Michael strahan - M. Shanken Communications, Inc.
Transcription
Michael strahan - M. Shanken Communications, Inc.
the good life magazine for men world travel bucket list Muscle cars are back Michael strahan the king of new york 76 cigars rated www.cigaraficionado.com the woMen of pro golf holiday gift guide Profile of Our Readers Total Audience: 379,000 gender / Marital Status Men 81% Women 19% Married 71% Age 21+ 100% 25-54 63% 35-64 72% Median Age 51 HHI & Assets Median HHI $154,326 Median Value of Financial Accounts + Real Estate $953,212 Own Principal Residence 91% Own or Lease 2+ Vehicles 84% Education & Occupation College Degree+ 71% Top Mgmt/Chief Officer/Professional 64% Passions, Hobbies & InterestsINdex Have Wine Cellar or Fridge 253 Drinks 6+ Distilled Spirits Per Week 234 $5K+ on Leisure/Entertainment 214 $15K+ on Watches/Jewelry 363 Plays Golf 24+ Times Per Year 222 Spends $50K+ on Travel 230 Spends $5K+ on Watches 411 Drives Luxury Vehicle 459 2014 Ipsos Affluent Survey USA, HHI $100,000+ MRI Fall 2014 Survey Total Audience Readers Per Copy 1,814,000 7.58 Gender / Marital Status Male 77% Female 23% Married 56% Age 21+ 97% 25-54 67% 35-64 60% Median Age 45 Household Income Median HHI $101,998 HHI $150K+ 24% Average Respondent Income $78,519 Property & Real estate Owns Home 72% Owns Home $200K+ 45% Education & Occupation Attended College+ 73% College Degree+ 45% Fin/Acct/Eng/Gen Mgmt 44% Source: 2014 Gfk MRI Fall With sales of more than 50 million albums and the hit shoW “the Voice” to his credit, usher’s star is shining brighter than eVer WONDERS of the world By Marshall fine portraits By JiM Wright Cigar Aficionado’s annual travel polls choose a bucket list of places and destinations that are must-sees for every traveler styling by gali barraza grooming by cole patterson produced by syncproductions suit and shoes by calVin klein shirt by alexandre plakhoV By larry olmsted The “Lost City of the Incas” dazzles with its remote location, the sophistication of its architecture and the ongoing mystery about why it was built, what it was used for and why it was abandoned 100 years after. Huber/SIme/eSToCk PHoTo photo credit tk Usher photo credit tk the rise of 52 53 129 HHHH a SURPRISE HIT Pawn STaRS TOP TEN TIME “Pawn Stars,” the most popular show ever to air on The History Channel, has turned a family business into a gold mine. By Mervyn rothstein OF T From classic designs to useFul complications, A+E NEtworks / JoEy L this year’s standout watches deliver perFormance and style at a range oF prices Piaget Altiplano 900P ©2014 By Laurie KahLe he man behind the glass counter is bald, bold and sturdy, wearing a black polo shirt with the words “World Famous Gold and Silver Pawn Shop Las Vegas” imprinted in white just beside his heart. Two long, parallel rows of glass cases rooted to the floor define the scene, each filled with what seems like mile after mile of glittering gold and silver jewelry or rare and shining coins. Wooden ceiling fans hang in line above, unmoving, their glass light fixtures illuminating the long and narrow room. Artwork of wildly different designs hangs on the walls, from paintings of Elvis and John Lennon to an etching by Rembrandt. Two men carrying TV cameras stand ready to begin filming for an audience that is counted in the millions. The center aisle, usually filled with customers, has been emptied save for several extras—actual shoppers —supplied for background ambiance. The word is given to begin, the cameras roll, and someone with something to sell walks quickly toward the man in black. “How’s it going, man?” says Rick Harrison, the man behind the counter. What does the visitor have for him today? The seller takes out a tiny, dark shoe and a small, dirty white glove, one finger missing. They belonged, he claims, to Mrs. Tom Thumb, the wife of the roughly three-foot-tall little person