Hi Chris249.
I tend to agree with your points. However I do not believe Aussie mags were too guilty of the sin of promoting new gear over old gear or testing gear in world class conditions at the expense of real world sailors.
Naturally when testing gear there will be pressure from manufacturers and retailers to put in a good word for their product. It would be extremely difficult to pick up a sail from say Neil Pryde, and then say it is rubbish. Combine this with the fact that a good sailor on old gear will sail better than and bad sailor on good gear makes it difficult to test gear properly.
Honestly if the good sailor with old gear is going better than others on newer gear, it would not make him or her disatisfied would it?
Personally I think if any Aussie mag gets going, it should shy away from testing gear in a big way. Thats hard for me to say because when I read windsurfing mags, I liked reading the reviews. One thing I did not like was press releases from companies saying how great their stuff is.
There are specialist press magazines. A colleague of mine is into Minis, restoring and driving them. He reads and writes articles for a Mini mag.
It would be good to read stuff about events, locations, great days sailing, new people starting to windsurf and people who have been doing it for 20 years. Its always good to see your face and name in print, even if its an ezine, which I recon is the way to go, despite the fact its difficult to read on the toilet.
Moby, I'm glad that you think the Aussie mags had that fault and I think you're right ...... I can assure you from the inside we didn't have the money to do our tests in Maui anyway! But the OS mags got into the whole thing of testing in conditions that their readers rarely got to sail in, and I think that distorted the whole sport and really hurt it badly.
Even the fact that you work in the industry changes your viewpoint; you spend so much time talking windsurfing that you demand more novelty than Joe Average, you are by definition dedicated enough that you should be a much better than average sailor, you can probably go away more, probably don't have a family demanding your presence, etc.
If your readership demographics are right you can run a mag in Oz with a circulation of 6,000-7,000, but the demographics of windsurfers aren't that great (ie it's not that easy to sell the inside from cover double spread to BMW because you're readership isn't that rich) and the advertising dollar just isn't there.
Where we differ is that I think that mags and ads spruiking new gear can turn people off their old gear, even if the old stuff works well. As far as I can see, in our consumerist society, few people want to be seen using old gear or something deemed "uncool" and therefore a lot of people took their windsurfing into blind alleys and then gave up.