Bob Huntley,
I suspect that many things about me might surprise you.
While I am pretty conservative and somewhat set in my ways, I understand that except for human nature, very few things remain the same. I pay for my own subscriptions for Golf Digest and Golf- I get Golfweek from other sources- not because their latest formats fit my preferences to a T, but because for under $1 per issue, I get enough of the information I like in a format I am comfortable with, all without having to get out of my chair. Some blow a year's worth of magazine subscriptions at Starbucks in a couple mornings.
I also understand that any business has to connect with its customers to remain viable. The future of golf is not me and people of my generation. Unlike some others here, apparently, I am not that easily offended or hard to please.
I am actually perusing the Gretzky issue you referenced, and though I can't verify her skills on the course, I was told by the folks at their home club that she is very involved and an excellent member. BTW, the best golf teacher I ever had was JR Abels when I was at Ohio State and I could beat him like a drum. Judging solely from close study of her body, I have no doubt that Ms. Gretzky could teach me a thing or two about physical fitness, something I need much more than how to make a better turn (which for me is a function of not being flexible enough) or a new set of irons. But even though I am not much into instruction, clubs and balls, I do glance at the articles and ads in the magazine. I find it rather confusing that people here with so much confidence in their own abilities are so concerned with the frequency of product cycles and the effects of advertising. It must be because they are such good people that they are always thinking of the lesser folks amongst them.
John Kavanaugh,
Please stop being cryptic. Spell it out. I still have some hope that the good JK will one day come through.