who achieved international fame in the mid-19th century with circus magnate P.T. Barnum. Harrison, in trademark fashion, provides a brief Barnum history— noting that if there was something Barnum “could make money off of, ethically or unethically, he did.” He offers some facts about Tom Thumb, including that he worked for Barnum at age 5 and that he was 3 feet, 4 inches tall and about 70 pounds when he died. He asks the seller a key question: Is there any proof that the items are what they are? “Do you have any paperwork at all?” The show “Pawn Stars” has become a runaway hit for The History Channel. Stepping out in Las Vegas are show stars Rick Harrison, fan favorite Austin “Chumlee” Russell, Corey “Big Hoss” Harrison and Richard Harrison, fondly known to viewers as “The Old Man.” 153 127 Matt Booth, who got his start making chunky, eye-grabbing jewelry in this Los Angeles studio, is the owner of Room101 cigars, a line of edgy, high-scoring Honduran smokes. O Yachts W hen is a yacht a yacht, and when is a yacht not? Depends on whom you ask. Was Tony Soprano’s boat Stugots a yacht? According to Jared Neff of Neff Yacht Sales, the fictitious Stugots is a 55-foot Ocean Yacht. She actually has the length—50 feet is yacht minimum—though her hull was popped from a fiberglass mold, and not a custom job welded of steel or aluminum. But in the end the boat is whatever Soprano wants to call her. Steve Jobs died before finishing his custombuilt yacht Venus, but she’s molded in his image. The $140 million, 256-foot-long ship’s aluminum hull has a bow with the smoothly curved corners of an iPhone or an iPod or an iMac. It’s not just skin deep, either: her navigation and controls are powered by seven iMacs. Until a few months ago, the longest, hottest yacht to ever ply the oceans was Russian Roman Abramovich’s $1 billion, 533-foot Eclipse, which includes two swimming pools, A CigAr BrAnd Blossoms unit would just stay on the base and drink. What I saw there made a huge impression on me. What better inspiration than these figures from Japan?” While his jewelry is made in a small foundry down a film noire-ish hall on the other side of the same building, his cigars are made in Honduras at the Camacho factory and distributed by Davidoff of Geneva in Pinellas Park, Florida. Unlike Davidoff or Camacho cigars, Room101 adopts an unmistakenly Japanese motif in its packaging: Sheer. Clean. Mysterious. Booth’s office space looks like something from an old detective movie. The hallways still have the original flooring, the ceilings are high and the large windows offer extraordinary views of other old buildings in the neighborhood. one disco, a miniature submarine (maximum diving depth: 150 feet), a huge master bedroom lined with armor plating and bullet-proof glass, a missile-defense system and a pair of helipads and hangars with helicopters inside. One belongs to the owner, the second to whomever needs it. Eclipse lost the No. 1 position to Azzam, the 590-footer reportedly bought by Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed al-Nayan, the President of the United Arab Emirates and Emir of Abu Dhabi, for more than $600 million. She’s armed with drone missiles and swimming pools, and has a luxurious, early nineteenth century Empire decor. The mark for third longest goes to the 482-foot Prince Abdulaziz—owned by the king of Saudi Arabia— which held the record for 22 years. No. 4 is the modestly priced $200 million Rising Sun, 454 feet long. For no good reason, let’s compare them with ships from today’s U.S. Navy. The $605 million Azzam is 590 feet long, while a $1 billion Ticonderoga Class cruiser measures 567 feet; Eclipse measures 533 feet The notion of riding the ocean waves for pleasure has never been bigger business, and—between discos, swimming pools, helipads and defense systems—owners never run out of ways to trick out their