this digital age: There’s no distractions, there’s no screens. They just get to lose themselves in the outdoors. And I like to think that with the stories we’re telling in print, that we can come close to replicating that.

On the relationship with the audience:  Field & Stream always had a very strong communal essence to the brands. A lot of our readers feel they know our writers. They’re the kind of household names and they’ve come to know them very well.

On the creation of the 1871 club: Hunting and fishing are communal activities. They’re very family oriented. They are pursuits that you do with friends and family. We’d like to kind of replicate that with Field & Stream as a brand and to create this 1871 club.  It’s something our audience will want to be a part of.

On his expectation of the first issue: I’d like to think that we either met or exceeded expectations with this first issue and that when they see it or, or they get their hands on it, this is something I want to own and keep forever.

On readers reaction to the first issue: I put my email address in my editor’s letter, hoping that people would reach out directly to me. And they have.  I’ve had one person said when they saw their first issue, they started crying because they were so happy.

On the Legacy Stewards: They’re both great storytellers. They’re artists and musicians. That’s how they make their living, but they’re really good storytellers. And that goes a long way in my book. So I’m happy that they’re part of the team and have new stories to share.

And now for the lightly edited my in-depth interview with Colin Kearns, editor in chief of Field & Stream:

Samir Husni: I’ve seen a lot of relaunches. There were good relaunches, but this takes the cake.

Colin Kearns: Thank you very much. It means the world to me.

There was a lot of pressure to get this right. We felt that every step along the way of relaunching the magazine.

Samir Husni: How does it feel working for celebrity owners? I noticed they are referred to as “Legacy Stewards.”

Colin Kearns: To their credit, that was their idea to take that.  I can’t remember what the other suggestions or ideas for titles that we threw their way, but none of them quite fit right. And, and we settled on legacy stewards, because the two of them really do take this very seriously:  The Field & Stream brand and their stake and role within it.

They are both lifelong outdoorsman, and they grew up with Field & Stream. They take a lot of pride being a part of it. But just like myself, I think they felt the pressure to get this launch just right. To make sure that we not only honored the legacy and tapped into what Field & Stream once was and used to be, but also like what it can be going forward to a new generation of hunters, fishermen, hikers, and campers.

In terms of working for them it’s been fantastic, because they’re kind of staying out of the way. I mean when they came into it, I don’t think they had any ambitions or aspirations of this being the Eric Church journal or the Morgan Wallen journal. They don’t have these egos where it’s like, this has to be all about me.

They just wanted to put everyone else within the company, within Field & Stream, in a place to succeed. They’re helping with guidance, or direction, or however they’re needed. But they’re being, especially on the magazine, and from a content standpoint,  they’re being pretty hands off, because they have a lot of trust in the editorial staff and in me to know that, ‘they’re the experts on this. We’ll  let them do their thing.’  We’re here for them when they need us.

Samir Husni: You’re not new to Field & Stream. You’ve been there 16 years and you wrote about that this issue was like coming home to you. Can you expand a little bit?

Colin Kearns:  I can take a step back and say around this time last year, when we were with Recurrent, I wasn’t in a great place with my career, if I’m being perfectly honest, I didn’t love my job. I can’t say I even liked my job. We had gone far away from where Field & Stream was.  The Field & Stream that I fell in love with, the Field & Stream that I had enjoyed working for pretty much my entire professional career.

When Recurrent acquired us in 2020, one of the first decisions they made was to sunset the print magazine, not just for us, but Outdoor Life, Popular Science, and Saveur, plus the other titles that they acquired at that time. I understood that. I didn’t begrudge them, I knew that print was not part of their business.

At the time, it kind of made my peace. I had a great run with this magazine. The last issue we printed in 2020 was our 125th anniversary issue, which was, at the same time,  125 years and now it’s gone.

So that was kind of bittersweet. I felt like the last issue we went out swinging. And I was like, if this is the last print issue of Field & Stream, we did our best. We can be proud of that. And for a while there Recurrent was good. They were investing in staff, and we had a lot of momentum going.

But then, maybe two years into that part of Field & Stream’s history, things just changed very gradually. It seemed like one day, I woke up and looked at fieldandstream.com. And I saw nothing but clickbait stories or commerce stories about products that had nothing to do with Field and Stream. We were doing stories about skiing boots, and we don’t cover skiing.

We were doing stories about different animal poop, because it’s like, this is what people are searching for. These are the kind of SEO terms we could go after. And it was just like what’s happened to Field & Stream? Where have we gone? This is so far away from, from the Field &Stream that I grew up loving, the Field & Stream that I’d loved working for over a decade.

All the great storytelling , we were known for, was nowhere to be found on the site. And I just felt like I’d gone so far away from the Field & Stream that I loved, and was so near and dear to me, and also to our audience. I was just like what am I doing here? This is not a place I want to be.

