Colt Forum banner

GUNS and American Handgunner now digital only…

1K views 41 replies 26 participants last post by  Goldcup62  
#1 · (Edited)
They just announced the end of the print magazine. It’s a sad day. GUNS is the oldest non-organization published magazine. I am honored to have been a part of it for the last eight years.
 
#7 ·
What am I gonna do with the magazine rack sitting next to the toilet? 😢
 
#8 ·
Wow! That's total BS....I'm emailing Roy, as he's the only contact I have related there. I just renewed both AH and Guns for another 5 years about a month ago. I 100% would not have done so knowing this. They better refund it.

edit - message already sent via Suzi as well. Very disappointed and I will never read their offerings as much if they aren't in print. This only hurts writers such as Alan and others. Sad day.
 
#10 ·
Top Story in Stock market news.
falling 30 points today was the value of the magazine rack, occurring shortly after the announcement of the end of the paper copy of GUNS magazine. … the magazine rack -soon to be just a novelty item of decoration that once adorned nearly every bathroom around the globe. ….

no more American Handgunner on the shelf of the magazine stand on aisle 12 in the grocery store. Which was THE only reason that I would go to buy groceries by myself .. so I could flip through every page of that magazine. Good chance i will have two teenage boys thinking they’re close to starvation now that my motivation for grocery runs has been dissolved.
 
#14 ·
I stopped subscribing years ago, when Peterson Publishing sold out. Guns and Amoo as well as Hot Rod magazines went downhill fast, so did Shooting Times. Once these publications started being published by a publishing firm, they just weren't the same.

I always liked American Handgunner too and was going to subscribe.
 
#21 ·
Well, that's not something I wanted to hear. I've subscribed to AH and Guns for at least a couple of decades and like others, I enjoy the hard copy. It's easy for me to pick up the copy and go right to where I left off instead of searching through my iPad to find the subscription and then searching for the next article I want to read or re-read. I just renewed both for a couple of years so I'll have to see what the new format looks like and decide from there if I want to continue with the subscription or let it lapse.
 
#24 ·
If you watch the podcast, they are not retiring to Bermuda with a stack of cash. They have been struggling to stay afloat for years. It was either go digital or close the doors permanently. People are loosing their jobs as it is. It used to be 40 people were on staff. The last few years it been 10 or less. Paper costs 400% more than it did a few years ago. Keep in mind publications with advertising can’t use USPS media rate so shipping has gone way up and is going up again for the Holidays.

It used to mean something to write for a print magazine but now advertisers want to reach more than print subscribers. If I write a gun review, it’s in a magazine for a month and then most go in the trash. If the review is online, it’s there until the website is taken down, which could be decades later. Which gets more views?
Where does it go from here? I have no idea. I’m still struggling to find my compass. When I got the news, it was devastating. I have thousands invested in books for researching specific guns. I have made trips to photograph guns that I want to write about. I have written articles that most likely will never get published.
I have been a writer for other publications since 1987. Most are gone. Some kept dropping the pay as times got tough until they finally said it was the end. I wrote for a website that required I find my own sponsors to get paid. One magazine gave me impossible deadlines that required an extreme amount of research into deer and turkey trending each year. If I counted all my hours, I was getting less than $5 an hour. When I was offered a position at FMG, it was a breath of fresh air and it kills me to think it might be ending.
 
#27 ·
This is very sad news. I don't subscribe to either but I check my grocery store magazine rack and frequently buy issues that focus on guns I like.

My only subscription anymore is to True West and they've reduced the number of issues per year they send out. I really hope they don't follow suit. I really enjoy going through my "collection" and re-reading articles on a rainy day
 
#28 ·
This is very sad news. I don't subscribe to either but I check my grocery store magazine rack and frequently buy issues that focus on guns I like.
I subscribed to GUNS, but usually found the special editions at my local market magazine rack. But a year or two ago they stopped carrying any guns/shooting material.
And I really think people in the USPS pipeline are throwing gun related periodicals, especially NRA mags in the dumpster! 🤨
 
#29 · (Edited)
Well this is sad.. soon no one will remember the fun of picking up a good informative fun magazine at the market or book store or getting one in the mail.. Take a magazine on a plane ride a bus ride etc. To places and in ways that you could never take a compuker.. How much fun it was to get a "guns of the old west" and talk about it here on C.F. Sheeeit.