vessels by Phil Scott photo credit tk ph oto Gra p h s By dav e l au r i ds e n photo credit tk Matt Booth’s young and nonconforMist rooM101 Brand has Been eMBraced By cigar sMokers By G r eGo ry M ot to l a The 86-foot Domino, from the Riva range of the Ferretti Group, includes among its staterooms with ensuite bathrooms a master and a VIP cabin, as well as a slew of other amenities. hot ne of the last things you’ll find going down Broadway in downtown Los Angeles is an actual Broadway show. From Third to Ninth Streets, Broadway is home to the country’s largest collection of aging, ornate prewar movie palaces and theaters. The exteriors bloom with architectural flourishes and golden-age glamour, but most are nothing more than defunct temples of nostalgia as they loom over what is now L.A.’s jewelry district. Atop one of these old, movie-less theaters—the old State Theater to be exact—is the office of a toiling former Marine named Matt Booth who makes jewelry and cigars. He’s the creator of a fashion-forward line of heavy silver jewelry called Room101 (after Orwell’s 1984) and the father of a cigar brand with the same name. Both the jewelry and the cigars are cast from Booth’s experiences overseas while deployed in Japan and are influenced by Japan’s iconic and mythological imagery. “When I was deployed in Japan, I certainly did my fair share of drinking,” says Booth, as he sits in an office chair nine stories over Broadway. “But I also experienced such strong images with such strong meaning. The majority of the guys in my 234 235 110 LUXURY With high-line brands launching sport utes and crossovers and the automobile mainstream moving up with spiffier output, the deluxe market is getting more crowded and hard to define By Paul a. EisEnstEin E ven as a new Cold War looms, the old compound on the outskirts of Leipzig, Germany is a reminder of the once-ominous divide between East and West. The sprawling old Russian military base, part of the former German Democratic Republic, had housed some fearsome weapons before being abandoned following the collapse of the Soviet Union. Today, though, the fortified concrete bunkers, pillboxes and weapons nests have found a new, more peaceful purpose as obstacles in an off-road training course. A procession of new Porsche Macan sport-utility vehicles has been set loose, the drivers veering off onto rutted dirt paths that let them attack the old base the way NATO Beating the troops could only have dreamt of in the days when a shooting war seemed a distinct possibility. Porsche created the course soon after opening its new assembly plant in Leipzig a few years back. It needed to prove to potential buyers that a company known for making some of the world’s most exclusive sports cars could inject a bit of that high-performance DNA into an SUV. It seemed quite a leap at the time but that initial off-roader, the Cayenne, is now the German maker’s single-largest seller. And close behind is the equally controversial Panamera, a four-door sports car that has also been rolling out of the Leipzig plant—which just underwent a $685 million update to handle the anticipated demand for the new Macan. Betting on professional basketball may be daunting for most, but these canny handicappers have made a living from shrewd insights in the NBA By Michael Kaplan illustrations By ed FotheringhaM S Ferrari FF, with four seats, four-wheel drive and a rear end reminiscent of a wagon, steps away from the brand’s pure sports car roots into crossover realm that is attracting much of the luxury market. NBA pend time around sports bettors and you inevitably hear them gripe and brag over every competitive outcome you can imagine. Guys rail against the road conditions of NASCAR or Tiger performing better or worse that he should. Or they sing the glories of getting in gear with an obscure division of the NCAA or spotting