And then, lo and behold, there was a meeting last October, where the new investors approached us, and I had a meeting with my boss, and the CEO of the company. This meeting was on a Monday morning, and it was put on my calendar at the last minute. When I saw that the CEO was on the call, I was like, I might be losing my job here.

Calls like this don’t typically happen. As the call went on, it dawned on me that Recurrent was in the process of selling Field & Stream to what is now our new owners. As I learned more about the new direction that the new owners wanted to take,  they kept bringing up the print magazine,  and getting back to our heritage.

It’s like, this all sounds great, but part of me was very skeptical. This is too good to be true. They’re not serious about bringing back the magazine, no way that’s going to happen.

The sale went through, we came over to the new company at the end of last year. And sure enough, the first kind of order of operations, we’re bringing back the magazine.  It’s going to be a biannual coffee table style book, premium as can be, nice paper, oversized format. And I was like, really, we’re doing this.

Eventually it became clear; this isn’t too good to be true. This is happening. Once I started to get back into that work with the rest of the edit team, it felt like a homecoming.

All of a sudden we were able to tell the stories that we’d love to tell, we were starting to be more ambitious, we could take a story that might only be 3000 words and give it 12 pages, because the photography was so spectacular. As we were working on his first issue, I’d almost forgotten how much I love this work and how meaningful it is to me. When I was working on my letter for this first issue, this theme of homecoming just came to me because it felt like a family reunion with all the writers and photographers that we used to work for and getting to work with them again.

The readers that love Field & Stream had missed getting it in their mailbox. Just working on print and seeing these stories in this format felt like coming home again. It was really special.

Samir Husni: What do you feel is the role of print in today’s digital age?

Colin Kearns:  It’s an experience that you can’t get digitally. There’s a lot to be said for what we can do with our digital content. We take that very seriously. That’s where our audience comes for the latest reviews and recommendations for gear. That’s where they come for, for seasonal how-to stories, whether it’s hunting or fishing or camping, or the latest outdoor news, whether it’s about hunting or fishing or conservation.

I think that all fits within the digital realm of what we’re doing, but where print, there’s a lot to be said for just logging off and getting away from screens and sitting down with the magazine and enjoying these stories at a slow pace and immersing yourself in them where you’re not getting distracted. Something we say about the magazine is that we like to think it’s the next best thing to being outside. I think a lot of what our audience, our readers, a huge thing they enjoy about getting outside and hunting and fishing is, is they get to get away from everything.

There’s no distractions, there’s no screens. They just get to lose themselves in the outdoors. And I like to think that with the stories we’re telling in print, that we can come close to replicating that.

We’re telling stories that are aspirational, that are inspirational that allow you to escape. Reading them in a print format is the only way to truly experience those stories.

Samir Husni: You created the 1872 Club membership as part of the relaunch. Do you feel that is part of the essence of print these days is that you have to be part of not only the ownership of the magazine, but also the membership to feel that you belong  to a group?

Colin Kearns:    I think it’s a really nice thing.  Field & Stream always had a very strong communal essence to the brands. A lot of our readers feel they know our writers. They’re the kind of household names and they’ve come to know them very well.

Hunting and fishing are communal activities. They’re very family oriented. They are pursuits that you do with friends and family. We’d like to kind of replicate that with Field & Stream as a brand and to create this 1871 club.  It’s something our audience will want to be a part of.

I think the magazine is what everyone’s most excited about and getting that. But in addition to that this is a new era for the brand and we don’t want people to be just subscribers to a magazine. We do obviously want but we also want them to feel they’re a part of something because, not to sound cheesy, but this is a new era for the brand.

We want to bring our audience in with it and make them feel part of it, because for three and a half years there was no magazine coming to people’s homes. A lot of them felt betrayed by that because just overnight the magazine went away and they never got it and  they never really got a reason why.

A huge challenge with this first issue when we made the announcement that print was coming back was that we had to kind of re-earn their trust. No one knew what this first issue was going to be  when we made the announcement back in January that Field & Stream was coming back in print.  I’d like to think that we either met or exceeded expectations with this first issue and that when they see it or, or they get their hands on it, this is something I want to own and keep forever. Field & Stream is something I want to be a part of.

Samir Husni:  What was the most challenging moment in putting this issue together?

Colin Kearns:  Back in January, I flew to Nashville where we had a team meeting, a company meeting, and I essentially pitched my concept for the magazine from the structure and the themes that I wanted to do for this year and the stories I wanted to tell.

I pitched my budget for what this was probably going to cost. I’ll never forget it when I was done. I guess I was pretty impassioned when I was sharing this  and really trying to, to get everyone behind me.

When I was done, everyone applauded, in the conference room, they’re like, this is great: Go. And  Doug McNamee, the boss, the president said, great, now go do it.

