GG: It’s big business, the corporate style. I didn’t take too much offense to it. I’ve been through it before. But it’s never fun. I have a friend who works at Citibank and they’re laying off one fifth of their workforce. It’s across the board. It’s not even a recession, this is a depression.
PDN: It seems to be hitting New York really hard.
GG: New York is like the bellwether for the rest of the country. It starts here first. We go into the shitter and the rest of the country follows after. I think the magazine industry needs a bailout.
PDN: Are there any signs to watch for when a magazine is about to go under?
GG: Obviously they get thinner, less ads. Then you start hearing rumors about people going unpaid. I don’t want to talk shit about other magazines, but right now there’s five or six magazines where everyone’s like, “I haven’t been paid in six or seven months from so-and-so.” That’s never a good sign.
PDN: Are you looking around and seeing any photographers who have found a way to do well right now?
GG: The big names are doing well right now. If you’re really tenacious and pushy and getting yourself out there...
PDN: Does that help, being pushy?
GG: I don’t like photographers who call you every week: “Oh, I’m calling to touch base.” That annoys me. But if a photographer does a project on their own that’s really clever and smart and funny, and they send you either a Web site of it or a mailer of it, and you stop in your tracks and say, “Hey, that’s cool.” – That’s the best thing to do if you’re a new photographer.
I think the future is going to be more like that: Spec shoots. Photographers doing their own shoots and selling them to magazines. When magazine budgets are slashed like this, that’s just a smart thing to do. Do your own thing and hopefully the world will catch up.
PDN: Do you think there’s much a market for Web content, particularly photography?
GG: If you have a budget to actually buy photography for a Web site, that’s great, but usually you don’t. But magazines, books, ads, they’re all going to need pictures for their content, so it’s not going to go away. Just for a while it’s going to be a bargain-basement, everything-must-go kind of thing.
PDN: What do you think went wrong with Radar?
GG: It’s hard times for magazines, especially independent magazines. There aren’t vast wells of advertising money to pull from. I’m afraid we’re going to see a lot more closings in the next few months. The fact is that people just aren’t buying as many magazines. Magazines: we’re living off the fat of the land. We’re a luxury item; we’re not essential. So when you have less money, what’s the first thing you do? You cut away the nonessential stuff.
I have no regrets. I had a great team that worked with me in the photo department. We had a lot of fun, we got away with murder for two years. The magazine world is a lot more boring now that we’re gone.






























