We don’t typically preview stories five months before they’re published, but this is just too cool. Award-winning photographer Tyler Stableford was recently allowed to fly along with F-16 pilots of the 120th Fighter Squadron stationed at Denver’s Buckley Air Force Base. The resulting stills and video footage, taken in-flight over the Rocky Mountains, are stunning. Click the image below for a preview and look for the full package here and in our print edition in July.

Daniel Brogan
Daniel Brogan is the founder, editor, and publisher of 5280: Denver's Magazine. Launched from his second bedroom in 1993, 5280 is now the largest local magazine in Colorado. It has higher market penetration than any other city magazine in America, and regularly outsells such national titles as Time, People, Oprah, and Martha Stewart Living on local newsstands.
The magazine's stories often make national headlines, and since 2005,5280 has been nominated for three National Magazine Awards, the magazine industry's equivalent of the Pulitzer Prize. Read more...
Coming Soon: Colorado’s F-16 Pilots
Tuesday, February 23, 2010
Posted at 2:28 pm by Daniel Brogan
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“Best American Crime Reporting” Honors 5280
Friday, February 5, 2010I’m very happy to report that Maximillian Potter’s “The Great Buffalo Caper,” which appeared in our January 2009 issue, has been selected to appear in The Best American Crime Reporting 2010, to be published by Ecco later this year. This is the second time Max’s work has been included in the anthology; the first was for “The Body Farm,” which was written while he was a staff writer at GQ, and appeared in the 2003 edition of Best American Crime Reporting.
5280’s inclusion in these kinds of best-of collections seems to be happening with increasing frequency. “Dan Hawkins and the Power of Positive Thinking,” our profile of the beleaguered CU football coach, was recently cited in The Best American Sportswriting 2009. And Mike Kessler’s “Out in the Cold,” was featured in 2008’s The Best American Magazine Writing.
Congratulations to Max and our entire editorial team!
Posted at 1:33 pm by Daniel Brogan
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Predicting the Future
Friday, January 8, 2010Jeremy Story of the Denver Public Relations Blog asked a bunch of local media professionals to look into our crystal balls and predict the year ahead. You can read my thoughts (and some ensuing discussion) here.
Posted at 10:35 pm by Daniel Brogan
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October’s 5280 Now Available
Saturday, September 26, 2009When you’re producing a magazine of 5280’s size and complexity, every issue has to be a team effort. But this month two of our editors made extraordinary contributions.
The October issue, which is now available on newsstands and online here, features our 16th annual Top Doctors survey. Even after all these years, Top Docs continues to be a reader favorite, typically selling far more copies on the newsstand in a single month than other local mags (ahem) sell all year long.
And for more years than either of us would care to admit, Managing Editor Lindsey B. Koehler has cheerfully taken on the job of surveying more than 8,500 busy doctors and keeping this monster project fresh year after year. I can tell you from personal experience that it’s no easy task.
But she didn’t stop there. Lindsey also teamed up with Research Editor Natasha Gardner to produce “Low on O2,” our comprehesive guide to living at altitude. If you’ve ever wondered just how much we’re all affected by our extraordinarily thin air, this is the package for you.
Natasha was also busy this month. She weighs in with “The Two Lives of Helen Thorpe,” an insightful and timely profile of an accomplished journalist (and newly published author) who also just happens to be Denver’s First Lady.
There’s a lot more, of course. Check it out, and as always, don’t hesitate to let us know what you think.

Posted at 3:50 pm by Daniel Brogan
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Milstead Heads For the Great White North
Wednesday, September 23, 2009David Milstead, the Rocky Mountain News financial columnist who played a central role in our recent telling of the paper’s final days, is leaving Denver. He’s accepted a position with the well-respected Globe and Mail in Toronto. Here’s the scoop:
From: David Milstead
Date: September 22, 2009 8:24:20 PM MDT
Subject: Milstead updateI will be joining the Globe and Mail, Canada’s Toronto-based national newspaper, as a reporter in its Report On Business section. I’ll be doing something similar to what I did at the Rocky Mountain News – specialty finance coverage. (No column, however.)The Globe and Mail competes directly with The National Post, which describes itself as a national newspaper, but fails to distribute in some provinces and has suspended publication of its Monday paper. The Toronto Star and The Sun provide local news in the market.I consider myself fortunate to find a full-time job with benefits with an excellent newspaper that has a serious commitment to business journalism. The Report On Business has about three dozen reporters; the day I interviewed, it was 20 broadsheet pages. All told, the Globe and Mail has more than 300 newsroom employees and circulates about 330,000 copies a day.
