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Magazine Mogul.


ROBERT E. PETERSEN Robert Einar "Pete" Petersen (September 10, 1926 – March 23, 2007) was an American publisher and founder of the Petersen Automotive Museum in 1994. [1]

Petersen was born in East Los Angeles and served in the Army Air Corps in World War II.
 SOLD HIS HUGE PUBLISHING COMPANY, BUT SOON REALIZED INK WAS IN HIS BLOOD. NOW HE HAS BIG PLANS FOR SPORTS AFIELD Sports Afield was founded in 1887 as a hunting and fishing magazine in 1887 by Claude King and is the oldest outdoor publication in North America. The first issue, in January of 1888, was eight pages long and printed on newspaper stock, out of Denver, Colorado. .

ROBERT E. Petersen built a name for himself in the publishing world over the last 50 years putting out niche magazines, and with the exception of Teen, they all reflected his personal interests.

But four years ago, he sold his 32-title Petersen Publishing Inc. (with such titles as Hot Rod hot rod

Automobile rebuilt or modified for high speed, fast acceleration, or sporty appearance. A wide range of automobiles may be called hot rods, including some of those used in drag racing as well as those used in recreational cruising.
, Skin Diving skin diving, act of swimming freely underwater. It is done with the aid of a face mask, swimming fins for the feet, and either a snorkel breathing tube or scuba [acronym for self-contained underwater breathing apparatus] gear.  and Guns and Ammo) for $500 million and said goodbye to the publishing business. But ink gets in the blood, and Petersen is back.

The man whom Forbes magazine called one of the nation's richest media moguls (with an estimated worth of $725 million) rejoined "Rejoined" is an episode of , the sixth episode of the fourth season.

Quick Overview: Jadzia Dax is reunited with the mate of a former host and the two struggle with their feelings for one another.
 the publishing world this January with his purchase of the flailing Sports Afield magazine. He's since moved the 113-year-old publication from New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 to North Hollywood and has shifted its focus back to hunting and fishing.

Much has changed in publishing since Petersen started Hot Rod to write about his hobby in 1948. He's put Sports Afield online and is talking about partnerships with Internet startups and even publishing books online in conjunction with the magazine.

He started Petersen Aviation with one plane because of his interest in aviation. The charter service now has four Gulf Streams and three Hawkers HAWKERS. Persons going from place to place with goods and merchandise for sale. To prevent impositions they are generally required to take out licenses, under regulations established by the local laws of the states.  to shuttle celebrities and others back and forth.

Question: Why did you decide to buy Sports Afield and come back to the publishing business?

Answer: It was just something that happened. It came up that the magazine was for sale and everyone was speculating about who would buy it. And so we got to talking and said, "Maybe it'd be a good idea if we bought it and brought it back to its former great self." So that's what we did. We made a bid. I didn't really expect to win. I felt that there were so many people buying stuff out there now. But they said they were very happy that we bid (because) they wanted someone to give it a good home.

Q: What changes do you plan for the magazine's content?

A: We want to have a true hunting ant fishing magazine. We think that market is up; there is a lot of activity there. A lot of the magazines out there are owned by people who don't have any interest in that area. Most of the majors are owned by big conglomerates A Conglomerate is the term used to describe a large corporation that consists of diverse divisions. Conglomerate companies tend to be large multinational corporations with operations in multiple regions of the world. . So we feel that with some good guys at the magazine, we can grow it bigger and have it do a good job.

Q: How will you restructure it?

A: We've redone re·done  
v.
Past participle of redo.
 the whole editorial team. We've brought in a top editorial staff. We're bringing in all sorts of top people now. The good thing about the magazine is to have the top writers and have people who really know what they're talking about. We're bringing back a lot of people who used to write for Sports Afield.

Q: Sports Afield has been losing readers and advertising has been dropping over the past few years. Why do you think it can be brought back?

A: I think it still has a name, still has a following. They lost people but they'll come back. We just want a great magazine and I'm sure we'll make a profit.

Q: How is running a magazine today different than when you launched Hot Rod?

A: I think today magazines can't just be magazines. They have to be magazines and they have to be on the Web -- they have to be in all sorts of other areas because advertisers want coverage clear across the media.

Originally, we just published a magazine. But then you published a magazine and if you were lucky you had a TV connection. And now you have to be on the Web. The Web is part of it and advertisers are used to the Web, they know what to do.

Q: What did you do before you got into publishing?

A: I worked at MGM MGM
 in full Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Inc.

U.S. corporation and film studio. It was formed when the film distributor Marcus Loew, who bought Metro Pictures in 1920, merged it with the Goldwyn production company in 1924 and with Louis B. Mayer Pictures in 1925.
. I started as a telegraph messenger and then I worked various jobs -- photographer, assistant -- and then they fired me and I started .Hot Rod.

Q: How did that come about?

A: I met Mad Man Muntz, a big car salesman. I was his P.R. person. We did the first Hot Rod show in 1948, and Hot Rod (magazine) came out of the P.R The guy I started with at the time, his father had a magazine called Tailwaggers for dogs, so we went over and stole al our ideas from what they were doing Which there weren't many. It was a magazine (about dogs) that went to the movie stars.

Q: What did people think of you and Hot Rod magazine Hot Rod magazine is a popular American monthly magazine devoted the the hobby of hot rodding, or modifying automobiles for performance and appearance. History
Hot Rod magazine is the oldest magazine devoted to hot rodding having been published since 1948. Robert E.
 in 1948?

A: They thought it was crazy. They thought the title was kind of racy rac·y  
adj. rac·i·er, rac·i·est
1. Having a distinctive and characteristic quality or taste.

2. Strong and sharp in flavor or odor; piquant or pungent.

3. Risqué; ribald.

4.
. At that time we were having problems with the police. They were going to shut down hot rods. I used to go before big groups and try to sell hot rod stories and said, "If we could get all hot rodders off the streets and into drag strips drag strip
n.
A short, straight course or track for drag racing.
, that would be wonderful." So we did that.

Q: Did you think you'd get back into publishing after selling off Petersen Publishing?

A: No.

Q: Do you have any plans to buy more magazines?

A: Everybody asks me that. Right now I'm happy working this magazine out. I think we're going to have a lot of fun getting back in the business. You have to form a whole new thing now. When we were in the business before, we had all the operations. We just said, "Start a new magazine." Now we have to pick out circulation people, financial people. It's a whole new business, so I'm not really looking forward to starting another one right now.

Q: How many cars do you own, and which is your favorite?

A: Oh, (takes a minute to count in his head) between 35 and 40. They're all my Favorite My Favorite is an independent synthpop band from Long Island, New York. They released two CDs: Love at Absolute Zero and Happiest Days of Our Lives. My Favorite broke up on September 14, 2005, when singer Andrea Vaughn left the band. . I'm driving the Ferrari 456 today.

Q: Collecting seems to have changed over the last 50 years, since you started Rot Rod. Do you think you'd collect the same thing today if you had to start over?

A: Collecting anything now is a big deal. It's a big job to be a car collector because you have to spend a lot of time keeping them up. I think with computers, collecting is going to go crazy. I think hat a lot of things were in people's garages, and now they see the Internet hing and think, "I can sell this."

Robert E. Petersen

Title: Publisher, owner

Organizations: Sports Afield, Petersen Aviation

Born: Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850. , 1926

Most Admired Person: His wife

Personal: Married
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Article Details
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Title Annotation:Robert E. Petersen
Author:NETHERBY, JENNIFER
Publication:Los Angeles Business Journal
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jun 19, 2000
Words:1127
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