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Bear Magazine

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Bear Magazine
Jack Radcliffe on the cover of Bear Magazine (Issue No. 65, September 2008.)
Editor-in-chiefSteven Wolfe
CategoriesMen's magazines
FrequencyQuarterly
Circulation30,000 (2010)[citation needed]
PublisherBear Omnimedia LLC
Founded1987
CountryUnited States
Based inLas Vegas, NV, United States
LanguageEnglish
ISSN1049-6521

BEAR Magazine is a periodical geared toward gay and bisexual men who are or admire "bears", stocky or heavyset men with facial and/or body hair. It was initially published in San Francisco, California, in 1987 by Richard Bulger and his partner Chris Nelson and marketed to the bear community within the larger LGBT community.[1]

History

In San Francisco, in 1987, Richard Bulger began a self-copied magazine called BEAR, dedicated to the appreciation of bears. Bulger had been running a modeling agency called Creative Options Agents (COA) with his photographer partner Chris Nelson. With his connection to gay biker culture and proximity to the Lone Star Saloon (a gay bar credited with the inception of the San Francisco Bear Community), Bulger sought to partake in the growing success of zine desktop underground publication taking hold in San Francisco. It's often thought that BEAR Magazine was begun by a man named Bart Thomas, who died of AIDS before the magazine's first publication. However, "Bart Thomas" was a pseudonym Bulger chose for himself ("bart" being the German word for "beard") in the earliest days of the project. A friend of Bulger named David Grant was reported to have suggested the name "Daddy Bear" for this new magazine just before his death from complications from AIDS.

The first copy of BEAR Magazine consisted of 45 xeroxed copies, promoted in The Big Ad and Handjob Quarterly (two established, popular zines at the time).

Originally created as an alternative to the abundance of shaven men represented in gay mainstream media, BEAR gradually expanded to become an internationally distributed glossy magazine, which featured erotic photographs of bears and erotic stories. There was also a classified personals section which, before the emergence of the internet, was one of the few ways for men to find compatible romantic and sexual partners, and to network with men with common interests.

The first formal company office was established above a 1908 former firehouse at the corner of 16th and Albion Streets in San Francisco, where their various publications, clothing and lifestyle products were also displayed and sold. Then, in 1994, Brush Creek Media moved its office and Bear Store to 367 9th Street in the South of Market district, which is the center of San Francisco's gay leather district and around the corner from Rick Redewill's Lone Star Saloon.

The close proximity of Brush Creek Media to the Lone Star Saloon resulted in a synergistic relationship. With the Bear Store and nearby bars, shops and hotels catering to those who identified as bears, the Lone Star Saloon eventually became considered the quintessential bear bar, further fueling the bear movement. This formed a circuit for locals, tourists and visitors to events such as the International Bear Rendezvous and Folsom Street Fair. In 1994, Beardog Hoffman purchased Brush Creek Media Inc. and began expanding the company into several special-interest gay magazines and video series.

In 2002, Brush Creek Media closed its doors when the IRS seized its inventory.[2] BEAR Magazine publication ceased after issue #64.

In 2006, the BEAR trademark was judicially assigned and registered to Butch Media Ltd of Las Vegas, Nevada, a creditor of Brush Creek Media. In 2007, the court assigned BEAR Magazine and all the Brush Creek Media copyrights to Butch Media Ltd.[3] Bear Omnimedia LLC, the parent company of Butch Media Ltd, continued BEAR Magazine in 2008, starting with issue #65. Under the new direction of publisher and editor-in-chief Steven Wolfe and photographer Teddy Mark, the format was updated in 2010 to better reflect bear movement and LGBT community, covering broader aspects of masculinity. BEAR Magazine continues to be published in both print and digital formats.

References

  1. ^ Sean Abley (August 26, 2005). "The Politics of Fur". Advocate (944): 80–82.
  2. ^ Fritscher, Jack (April 15, 2003). "AUTHOR'S HISTORICAL CONTEXT INTRODUCTION (to Drummer Article)". jackfritscher.com.
  3. ^ U.S. Patent and Trademark Office Serial No. 78518965 and 78518967