My first day will be Nov. 2.
I believed from the beginning that I would face the choice of leaving journalism or leaving Denver, and thought it more likely I’d leave journalism. I had prepared myself for that possibility, and am somewhat shocked to be heading right back into the newspaper business.
It was not our goal or preference to leave Denver, and we will miss all the wonderful people we’ve met in the last eight years. We will keep in touch.
Best of luck, David. We’re expecting that your first column will be an update on these guys:
Posted at 8:20 am by Daniel Brogan
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Fellas, Have You Bought New Underwear Recently?
Monday, August 31, 2009It’s called the Men’s Underwear Index, and it may be the simplest and yet most ingenious gauge of consumer confidence that I’ve ever heard. Simply put:
Sales of men’s underwear typically are stable because they rank as a necessity. But during times of severe financial strain, men will try to stretch the time between buying new pairs, causing underwear sales to dip.
“It’s a prolonged purchase,” said Marshal Cohen, senior analyst with the consumer research firm NPD Group. “It’s like trying to drive your car an extra 10,000 miles.”
So, according to the theory, when men start buying underwear again, it’s a sign that they believe better times are coming. And that’s exactly what’s happening.
Retailers are reporting encouraging signs in the men’s underwear department. Sears spokeswoman Amy Dimond said stores are beginning to see more sales. At Target, spokeswoman Jana O’Leary said sales of men’s underwear have been stronger over the past two months and multi-pair packs are moving.
No less an oracle than former Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan has given this theory credence, as described in a report on NPR two years ago.
For the record, I stocked up in July, which, come to think of it, was right around the time we were closing our very healthy September issue.
Posted at 8:59 pm by Daniel Brogan
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Video: Christopher McDougall on “The Daily Show”
Wednesday, August 19, 20095280 contributor Christopher McDougall got a whole lotta love on “The Daily Show” last night. Jon Stewart called McDougall’s “Born to Run,” which we excerpted in May, “a great book; it’s a really gripping read.” McDougall also wrote about the Leadville Trail 100 Ultramarathon in the magazine’s June/July edition from 2005.
| The Daily Show With Jon Stewart | Mon – Thurs 11p / 10c | |||
| Christopher McDougall | ||||
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Posted at 11:45 am by Daniel Brogan
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The End of Local Television
Saturday, June 27, 2009Mark my words: This is huge.
Television programs such as “The Simpsons” and “CSI” are for the first time commanding higher advertising rates at Web sites including Hulu.com and TV.com than on prime-time TV.
The big loser? Local television stations, as the networks realize that the Internet will allow them not only to charge higher rates, but also to avoid sharing valuable commercial time with their local affiliates.
Posted at 11:41 am by Daniel Brogan
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Sneak Peek: Top of the Town 2009 Cover
Tuesday, June 23, 2009Here it is, in all its glory, your first look at our July 2009 cover, featuring the ever-popular Top of the Town. We’ll be unveiling the entire issue tonight at a party at the new Pinnacle at City Park South. It’s also a celebration of our 16th anniversary — thanks to everyone who has supported us all these years!
Posted at 4:25 pm by Daniel Brogan
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“Born to Run” Hits the (Book) Charts
Tuesday, June 9, 2009Props to 5280 contributor Christopher McDougall whose new book, “Born to Run,” clocks in at #16 on this week’s New York Times best-seller list. An excerpt from the book, which chronicles McDougall’s quest to find a tribe of the world’s greatest distance runners and learn their secrets, appears in the current issue of 5280, and another of Chris’ award-winning articles for us can be found here.
