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Aviation
Week Exective Vice President
Kenneth
E. Gazzola
Publishing
Director
Gil Wolin
Editor-in-Chief
John
Morris
Online Editor
Jessica
Salerno
Managing
Editor
Barry Rosenberg
News Editor
Rich Piellisch
Chief Art Director
Raymond F. Ringston
Writers
Fred George
Paul Richfield
David Rimmer
Rob Hewson
Paul Jackson
Bill Sweetman
Mike Vines
Copy Editor
Mike Jerram
Photographer
Paul Brou
Art Director
Kirk Fetzer
News Assistant
Mara Morris
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ABOUT
SHOWNEWS
A Little Bit of Show News History
Who's the Best Show Magazine of All?
Aviation week's Show News, Of Course!
When it comes to who's been around longest, the show daily publication
in your hand can boast the longest lineage of all.
Aviation Week's Show News tops the list as the most experienced,
most internationally-published of them all, often with 100-plus
glossy pages packed with full-color photos, news and personal views
on key issues from leading aerospace personalities.
But it wasn't always like that.
Show News goes back at least 35 years, touching (or being
touched by) many of the best-known aerospace journalists of the
last three decades-including the NBAA's very own Jack Olcott, who
can claim several years at its helm.
Who better to tell the story than John Fricker, who was there
as the business-aviation-based Reading Show spawned the first international
ancestor of Show News, and who to this very day remains a
key member of the magazine's illustrious international staff:
"Daily air show newsletters were started at Reading in the
mid-1960s by the late Robert B. Parke and Ed Muhlfeld, respectively
editor and publisher of Flying magazine, then owned by the
Ziff-Davis Group. As London editor of Flying from 1961, I
helped set up the first European show daily at Paris in either 1967
or 1969. My personal records for Salon de l'Aeronautique daily coverage
go back only to June 1971, although my first attendance was in 1949
and I haven't missed a Paris air show since.
"Staff requirements were not extensive at that time, since
the daily newsletters were only three or four single-sided sheets,
typewritten on stencils and run-off on a duplicating machine for
a circulation of just a few hundred copies. I remember having to
sleep in Flying's hospitality suite in the Paris Meurice
Hotel, which meant being unable to go to bed until the last guests
weaved their uncertain way home in the wee small hours." (It's
not like that now-ed.)
"In 1972 Ziff-Davis produced the first Hannover Airshow Show
Daily, with no fewer than six issues," recalls Fricker.
"Hotel shortages in Hannover resulted in many visitors, including
ourselves, having to stay with German families in surrounding villages,
which was nothing if not educational. But where else, except at
Fairchild Republic's biennial barbecue, could you get your steaks
grilled and served by legendary WWII fighter ace General Adolf Galland?"
What would later become Show News subsequently moved from
Ziff-Davis in the 1980s to newspaper magnate Rupert Murdoch, and
then to present owners McGraw-Hill Aviation Week. The domestic U.S.
show and convention coverage continued, mainly at NBAA and Heli-Expo.
But Farnborough proved a pivotal point. Over to Fricker:
"With Bob Parke I was involved in the mid-1970s in negotiations
with the SBAC to publish at Farnborough. The (xenophobic) SBAC would
allow an American show publication only if offset by a similar British
daily. This introduced the first element of competition into the
field."
At that time the SBAC could stomach only all-British aircraft
for the show, later grudgingly allowing some with foreign powerplants
and finally opening the gates to all when it realized that fog in
The Channel (or the Atlantic) no longer meant "Continent cut
off."
John W. (Jack) Olcott, then Editor of Z-D's Business &
Commercial Aviation magazine and now NBAA president, took over
responsibility for Show News, successively followed by James
Gilbert, Robert Searles and from 1994 John Morris, the present incumbent.
Says Fricker: "Links with the first international Show
News are happily still maintained by myself as the sole remaining
original team member, on the full show issues at Farnborough, Paris
and Singapore. Under John Morris's tutelage, issues are published
at many other aerospace shows throughout the world including Singapore,
Berlin (ILA), Chile (FIDAE), China, and Dubai, with ventures into
South Korea and Malaysia. Some are bilingual-you can't imagine the
foreign language printing complications-but publication is assured
by a small, dedicated and highly professional production and distribution
team.
"Desk-top publishing and digital images are a far cry from
the early typewritten-and-duplicated newsletters. Yet despite its
enormous growth, Show News still reaches the main local hotels
by breakfast, and appears on all the stands by opening time.
"And all for free, too, in the best deal of the shows!"