a glitch in the NFL team that everybody else seems to think is infallible. What you rarely hear, though, is chatter about the NBA. Serious sports bettors tend not to wager on it. “It’s too hard to beat,” says a respected gambler. “Everything is totally fluid. It’s not like the NFL, where there’s only one game a week and you can read into what happens. And it’s not like college basketball, where losing teams tend to keep losing. In the NBA, a team gets creamed one night by, say, the Heat. Then they play the next night, and beat the Heat. There doesn’t seem to be a lot of rhyme or reason to what happens. It’s too much work and too much aggravation.” Maybe that is true for some, but it’s definitely not the case for all. This becomes apparent when I wash up on the shores of E.R. Island—okay, the metaphorical shores. It’s actually the home of Erin Rynning, situated on a rustic stretch in the Las Vegas suburb of Summerlin, behind the security gates of a nice housing development. Rynning is famous for being the second most successful NBA sports bettor out there. Number one is a guy by the name of Bob Voulgaris but he’s holed up somewhere between Beverly Hills and Vancouver. Word comes from a mutual friend that Voulgaris is taking no calls from the media these days. He works from a strong computer system that models games and divines scores. He initially made a killing by beating the halftime lines put out by bookies. Once those inefficiencies got fixed, Voulgaris turned to hammering the fullgame spreads and money lines and totals. Nevertheless, for Rynning, being number-two ain’t so bad. Living on his theoretical island, sitting at a table in his tidy kitchen, laid-back and post-preppy looking, Rynning is as happy a guy as you’ll find splashing around money for a living. He’s understood NBA basketball for as long as he can remember, never needed to have a square job, and always knew that he would eventually end up in Las Vegas. In his Spartan, two-story home, situated behind a security gate, Rynning maintains a low-tech operation. He does his handicapping with pen and paper, working mostly on gut and instinct rather than following the mandates of software. It’s an old-fashioned way that has long worked like a charm. For him, he insists, beating the NBA has never been the big chore that it is for others. “I began handicapping right from the start, back when I was 12 years old,” says Rynning, who grew up in Wisconsin. “During ninth grade, my father’s friends would call and ask me who to bet on. I’ve never met anyone with better opinions than me. That’s why I avoid the sports books”— where distracting conversations about lines and odds are inevitable—“and don’t discuss the games with other bettors. When I first moved here, 10 years ago, I thought it would be great to take in information from all the handicapping shows on the radio. I did, and 2003 was the only losing year I’ve ever had. Now I just stick with my own opinions and things work out fine.” photo credit tk THE NEW FACE OF 111 120 106 107 According to the Fall 2014 MRI Study, Cigar Aficionado has the highest household income over all competitive men’s magazines. Median HHI 1. Cigar Aficionado $101,998 2. Golf Magazine $95,821 3. Golf Digest $95,015 4. Fortune $92,597 5. Forbes $87,813 6. Men’s Health $82,245 7. Men’s Journal $81,557 8. Men’s Fitness $74,600 9. GQ (Gentlemen’s Quarterly) $70,627 10. Esquire $65,916 MRI Spring 2014, All Adults extend your reach CIGAR AFICIONADO extends your reach by providing a unique audience of readers, with minimal duplication compared to other upscale, lifestyle, business and general interest magazines. % Duplication of CIGAR AFICIONADO Readers that also read The Wall Street Journal 12.9% GQ 11.1% Esquire 10.8% Golf Digest 10.7% Men's Journal 9.3% Architectural Digest 9.2% Forbes 9.1% Vanity Fair 9.1% Fortune 8.1% The New Yorker 