Posted at 3:01 pm by Daniel Brogan
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Marvin “Henchi” Graves Dies
Monday, June 8, 2009Sad news to report. Marvin “Henchi” Graves, one of the lead singers with Denver’s Freddi-Henchi Band, passed away this morning after a long battle with cancer. He was 64. From the band’s website:
It is with great sadness that I report that Marvin “Henchi” Graves passed away at around 10:00 AM this morning, June 8, 2009.  Henchi fought a long tough battle with cancer for several years, far exceeding doctors’ expectations.  The nickname Henchi was short for Henchman, which he earned from being an excellent wrestler.  He was one step away from the Olympics when an achilles tendon injury forced him to change directions.  This is what led him into the world of choreography and music.  Henchi was tough all of his life right to the end, yet he was always a very nice person.  Even on days when he was feeling his worst from cancer treatments he remained much more cheerful than one would expect.  He always managed to make a joke or laugh about something.  I sure will miss that laugh.  We knew this day would eventually come.  It just always seemed like it would be in the future and that it would never really arrive.
Â
Henchi had many, many friends and it is a very sad day for everyone that knew him.  The fans have always been a part of a Freddi-Henchi Band show and today I think we all lost a good friend.  We will miss you Henchi, and you will never be forgotten. The world will not be the same without you here.  Rest in Peace, my friend.  We love you.
The popular R&B group was formed in Arizona in the 1960s when Henchi teamed up with fellow singer Fred Gowdy. After years on the circuit, the band settled in Colorado and was a long-time favorite for their high-energy shows. In recent years, they were regulars at Lannie’s Clocktower Cabaret, and just last summer, they tore it up at 5280’s 15th anniversary celebration. Here’s a  picture from that great evening with (from left) guitarist Bob Yeazel, Lannie Garrett, Fred Gowdy, yours truly, and Henchi on the right.
In his final weeks, Henchi got to enjoy a Nuggets-Lakers playoff game, thanks to the generosity of a local fan.
Posted at 7:21 pm by Daniel Brogan
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Colbert Goes Commando, With Some Denver Help
Monday, June 8, 2009Comedy Central’s “The Colbert Report” comes to us from Baghdad this week, and that’s due in no small part to veteran Denver soundman Dano Goforth. Having worked on more than 25 USO tours in Iraq, Dano knows the territory and is used to delivering great results under trying conditions. He’s also one of the truly good guys on the Denver entertainment scene.
“Operation Iraqi Stephen: Going Commando” airs nightly through Thursday at 12:30 on Comcast 72.
If you miss any of the episodes, Dano writes that they’ll all be available on iTunes, with a portion of the sale price going to the USO.
Safe travels, buddy.
Posted at 5:09 pm by Daniel Brogan
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Sneak Peek at June (and the Rocky’s Final Days)
Tuesday, May 26, 2009It sure didn’t seem like it this weekend, but summer is on its way, and our June issue is ready to help you make the most of Colorado’s golden months. This is a whopper of an issue, including a troubling look at our state’s growing wildfire threat, a surprising take on the West’s gun culture, and Executive Editor Maximillian Potter’s highly anticipated chronicle of the closure the Rocky Mountain News. Max was in the Rocky’s newsroom throughout its final months, and his report brings to light troubling new facts about the paper’s demise.
In addition to a sneak peak at the June cover (click for a larger version), I’m posting the introduction to Max’s story.
All the News that’s Fit to be Killed
Fifty-five days shy of the Rocky Mountain News’ 150th anniversary, the paper’s corporate owner shut it down. Executives of the E.W. Scripps Company said it had to be done. That’s one way of looking at it.
By Maximillian Potter
June 2009Newspaper editors, those who still have jobs anyway, tend to be relentlessly literal. If your mother tells you she loves you, so goes the old newsroom adage, check it out. The trait is a professional necessity. After all, the aim of the newspapering game is to track down the answers to the “Five Ws” (who, what, when, where, and why); put that reporting into an inverted pyramid, a story with the most salient facts first and the less critical information in subsequent paragraphs; and do it for dozens of breaking stories every day. Newspaper editors have neither the need nor the time for literary luxuries. And so, the senior-most editors of the Rocky Mountain News worked right through the tragic metaphor flashing before their eyes on the afternoon of January 15, 2009.
