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Sports Afield reloads as new publisher takes a shot. (Up Front).


Publishing magnate Robert Petersen Robert Petersen can refer to:
  • Robert Storm Petersen, Danish cartoonist
  • Robert E. Petersen, American publisher and automotive museum founder
 is counting on an old hunting buddy to keep 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.  Magazine alive.

The 115-year-old hunting and fishing title is expected to return to newsstands in December, six months after the North Hollywood-based magazine suspended publication and laid off its staff. The resurrection resurrection (rĕz'ərĕk`shən) [Lat.,=rising again], arising again from death to life. The emergence of Jesus from the tomb to live on earth again for 40 days as told in the Gospels has been from the beginning the central fact of  comes thanks to a licensing deal Petersen worked out with Ludo ludo
Noun

Brit & Austral a simple board game in which players move counters forward by throwing dice [Latin: I play]

Noun 1.
 Wurfbain, a fellow hunting enthusiast and owner of Safari Press Inc., a Huntington Beach Huntington Beach, city (1990 pop. 181,519), Orange co., S Calif., on the Pacific coast, across from Santa Catalina Island, in an oil-producing area; inc. 1909. It manufactures aerospace vehicles, aircraft parts, optical instruments, and heat transfer equipment.  publisher of hunting and sports firearms This is an extensive list of small arms — pistol, machine gun, grenade launcher, anti-tank rifle — that includes variants.

: Top - 0–9 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

A
  • A-91 (Russia - Compact Assault Rifle - 5.
 books.

Wurfbain's Field Sports field sports
Noun, pl

sports carried on in the countryside, such as hunting or fishing
 Publications Inc. is licensing only the publishing rights to the magazine. Petersen will retain control of the publication's related properties, including cable television show "Sports Afield: On Assignment" and the syndicated radio program "Sports Afield Almanac almanac, originally, a calendar with notations of astronomical and other data. Almanacs have been known in simple form almost since the invention of writing, for they served to record religious feasts, seasonal changes, and the like. ." Financial terms of the deal, which was announced last week, were not disclosed.

Despite tough times in the magazine industry and Petersen's failed attempt to turn Sports Afield around, Wurfbain believes he can wait out the downturn.

"A down market is an opportunity to buy, if you take a long-term view' he said. "We wanted to structure the money such that we could sit out what is surely the most severe advertising recession in 100 years."

Sports Afield, launched in 1887 as the "Journal for Gentlemen," is one of the nation's oldest magazines. Under the ownership of Hearst Corp., the publication was turned into a general interest outdoors magazine in the 1990s, a strategy that proved unsuccessful. Circulation fell below 500,000, far less than what competitors Field & Stream and Outdoor Life were drawing.

Petersen, founder of Guns & Ammo and Motor Trend, sold a majority interest in his magazine holdings to British publisher Emap PLC in 1996 and the balance two years later. He bought Sports Afield in late 1999, marking his return to publishing. Emap sold Petersen Publishing, renamed Emap USA, to Primedia Inc. last year.

Petersen moved Sports Afield to North Hollywood 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
 and returned the magazine to its fishing and hunting roots, relaunching it with Ken Elliott, former vice president of the outdoor division of Petersen Publishing, at the helm. While the number of ad pages went up and circulation rose slightly, Sports Afield was hit hard by the recession and decline in ad spending.

"We were in this relaunch Relaunch can refer to several things:
  • , a series of novels set in the Star Trek universe
  • Relaunch (process), is a marketing process in which a brand or product (such as a magazine or a car) is relaunched
 mode when the advertising industry fell apart," Elliot said. "After the events of 9/11, advertising became very difficult."

Publication temporarily ceased in June and everyone was laid off but Elliot, who stayed on to assist in the transition to a new publisher. While other media are showing some signs of recovery, magazine ad spending is expected to remain flat through the end of the year.

Under Petersen, Sports Afield was kept relatively small to attract the "rods, reels, guns and bullets" advertisers who want to reach outdoors enthusiasts but can't afford the high rates of larger circulation magazines, Elliot said.

"If you get too big, you price yourself out of that market," he said. "To be a special interest magazine, the advertising has to mirror the editorial."

Wurfbain plans to take a similar tack. He said he won't be offering bargain-basement subscriptions simply to keep circulation high. "We're not going to be too interested in trying to sell you a three-year subscription for $2.99," he said.

Circulation may crop down to 200,000 and ad rates could follow with roughly a 50 percent decrease, Wurfbain said. But he's confident the magazine will draw in enough smaller advertisers to make up for the loss of national ones.

No major editorial changes are planned, although Wurfbain, who comes from a family of hunters, wants to see more "adventure" stories, "like going on a hiking hiking

Walking, often among hills or mountains, as recreational sport. It represents an activity in its own right and also figures in backpacking, camping, hunting, mountaineering, and orienteering.
 trip in Alaska and maybe getting into trouble with a bear."

He has brought on Diana Rupp, a former editor of Wildfowl wildfowl: see waterfowl.  and Wing & Shot, as editor in chief. The magazine will publish 10 issues a year.

"We realize that this is a hard time to run a magazine but we see this as a real opportunity," Wurfbain said.

Publisher of close to 200 books on hunting and sports firearms, Wurfbain said he had been looking to get into magazine publishing when Petersen began talking about Sports Afield.

Asked if he expects, at least initially, to lose money on the magazine, Wurbain said: "If it would do otherwise, I would probably fall out of my chair."
COPYRIGHT 2002 CBJ, L.P.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Comment:Sports Afield reloads as new publisher takes a shot. (Up Front).
Author:Peschiutta, Claudia
Publication:Los Angeles Business Journal
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Sep 2, 2002
Words:723
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