JumbleDuck
Well-Known Member
New boats tests are sadly sanitised and they never say what they mean.
Snooks YM tests are now pretty damn good - there have been a few which have left me wincing slightly with the, erm, frankness of his opinions.
New boats tests are sadly sanitised and they never say what they mean.
As the author of the new boat tests for YM, I can assure you I can and do say what I mean. What I can't and won't do is be unfairly critical or positive and always try to give a balanced report. If I could afford, to I wouldn't buy every boat I test, but I'm not every reader and I try not to let my personal views about certain design aspects cloud my judgement. After all not everyone wants to sail off into the yonder.
If I feel I might be sticking the knife in too far then twisting it by being too critical I'll run it passed the editor, if he's happy he might run it passed the legal department, but when I've broken a boat I've said so, when I've found something dangerous or lacking in common sense I've said so.
If I find something and the manufacturer is in the process of changing it or will change it I might mention it but I won't labour the point.
There are very few bad boats out there and I only have around 2,000 words to include everything so at times when I'd like to go intodetail I simply don't have the space.
It's nice to know someone reads them though ;0)
One traditional difference with French articles is that the latter make much more use of photographs to illustrate a boat review. I prefer to see things such as layout for myself rather than be told about a feature....
Incidentally the French reviews often take place in the context of a real trip where not only the boat is described but also the place that is visited.
And I'll give full marks to PBO for the Hantu Biru restoration.
Suggestion to the editor: why not increase Snooks' space to say 3000 words?
So when it comes to boat buying there are way more buyers speaking english than french. Surely this has something to do with the collapse of the french magazines?
And me! Thinking on about what they did, they aint posh students working at mags, they actually did the biz!
S
And I'll give full marks to PBO for the Hantu Biru restoration.
That would only apply if magazines sold internationally. How well does "Good Old Boat" do in the UK?
I bought a copy of Voiles to read on a flight home from Mulhouse recently, and I was struck by how lively the French yachting scene seemed to be. A far cry from the UK scene's sad succession of dreary old men, fretting about ensigns and the state of their gelcoat as they cross to Lymington for the thirty seventh time.
Yachting in France: sailing. Yachting in the UK: caravanning in a Breton cap.
Odd how some people just love to knock their home country.
Anyway, I have never heard of "Good Old Boat" and wouldnt buy it if I saw it since I dont like MABs. But thats not the point - others will buy it. Probably not a lot but just as you bought Voiles, visitors will buy YM and more of them because because more people can read English.
Odd how some people just love to knock their home country.
Anyway, I have never heard of "Good Old Boat" and wouldnt buy it if I saw it since I dont like MABs. But thats not the point - others will buy it. Probably not a lot but just as you bought Voiles, visitors will buy YM and more of them because because more people can read English.
Incidentally, YM sold 26,158 in 2011 (down 6% on 2010) and 23,510 in 2014, while PBO sold 34,014 in 2011 (down 11% on 2010) and 26,768 in 2014. That puts the cumulative drops over the four years from 2010 to 2014 at 18% for YM and 41% for PBO. It will be interesting to see the 2015 figures when they come out.
Define "free fall"??![]()
10% year one year probably isn't quite free fall, but I doubt it has the Time Inc board shuddering with pleasure. The 2014 ABCs will be out in January, I think.
They will be out on Feb 14th 2016, those that have an ABC which all of Time Incs portfolio do. Not sure about Sailing Today...