starlog7.jpgI’m not sure how I missed this, but several days ago the SF magazine ‘Starlog’ announced that it was ceasing publication as a magazine and instead would focus on its website as a portal to the world of SF. The update, along with reactions, on the Starlog website says the cessation is ‘temporary’ but without an ETA for a return to print.

I’ve read Starlog off and on over the years, but I haven’t picked it up in a long time. Mostly because I never bothered to look for it, and those times that I did, I couldn’t find it at Barnes and Noble. I do remember the very first one I picked up. Probably like many people, my first issue was #7, the one about Star Wars (you can see it in the picture). As a budding SF reader and fan, Starlog promised a look at the world of SF on film and TV that you wouldn’t get anywhere else. However, I never made it a staple of my reading, nor did where any other SF magazines. So it’s not with sadness that I see Starlog exit the print field, but more a sense of inevitability.

The rise of the Internet and the shortened news cycle is something that traditional print magazines just can’t compete with. Most magazine issues are laid out months in advance with the stories and information being obsolete when the issue hits the stands. Blogs and other websites beat magazines easily when it comes to immediacy. When I’m looking for information in a SF TV show or movie, I turn to Google. Starlog never even entered my head. Now collector’s editions of magazines are something entirely different, but I don’t think you can make a successful magazine around that.

Given the demand for ‘gotta have it now news’ coupled with the slow decline in readership, I wouldn’t be surprised to see the few remaining SF magazines turn more toward the web to try to keep their costs down and increase their readership. However, the SF space of the internet is rapidly becoming crowded. Starlog will have to bring something different to the table to help it compete. How about a respect for the SF fan? That should help it take on SyFy’s web presence as a destination for ‘all things Sci Fi’.

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