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Sports Journalism Jobs: Magazines Writing & Photographer Jobs

While newspapers struggle, magazines are doing very well. "Mr. Magazine," journalism professor Samir Husni at the University of Mississippi, reports that
78 new magazines were launched in the USA in May, 2006. In the first five months of the year, there were 338 new ones. Thousands of jobs and freelance markets are there for talented sportswriters and sports photographers. More men and women who love sports and know how to handle words and pictures are needed on staff as editors, associate editors, photo editors, proofreaders, copy editors, managing editors and interns.

Magazine publishers have also discovered that they can actually make money in the "new media" with websites, online publications, podcasts, blogs and more—for which they need more journalists.

"This is every boy's dream," writes Richard Hoffer in a recent issue of Sports Illustrated magazine. He's talking about Joe Jurevicius, a home-town boy who will be playing in front of his family and friends for the Cleveland Browns in 2006. What's your dream? How about a job like Hoffer's, interviewing the kid "who'd watch the Browns on TV in your parents' garage, the door open to simulate stadium seating in 20° weather" when he becomes a Brown?

How about test driving a new Ferrari before anybody else has even seen it? Road & Track might be your speed! Like a fast-paced work environment? Get on the editorial staff of a magazine like AutoWeek. If you want to be a sports journalist in "new media," try the new online-only publication, Winding Road™ magazine. (See the Sports Journalism, Websites and Online Publications page for this and other opportunities to work online.)

Scuba Diving can send you to an exotic island in the Pacific to dive where no man or woman has gone before; Sports Illustrated needs people to cover the Superbowl. Even men's magazines, women's magazines and general-interest magazines want to meet the athletes who represent their countries in the Olympics.

This is just a sampling of the sports magazines looking for full-time staff and contract writers:

  • Archery Business
  • Baseball America
  • Baseball Digest
  • Billiards
  • Bowlers Journal
  • Bowling Center Management
  • Climbing
  • Competitor Magazine
  • ESPN The Magazine
  • Fitness Management
  • Football digest
  • Idea Fitness Journal
  • Martial Arts Professional
  • Muscle And Fitness
  • Outside
  • Parachutist
  • Powersports Business
  • Racquet Sports Industry
  • Racquetball
  • Referee
  • Rocky Mountain Sports
  • Runners World
  • SG Surf Snow Skate Girl
  • Silent Sports
  • Smackdown
  • Soccer America
  • Sporting Goods Business
  • Sporting Goods Dealer
  • Sporting News
  • Sports Edge
  • Tennis
  • Tennis Week
  • Track And Field
  • International Journal of Sports Marketing & Sponsorship
  • Sporting Goods Business
  • The Sporting Goods Dealer
  • The Sporting News
  • Sports Afield
  • SportsTURF
  • Sports Illustrated For Kids
  • Sports Illustrated

This publisher of a huge directory of all media has links to many magazine websites, available free online: Gebbie Press

There are direct links to sports magazines of the world online, from Adirondack Sports & Fitness to World Kid, at All You Can Read.

If you're a writer and/or a photographer, you can work for the magazines you like to read. The first step is to become very familiar with the publication, cover to cover, including the features, departments, editorials and even the advertisers. The other important thing is to produce work in the style that the publisher and editors like. Newspapers report in the style of the Associated Press (AP). The format is an inverted pyramid, working from the headline to the important news, down to the details and sidelights. If the editor has to shorten your article, he'll simply cut the bottom off. Magazines, on the other hand, can tell a story in depth with a 3,000-word feature, and show it with a multi-page photo layout. This kind of journalism takes research, interviews and story-telling ability. You need to find the story behind the story. You have to get the one picture that twenty other photographers will miss in the same moment.

To get a good start in magazine sports journalism, get through college. Along with some sports and athletics education, definitely study communications. An Associate Degree is a must, and a Bachelor Degree is required for many positions. The best major is journalism, or at least some form of writing degree. Journalism Degrees are offered by colleges and universities all over the country, and some, such as the University of Texas, have degree programs specifically in Sports Journalism. The UT program is open to 18 students who are journalism majors in broadcast, print, photojournalism or multimedia, and the instructor is a professional writer, editor, broadcaster or photographer who works in sports coverage.

Sportswriters average over $58,000 per year in magazine staff positions. Editors generally make more than this, once they get beyond an entry-level editing position, and can make around $60,000 to $75,000.

PRIMEDIA / Action Sports Group is an example of a publisher of several different magazines. Here's a sample of a staff job there, as a Copy Editor for Surfer Magazine. These are the job duties of a copy editor:

  • Read and edit all manuscript copy on a daily basis.
  • Contact appropriate personnel, both internally and externally, to determine the accuracy of the manuscript and to research the factual information.
  • Track the flow of copy through the Editorial and Art Departments, notifying the appropriate personnel of the status of the copy. Break down the story envelopes and input the ad indexes.
  • Input manuscripts and statistical charts, on an occasional basis.
  • Interact with staff writers to implement or recommend changes to the copy and to clarify any uncertainties about the manuscript.

A Bachelor's Degree is needed, preferably in English or Journalism. Previous experience in copyediting, preferably with a monthly publication, is required.

Human Kinetics is a publisher in the physical activity field. Their readers include teachers, coaches, researchers, sports participants and fitness enthusiasts. The company is employee-owned and pays well. Opportunities for advancement are good. Benefits? How about a fitness facility, on-site massage and a subsidized cafeteria in their Champaign, Illinois headquarters? With a Bachelor's Degree and three to five years experience, you could apply for one of these positions:

  • Journal Division Director
  • Book Acquisition Editor
  • Assistant Book Acquisition Editor
  • Developmental Editor
  • Journal Managing Editor

Their job page online is at http://www.humankinetics.com/careers/.

There are dozens and dozens of sports magazines. Contact the ones that interest you, especially for contract or freelance writing jobs.

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