I was elated when he said that, but on the flight home, I was like, oh shit, we’ve got to do this now. It was on a quick timeframe. I mean we got approval to start going forward in January. We had to be done with this thing in March and it’s a 160 page issue that we started from scratch. So getting everything done on a short time was very challenging. These were like muscles, editorial muscles that I hadn’t exercised in a long time. Three and a half years is a long time to go without publishing a magazine.

Now, obviously in that time we were doing a digital version of the magazine at Recurrent, but it’s not the same at all. I’d just forgotten how hard it is to produce a magazine and how much work it is. Every time I told that to people, I made sure  I’m not complaining because this is the most fun I’ve had at work and the most fulfilled I’ve felt in a long time, but it is hard work putting out a magazine.

Also the pressure that we’ve all put ourselves on. We took the magazine away from readers and now here we bringing it back and asking for a significant investment. It’s not an inexpensive magazine. We wanted to make sure that what we were producing would be worth it.

Samir Husni: And what was the most pleasant moment?

Colin Kearns: We’re obviously all work remote,. In the old days at Field & Stream, when we were working on an issue pages would be passed around the office and you’d edit on paper.

Now obviously that’s not how it is. We’re editing on PDFs sending them via Slack or email. And it’s like, all right, it’s your turn.

So even though I knew every single page of the issue, like the back of my hand, I’ve read all the stories probably a dozen times.  I knew what the issue was. I had no idea how impactful and how big it would be when, when I first held it.

When the box of issues arrived at my house and when I opened that first box of issues and held in my hands, no one was here to see me, but I was, I just kept saying, holy shit, holy shit, holy shit. And it was like, this is enormous. This is so big  and makes such an impact.  I thought I knew this issue was so well. And it took even me by surprise.

I think we did something special here. And  it was great.

Samir Husni: Is there anything I need to ask you that I didn’t ask you?

Colin Kearns: That’s a good question. I can’t think of anything, honestly. I just want to follow up on what I just said. It’s been really fantastic to hear feedback from readers as well.  I put my email address in my editor’s letter, hoping that people would reach out directly to me. And they have.  I’ve had one person said when they saw their first issue, they started crying because they were so happy.

People have been so pleasantly surprised and delighted to have the magazine back and to see it in this new format. That’s really been rewarding because we had a tall task on us to make good and regain our readers trust with bringing back the magazine. And I don’t think we’ve nailed it. We’ve still got work to do, but I do think we’ve at least made a good first impression we’re taking this very seriously and hopefully only going to get better from here.

Samir Husni: One of my typical personal questions at the end is if I come to visit you one evening and I knock on your door, what do I catch you doing? I mean, cooking, reading a book, watching TV or taking care of?

Colin Kearns:  I’ve got my wife and I have a 20 month old son. So if you came over you’d be warmly welcomed.

Of course  you’d probably find me either cooking a dinner for them or sharing dinner with the two of them. That’s typically what we do.

After that it’s either story time or play time with, with Leo. On the rare nights where he goes to bed at a decent hour I might treat myself to 30 minutes of an old movie before I go to bed.

Samir Husni: I’ve noticed you introduced Leo to the magazine.

Colin Kearns: Yes. It was really special. When the first issue arrived, there was not a photo of me with the editor’s letter.  There’s this beautiful sketch portrait, done by an artist named Frederick Stivers which he did it from a photo that I sent him of, of me on a trout fishing trip.

I showed it to my son, Leo and said,  Leo, do you recognize who is that? And he looked at it and he said, dad, dad. That was really cool.

It means a lot to me, whether he grows up and enjoys, fishing or hunting. That remains to be seen.  He will grow up with Field & Stream in his house, on the coffee table, or on the bookshelves. I did, I know a lot of our readers did. It’s an important presence in a lot of people’s homes. It makes me happy and warms my heart that’ll be true for him too.

Samir Husni: My last typical question is what keeps up at night these days?

Colin Kearns:  A lot of things. How do I be a better father? How do I be a better husband? How do I be a better writer and editor? And how do I be a better fly fisherman? That’s it.

Those are, those are four things that I think about. I don’t have to be the best at any of them. I don’t expect to be the best, but how can I be better at each thing each day? And that’s what I think about. That’s what keeps me up.

Samir Husni: One more question I have to ask. Are you now a country music fan?

Colin Kearns: I’m getting there slowly but surely. I’m more of a talking heads type of fan. But I will say this about Eric and Morgan, another reason they fit so perfectly within the Field & Stream brand and families.

They’re both great storytellers. They’re artists and musicians. That’s how they make their living, but they’re really good storytellers. And that goes a long way in my book. So I’m happy that they’re part of the team and have new stories to share.

Samir Husni: Thank you for your time. And all the best.