This week, SNEWS marks a new chapter with a brand-new name: 国产吃瓜黑料 Business Journal. What better time to take a look back at the brand鈥檚 rich 37-year history as the outdoor industry鈥檚 news publication of record? Here are just a few of the twists and turns SNEWS has taken from its time as a 鈥榸ine-style orange newsletter to the multichannel force it is today.
A Brief History of SNEWS
Nov. 1983: Bob Woodward and Ted Eugenis start discussing the need for an outdoor industry news source from their homes in Bend, Oregon. Woodward, who鈥檇 worked in computer sales, Silicon Valley startups, and the retail side of Sierra Designs, was then a freelance journalist. His ski/cycling budding, Eugenis, had edited for the likes of National Outdoor Outfitters News and Backpacker. 鈥淲e felt it would be beneficial to the industry to publish something that was straight, no chaser, without any advertising,鈥 Eugenis said, 鈥渟o the retailer could make good decisions to compete.鈥 Woodward added, 鈥淭he news aspect was primary鈥攗nvarnished, accurate news. I liked the outdoor business; good people. I felt they deserved to get inside information.鈥澨

Feb. 1984: The first issue of Specialty News, aka SNEWS, mails to about 50 subscribers for a $100 annual fee. Woodward and Eugenis, along with a third editor Chris Hughes, printed the monthly newsletter on orange paper. 鈥淚t was ugly as hell, but it couldn鈥檛 be photocopied,鈥 Woodward said. Highlights include a Q&A that asks听if specialty retail shops are dying; the line, 鈥淎 ski rep will drive for two hours to get a line of coke, but he won鈥檛 get out of bed to get a reorder鈥; and a retailer answering the question 鈥Gore-Tex in shoes?鈥 with 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think it鈥檚 necessary.鈥
The ’80s and ’90s: SNEWS grows in reach and renown, thanks to its signature combination of reporting, opinion, and irreverent tone. Woodward fondly remembers the introduction of the newsletter鈥檚 Average Human Being test, in which the editors asked regular people (not pro athletes or elite outdoorspeople) to try out new gear. Eugenis kicked it off with his idea to send Gates gloves to Chicago garbagemen in midwinter for testing. 鈥淚t was a real, practical use,鈥 Eugenis said. 鈥淢ost people aren鈥檛 going to use ice axes with the gloves. Retailers are going to sell to the garbage guy, or someone walking his dog.
The newsletter also built up a reputation for breaking industry news and bringing people together, from the birth of Mountain Hardwear, to The North Face鈥檚 Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 1993-94, to printing an interview with The North Face鈥檚 Bill Simon that prompted Yvon Chouinard to contact him and begin forming the Conservation Alliance. SNEWS鈥檚 鈥渦nvarnished鈥 coverage also earned the publication its share of critiques. Woodward laughingly recalls an employee of a fabric company that had earned a negative review trying to start a physical fight with him and Eugenis in Las Vegas, and 国产吃瓜黑料鈥檚 Larry Burke screaming in his face at a trade show for calling it 鈥渢he magazine for high-rise adventure living.鈥 (Little did either man know that one day SNEWS and 国产吃瓜黑料 would become sister publications.)鈥淲e had to endure some tongue-lashing,鈥 Woodward said. 鈥淲e felt it was a good sign.鈥
And of course, the 鈥80s era saw the advent of the SNEWS Poly Party, born at the 1982 SIA Show. Attendees were invited to raid the thrift stores of Las Vegas for gaudy leisure suits; the magazine started renting a bowling alley to host the event, and 鈥渢hen we鈥檇 all go to the Hilton lounge and invade the dance floor,鈥 Eugenis said.听
2000-2002: Woodward begins handing off SNEWS, which now has about 2,000 subscribers, to husband-wife team Michael Hodgson and Therese Iknoian; the pair take full control in 2002. Right off the bat, Hodgson and Iknoian introduce a seismic shift: launching snewsnet.com and moving all content online. 鈥淚t gave much more immediacy and engagement,鈥 Hodgson said. 鈥淚t allowed us to be far more responsive to the news. All of a sudden the news cycle became 24-7 for us.鈥 Iknoian, a veteran journalist, also brings new standards to the publication: 鈥淚鈥檓 not saying [Woodward] wrote gossip, but he had that insider, 鈥楾his is what I鈥檓 hearing鈥 aspect to it,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e weren鈥檛 just printing whatever someone says without proof and sources. I was very, very strict about the news rules. If we鈥檙e going to be news, then let鈥檚 do it right.鈥 Gene Treacy also joins as a partner in 2002.