5.8% Source: 2014 Ipsos Affluent Survey, USA, $100K+ HHI a sampling of our luxury advertisers AUTOMOTIVE 911 Carrera Cabriolet Acura Camaro Cayman Chevrolet Impala Chrysler SRT Corvette Ford Edge Ford Fusion Hyundai Jeep Lexus Maserati Mercedes-Benz Porsche 911 Nissan WATCHES & FASHION Ball Watch Bertucci Breitling Bremont Bulova Cartier Carl F. Bucherer Chanel Charles Tyrwhitt Cuervo y Sobrinos Graham Hublot Jaquet Droz Louis Vuitton Maurice LaCroix Oris Panerai Seiko Tag Heuer Ulysse Nardin Van Cleef & Arpels Westime CIGAR ACCESSORIES Andre Garcia Blazer Lighter Burn Casa Magna Colibri Lighters Daniel Marshall Humidipak Humidordiscount Liebherr-Hausgeräte Lighters Direct Lotus Lighters Rabbit Air Ventura Cigar Company Xikar eLECTRONICS/ appliances Fujifilm Harman Illycaffé Espresso Resort/travel Casa de Campo Casa Vieja Dominican Republic Tourism Kohler Mexico Tourism Board Mirage Nizuc Palazzo Pikewood Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino The Resort at Paws Up The Wellesley Venetian Hotels & Casino RESORT/TRAVEL Bellagio Casa De Campo Dominican Republic Foxwoods Golf Club at Devils Tower Mexico Tourism Board Mirage Palazzo The Resort at Paws Up Venetian Hotel & Casino Visit St. Petersburg Spirits 1800 Tequila Absolut Appleton Rum Ardbeg Bacardi Balvenie Belvedere Bombay Sapphire Botran Rum Bowmore Bulleit Bourbon Bushmills Captain Morgan Carpano Antica Formula Cazadores Chivas Regal Ciroc Vodka Crown Royal Crystal Head Vodka Dewars Dobel Tequila Don Julio Drambuie D’Usse El Tesoro George Dickel Glenfiddich Glenmorangie Glenlivet Grand Marnier Grey Goose Hendricks’s Gin Hennessy Jack Daniel’s Jameson Johnnie Walker Blue Jose Cuervo Ketel One Maker’s Mark Michter’s American Whisky Milagro Tequila Mount Gay Rum Patrón Tequila Rémy Martin Ron Diplimatico Rum Ron Matusalem Rom Zacapa Sambuca Skyy Vodka Smirnoff Vodka Stoli Talisker Tanqueray Gin The Glenlivet Three Olives Tullamore Dew Ultimat Wild Turkey Woodford Reserve Zafra Rum Zaya Rum 2015 issue dates and deadlines Cover Date Space Close Material Due Subscriber Mail Date Newsstand On-Sale Date Jan/Feb 2015 Nov. 24, 2014 Nov. 28, 2014 Dec. 19, 2014 Jan. 13, 2015 March/April 2015 Jan. 13, 2015 Jan 16, 2015 Feb. 10, 2015 March 3, 2015 May/June 2015 March 3, 2015 March 6, 2015 March 31, 2015 April 21, 2015 July/August 2015 May 5, 2015 May 8, 2015 June 2, 2015 June 23, 2015 Sept/Oct 2015 July 7, 2015 July 10, 2015 August 4, 2015 August 25, 2015 Nov/Dec 2015 Sept. 8, 2015 Sept. 11, 2015 Oct. 6, 2015 Oct. 27, 2015 Jan/Feb 2016 Nov. 24, 2015 Nov. 27, 2015 Dec. 18, 2015 Jan. 12, 2016 production specifications Printing ADVERTISING SIZE SPECIFICATIONS Web Offset (SWOP) WIDTH DEPTH Binding: Perfect Bound Publication Trim Size 9.75" 11.875" Publication Trim Size: 9.75" x 11.875" Full Page Safety 9.5" 11.625" Full Page Bleed 10" 12.125" Full Page Non-Bleed 8.125" 10.5" Spread Trim Size 19.5" 11.875" Spread Safety 19.25" 11.625" Spread Bleed 19.75" 12.125" Spread Non-Bleed 16.25" 10.5" 2/3 Page Vertical Bleed 7" 12.125" Delivery of Ad Material 2/3 Page Vertical Non-Bleed 6" 10.5" Digital files uploaded to our ad portal http://mshanken.SendMyAd.com (uploading tutorial available on site) 1/2 Page Spread Bleed 19.75" 6" 1/2 Page Vertical Bleed 4.875" 12.125" 1/2 Vertical Non-Bleed 4" 10.5" 1/2 Page Horizontal Bleed 10" 6" 1/2 Page Horizontal Non-Bleed 8.125" 5" For Further Information 1/3 Page Vertical Non-Bleed 3.625" 10.5" Go to mshanken.com, or contact: 1/3 Page Vertical Bleed 3.75" 12.125" Digital File Specifications PDF/X-1a n PDF/X1a file (Only one ad per file) n Images must be CMYK or Grayscale TIFF or EPS prepared for the SWOP3 color environment n Total Area Coverage for CMYK color builds should not exceed 300% Advertising material will be retained for one year, unless return is specifically requested. 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