Sean,
Again with the comping! It's the clubs that control that, not the magazines or their panelists. If a club wants to attract more attention to itself by offering to let panelists play at no charge, so what? It doesn't change the quality of their course. It might get them a few extra points here or there from a few raters, but with a large number of panelist votes required to determine a course's score it could never be enough to move the needle too far.
Anyway, if
all the courses are comping, as you guys propose, where is the influence? You can't stand out by comping if everyone is doing it!
Kavanaugh doesn't like Golfweek charging panelists a membership fee. So what? Companies, like individuals,
always do what is in their best interest. It's a function of supply and demand and I would imagine Kavanaugh is a good enough businessman that he would have thought of the same thing had he been in charge. Want to eliminate the ability for Golfweek to charge a fee, then reduce the demand for a panel position by convincing courses not to host panelists... which seems to be a big part of the draw for a number of people. The clubs created this dynamic... not the magazines or the panelists... and, it's only the clubs that can change it. But, they don't seem too motivated to do so, from what I can tell.
All this comping, if it really exists, doesn't always get the course the positive exposure they desire. As Tom Doak says, you might bring a panelist in and have him focus on your $12 hot dog instead of your fine course! Because, as we all know, a panelist can't separate the value of a hot dog from the quality of a golf course. I guess to make things equal the course should have comped the dog!