2000s: SNEWS continues to expand, branching into the fitness business and introducing the FitBiz newsletter; growing the sister publication/website GearTrends ; and launching a law review to cover legal issues in the industry with Jim Moss. 鈥淲e got a reputation of being very accurate, probing, and very fair,鈥 Hodgson said. 鈥淲hen anyone wanted to leak something or get a story out accurately, they came to us.鈥 He recalls the satisfaction of breaking big news鈥斺渢hose many stories where we were the first call from the CEO or CFO of a company鈥濃攁nd particularly his investigative report on BPA in aluminum bottles.听

The year 2007 brings more major changes as Active Interest Media (AIM) acquires the business. Previously, Hodgson hadn鈥檛 considered selling. But just as he hit the Outdoor Retailer trade show floor in summer 2007, he got the news that his father had passed away. That same day, Hodgson鈥檚 close friend and AIM employee Jon Dorn approached him with the idea of the acquisition. 鈥淯p until that point, I would have said no,鈥 Hodgson said. 鈥淭hen I said, maybe now is the right time.鈥 SNEWS keeps on growing and takes over production of OR Daily in 2010.听
2011-2016: Iknoian and Hodgson move on in late 2011 and early 2012, respectively. Megan Mulligan takes over, then passes the torch to David Clucas.
2016-2020: Kristin Hostetter, who had served as gear editor at Backpacker for 22 years, takes the reins. Her first four years include covering (and dealing with) the Covid-19 pandemic, Bears Ears, and the tumultuous, changing trade show landscape; and another acquisition, this time by Pocket Outdoor Media, in 2020. But Hostetter says her biggest thrill has been launching The Voice biannual magazine (now also called 国产吃瓜黑料 Business Journal), which debuted in summer 2018.
鈥淲e had a really strong desire to bring deeply reported, opinionated, and honest stories about the outdoor industry to our audience,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hat level of B2B journalism simply didn鈥檛 exist in the outdoor industry before our magazine.鈥 The publication also strives to elevate the voices of journalists, photographers, and illustrators from marginalized communities. 鈥淚 know we still have a long way to go, but we鈥檝e worked really hard to bring diverse voices into the magazine (and the website),鈥 Hostetter said. 鈥淒EI, as well as climate action and sustainability, have become two content cornerstones for us.鈥 Overall readership of the magazine and website reaches 250,000 people per month.
March 2021: Hostetter and associate editor Andrew Weaver oversee a rebrand, SNEWS鈥檚 latest evolution. 鈥淚f you鈥檝e been working in the outdoor industry for 20 years, you probably know SNEWS and appreciate what it stands for and what we do,鈥 Hostetter said. 鈥淏ut I鈥檝e always felt that name is too 鈥榠nsiderish.鈥 It doesn鈥檛 welcome new people into our community. We all want our content to be inviting and accessible to everyone.鈥 The team will be rolling out 鈥渞einvigorated鈥 content in the coming weeks, including new departments, a podcast, and a video series. 鈥淲e鈥檙e very much doubling down on being the industry鈥檚 business publication,鈥 Weaver said. 鈥淭his is a reflection of a deeper shift, rather than just a bit of window dressing.鈥澨
The SNEWS old guard has given its blessing: 鈥淚 think it鈥檚 a good time to change the name,鈥 Woodward said. 鈥淲e can always happily sit around and have a cocktail and say, 鈥楻emember the SNEWS years?鈥欌 But now, the focus is on OBJ鈥檚 future鈥攖o at least 37 more years as the outdoor industry鈥檚 must-read title.