Just remember when they turn the compukers off- we will be back to the stone age in about a week..

Or in my case a week end.. lol
 
#30 ·
Well this is sad.. soon no one will remember the fun of picking up a good informative fun magazine at the market or book store or getting one in the mail.. Take a magazine on a plane ride a bus ride etc.
Take/read a gun or shooting magazine on a bus or plane today and you'll end up in handcuffs!!!
 
#31 ·
Yep, & one of the stupidest things in the compuker world going to a gun site and seeing "are you 18" wat a crop of you know what- Its a totally bonkers world these days- where I live I run into a lot of young GI's and I always tell them wacky stories if they want to hear them- about the fun in the military and good old days about that time in Taipei etc.. its astounding to them them lol they always say..

dang wish we were in back then!.. and get a wistful look about them ha ha!

Well we got our memories.. can't take that away,😄
 
#34 ·
Like others have said, I spend a lot of time at work looking at screens. I find myself tiring faster of even using my laptop at home to surf gun forums and such. I ALWAYS enjoy holding a good magazine or book in hand, whether it be on the deck with a bourbon or on the crapper.

Being a book lover since childhood, I've amassed a pretty good library and now wonder, is it worth anything to anyone else but me? The thought of taking out all the shelves, scrapping the pages and installing a big flat screen in their place is appalling. Don't get me wrong, I've also got the 80" flat screen to enjoy the movies with and the handy little Mac laptop for all things internet (can't stand much more than texting on my phone). There is something for the brain though, in holding a book, reading it, thinking on it and understanding, plus the pure enjoyment.

I've tried reading articles and other formats on the Guns, American Handgunner and other websites. Sure, it's there, just scrolling on down but the enjoyment is far lower and I predict I'll spend much less time online with them, more likely just drifting away to spend time doing other pursuits.


And for anyone wondering about their subscription fees, they legally have to refund any "unused" funds, as subscriptions are legally to be held in an escrow until they time out. Now, they just have to find a way for the many thousands of subscribers. I'm in no rush there and honestly, I would've paid a good bit more for a subscription, just to keep the print copies rolling.
 
#42 ·
I have been a book nut all my life (69 yrs) and with my love of WWII history and guns had quite the library over time. I have a used book dealer friend and he (and I) saw the writing on the wall years ago. I started downsizing my collection and he was willing to buy my books and did so over the years now. I least I was getting something for my books. I still have some and even buy some once in awhile, but the internet changed everything and not for the better in most cases.
Being a book lover since childhood, I've amassed a pretty good library and now wonder, is it worth anything to anyone else but me? The thought of taking out all the shelves, scrapping the pages and installing a big flat screen in their place is appalling. Don't get me wrong, I've also got the 80" flat screen to enjoy the movies with and the handy little Mac laptop for all things internet (can't stand much more than texting on my phone). There is something for the brain though, in holding a book, reading it, thinking on it and understanding, plus the pure enjoyment.
 
#35 ·
I had just renewed my subscription for three years to get the "best deal" as stated on the form that was mail just a couple of months ago. Does one have to subscribe to view the digital version?
If this was already decided on earlier this year, then shame on them for still sending out renewal letters and forms if the end was coming anyway. I still had several issues coming before my subscription was due to renew. It's not the $36 or whatever small amount, but the feeling of being deceived that there was a renewal of product that in fact had already been decided to be discontinued. I understand the reasons given in the video, it's the world we live in today, but there should have been some sort of notification to the subscribers. A letter (there were no problem sending out renewal letters) or printed statement in the magazine, on the cover or as the first page, stating "This is your last issue" with an explanation. As an over 20-year subscriber, I should not have to find this out on the Colt Forum, that it was announced on a pod cast that I don't even watch. I do get e-mails from them, but they are only highlighted articles from the last issue. there was no e-mail stating that the magazine has ceased publication.
 
#38 ·
"Being a book lover since childhood, I've amassed a pretty good library and now wonder, is it worth anything to anyone else but me?"

Good question. I've sold a couple of specialty firearm books this year that brought good money. I have a couple of others like the Don Wilkerson 2nd generation SAA's I should sell, but I have difficulty letting go of all sorts of things. I recently gave away about 80 pounds of gun magazines from the decades worth I have, didn't really make a dent in those piles. :) My poor son will have to rent a rollaway dumpster.