It was a Thursday, and as on most weekdays since 1998, when John Temple became the Rocky’s editor, he was leading the 3:30 p.m. meeting of his top editors. The agenda was the news of the day and how it ought be presented, particularly on the front page. The 10 or so editors were huddled around one end of a 40-foot, oblong table in a conference room on the fifth floor of a lavish leviathan called the Denver Newspaper Agency building. The DNA building, which oddly enough also houses the Rocky’s competitor, the Denver Post, was completed nearly three years ago at the newsworthy cost of $100 million. Erected on the corner of Broadway and Colfax Avenue, at the intersection of power between the Denver City and County Building and the state Capitol, it was equipped with virtually every state-of-the-art newsgathering gizmo, along with some pricey comforts. On the conference room walls hung four flat-panel televisions attached to cable news feeds from around the globe. Circling the long table were some 20 Herman Miller chairs, each retailing for hundreds of dollars.
Shortly into the meeting Temple blurted a “Wow!” intended to rouse his editors’ attention. He was looking at one of the TVs, remarking on CNN’s coverage of a commercial plane that a few hours earlier had emergency-landed in New York City’s Hudson River. Within minutes, a Rocky photo editor had a laptop pulling wire-service photographs of the event and was feeding the images to another TV screen for the editors to see. Each picture was more astounding than the last, with passengers emerging from the fuselage onto the wings, preparing to board approaching rescue boats. The Five Ws of this one were something else: During takeoff from LaGuardia Airport, US Airways Flight 1549 hit some birds, which triggered engine failure, and the pilot, captain Chesley Sullenberger, a graduate of the U.S. Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, executed a miraculous water landing, saving all 155 people onboard. Before climbing onto a rescue boat himself, Sullenberger walked through the sinking aircraft, twice, to ensure that everyone had been evacuated. One of the pictures, a shot of 1549’s tail dipping beneath the Hudson as passengers squeezed onto the wings, would be the front page of the next day’s Rocky. The headline: “Wing. Prayer. Rescue.”
If any of the editors in the room noted the parallels between Flight 1549 and their own predicament, they kept it to themselves. The Rocky, too, had crashed. About six weeks earlier, on December 4, 2008, executives of the E.W. Scripps Company, which owned the paper, announced that the Rocky’s moneymaking engines had failed and the company was putting it up for sale. The suits, who had flown in from Scripps’ Cincinnati headquarters, said if they were unable to find a buyer within a month–on or about that very January Thursday–the company would close the paper. Announcing the Rocky’s status as a money-losing proposition as the reason for the sale effectively had left the paper stranded and about to sink, with staffers anxiously waiting on the wings. The Rocky’s captain, Temple, had been walking the newsroom, telling his staff “anything is possible,” only here there were no rescue boats in sight, no buyers to be had.On February 27, 2009, just 55 days shy of the paper’s 150th anniversary, the Rocky went under, swallowed into the abyss of America’s failing newspaper industry. Scripps executives again came to town. They provided answers to the Five Ws of the closure, and the Rocky reporters wrote it all down, a final assignment for a final edition. The paper had been hemorrhaging millions of dollars, the executives said. They said they’d had a “strategy,” but then the “ground shifted beneath our feet”–the U.S. economy’s plunge and the increasingly devastating power of the Internet–and it simply became too much to overcome. “We did all we could,” the suits said. “It’s nobody’s fault.” As a headline in the final edition put it: “Dismal economy, changing world halt Rocky’s near 150-year run.”
As first drafts of history go, it wasn’t bad, as it had just enough of the facts. As corporate spin goes, however, it was flawless, as it omitted just enough of the unpleasant truths. The Scripps party line avoided the fact that this once-great newspaper company long ago had begun turning away from print; that it was casting aside yet another journalistic institution like an emptied piggy bank. And there was no reason to wonder aloud if the Rocky’s esteemed editor had put his own corporate concerns above his journalistic ethics.
