From the Editor: Curveballs at the Un-Magazine
From the first issue 40 years ago, Smithsonian has blazed its own path through the media landscape
- By Carey Winfrey
- Smithsonian magazine, July-August 2010, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
“We thought of ourselves as the un-magazine,” recalls Jim Doherty, also an editor for 19 years, beginning in 1983. “We prided ourselves on our singularity. We had a niche—and we were the only one in it. We refused to join the herd, chase celebrities, report trends, do what other magazines did. Our copy went on and on, often taking detours from the main narrative to explore esoteric and sometimes quite complex matters. And any subject was fair game, from square dancing to truck stops, from sports to music to education to ballet to art to science, you name it. We did not follow the pack. We followed our instincts—and our noses.”
Moser doubled Thompson’s decade-long tenure and took the circulation to two million, where it remains today.
Richard Conniff has contributed to the magazine for 28 years, including this issue (see “Meet the Species,”). In 1997, three articles Conniff wrote about moths, giant squid and dragonflies won a National Magazine Award in the Special Interests category. “The thing that was great about the magazine, and still is,” says Conniff, “is that it has a breadth of interest and a curiosity about the world.” Some years ago he proposed a story to an editor at another magazine about a new event in Chicago—a poetry slam. To which, Conniff says, the editor replied: “‘The bleep in the street doesn’t give a bleep about a bleeping poetry slam.’ So I took the idea to Doherty at Smithsonian, who said, ‘Sure, go for it.’ The story we did helped turn the poetry slam into a national event.”
Conniff says Smithsonian’s basic premise remains unchanged: “I still think there’s the same editorial curiosity about the world, the same willingness to take on subjects that are quirky and revealing in small ways or large—that’s still what the magazine is all about.”
Reading Conniff’s words, I can’t help but smile and stand a little taller. Then I hear a mumbly voice in my ear: “What a lotta foofaw. Get back to work.” Right, Chief.
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Comments (2)
Surely the writer is aware that the word is really "foofaraw"? When said quickly, it does sound like "foofaw."
D.E. Weiler
Posted by Dennis Weiler MD on August 2,2010 | 12:39 PM
I was delighted to see a familiar name in this issue of Smithsonian, which I have subscribed to for years. Jack Wiley was a personal friend, as we both grew up on the island of Aruba. While he was attending Fordham and I was at Cornell, we met in NYC. Many years later, I again spoke with Jack several times on the phone, and found we still had much in common. I, a freelance travel writer, and Jack an established, well known author and editor for the Smithsonian, proved we had much to share. Sadly enough, our last conversation was shortly before his passing - a great loss, a great friend, yet I have the wonderful memory of Jack.
Posted by Sharon Slayton on July 24,2010 | 07:40 PM