Saturday, March 21, 2009

AMPA sets example for Mag Awards

The awards presentation at the Alberta Magazines Conference Friday afternoon went off smoothly at 3:30 p.m. in a reception room at the Carriage House Inn in a distant section of Calgary known (rather dauntingly to outsiders) as “the South East.” Colleen Seto, executive director of AMPA (known to AMPA members as Little Blessing), climbed onto a chair in the middle of the room and called for attention; Gary Davies of Avenue Magazine, president of AMPA, presented the awards in rapid order, applause erupted at intervals, and a tall photographer in gleaming white running shoes that resembled life rafts floated over the carpet to capture the smiles and handshakes for future historians. The raffles for the IPOD and the GPS device went off without a hitch and to more well-earned applause. No more than half an hour was required; the wine drinkers returned to their chat and the mood remained celebratory, friendly, even hectic. It was all over in another forty-five minutes and it was still daylight. Among the assembled celebrants there was no sign of peevishness or the exhaustion that one associates with Other Magazine Awards; nor was anyone heard swearing off ever attending one of these things again.

At lunch that day, Al Zikovitz gave voice in his keynote speech to the question on everyone’s mind. “Where do we go, what do we do?” he cried, and, by way of reply, proposed that it’s time “to stop running after circ, and start running after readers,” a sentiment endorsed by many in the room who nodded their heads vigorously. “I may be sleeping better than many of you,” he went on to say, “because ad revenue at Cottage Life is only 39% of total revenue.”

Speakers at the convention were treated to dinner in a posh restaurant offering a ten-ounce steak special that “starts at forty dollars,” as the server expressed it, “and goes up in $2 steps for each two-ounce increment.”


8 Comments:

Blogger Thad McIlroy said...

A vivid account! Thanks.

10:32 pm  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Wow. Some of us easterners wondered what happened to Stephen Osborne. We haven't seen a post from him on this blog for ages. I actually can't remember the last time I saw his name here. Oh, now I remember, it was when he was awarded the National Magazine Award for outstanding career achievement. Man, he talked a long time that night. It made me peevish.

12:46 am  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Cottage life endorses the subsidy model! very nice.

4:26 am  
Blogger D. B. Scott said...

To anonymous easterner: is there a reason why you have nurtured your peevishness this long and feel the need to comment on it now?

12:29 pm  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Umm, am I missing something? Not sure how Cottage Life is endorsing the subsidy model. I believe ad revenues represent a lower than average proportion of their revenues because they've done such a good job of driving revenue from other products aimed at their market segment.

2:01 pm  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Oh DB, I was just playing on Stephen's use of the word peevishness. There has been no nurturing of said word in these quarters. My how you impute. But to answer your Q, I'd never have made such a remark had Stephen not taken a shot at the very institution that so honoured him. I'm sure you'll find a way to hit back at these comments, DB, but I'm done with this thread. Tootles.

8:41 pm  
Blogger Alberta Magazines said...

Thank you Stephen for coming out and sharing his knowledge and for his wonderful account of the Alberta Magazines Conference and our Showcase Awards. We do like to keep things short and sweet, creating opportunities for celebration and recognition via personal exchanges (and wine and cheese of course.) More details can be found at: http://www.albertamagazines.com/what_we_do/conference.php
And as for the beef, the bigger the better, right?

6:47 pm  
Blogger Alberta Magazines said...

Oh and my fellow presenter was actually Renato Casello with Transcontinental, not Gary Davies.

6:48 pm  

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