5280’s June issue hits newsstands Friday.
Posted at 5:11 pm by Daniel Brogan
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Making Magazines on the iPhone
Monday, May 25, 2009I’ve gotten quite a bit of feedback on something I posted recently to Twitter (you are following me on Twitter, right?):
A magazine editing first? I just ok’ed a manuscript on my iPhone while in line for the men’s room at Nuggets Game 5. Ain’t technolgy grand?
8:29 PM May 13th from Tweetie
Technology may or may not be grand, but it definitely is moving quickly. As of today, simply editing a manuscript on a phone is old hat:
Some people send text with their iPhones, and some play games. The artist Jorge Colombo created this week’s cover for The New Yorker with his.
Mr. Colombo drew the June 1 cover scene, of a late-night gathering around a 42nd Street hot dog stand, entirely with the iPhone application Brushes. Because of the smears and washes of color required by the inexact medium, it comes off as dreamy, not sharp and technological.
A video of the cover image being created can be found here.

Posted at 4:16 pm by Daniel Brogan
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Yes, The Loss of Newspapers is a Matter of Life and Death
Thursday, May 21, 2009Don’t think the decline of American newspapers is a matter of life and death? Think again.
Opponents of the death penalty looking to exonerate wrongly accused prisoners say their efforts have been hobbled by the dwindling size of America’s newsrooms, and particularly the disappearance of investigative reporting at many regional papers.
…
“It’s extremely troubling, some of the leading investigative journalists in this country have been given golden parachutes or laid off,” said Barry Scheck, the co-founder of the Innocence Project in New York, which is affiliated with the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law. “When procedural mechanisms begin to fail, the press is the last resort for the public to find out the truth.”
Check back here next week, when the June issue of 5280 weighs in with Maximillian Potter’s eye-opening look at the final days of the Rocky Mountain News. Max has uncovered critical new details regarding Scripps’ decision to shut down Colorado’s oldest newspaper just two months shy of its 150th anniversary. This is a story all of Denver will be talking about.
Posted at 1:02 pm by Daniel Brogan
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“Today” Show Picks Denver as Top City for Real-Estate Rebound
Tuesday, May 19, 2009NBC’s Today Show this morning picked Denver as the city best poised to recover from the real-estate slump:
Real estate expert Barbara Corcoran, a regular guest on the show, said Denver more than any other U.S. city is “clearly on a rebound.”
“It’s really the perfect real estate success story,” she said. “It had one of the highest foreclosure rates in the nation for years running, and now they’ve cut that foreclousure rate in half and they’ve turned the corner.”
Denver, Corcoran said, has “a vibrant downtown, it has a high employment base, it has educated people, it has youth, [and] it has one of the biggest park systems in the country.
“Everything about Denver is pointing up, up up,” she added.Â
None of which will come as a surprise to 5280 readers, of course.
Posted at 7:39 pm by Daniel Brogan
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Is Top of the Town for Sale?
Friday, May 1, 2009Voting for our 2009 Top of the Town issue concluded recently, and while the results won’t be published until our July issue, we’ve already started to hear what have become the annual whispers that to be a winner you have to first advertise in the magazine. This year, thanks to some unscrupulous competitors, those whispers seem louder than ever, so perhaps it’s time to revisit a column I wrote on this very subject back in 2005.
The fact of the matter is that 5280 never promises editorial coverage in exchange for an advertising contract. I could bore you with all kinds of lofty arguments about maintaining our integrity and credibility, but, in this case, there’s a much simpler reason:
Simply put, Top of the Town awards are a lousy way to sell advertising.
Don’t believe me? Consider that eight local jewelers regularly advertise in 5280. But our Top Jeweler category only has two winners, one chosen by readers, the other by our editors. Which means that in the next few days I can expect calls from at least six angry clients (and their wives and their friends and their loyal customers). Multiply that by more than 140 categories and you’ll start to see why our sales reps dread answering the phones in the days after Top of the Town hits the streets.
Of course, smart advertisers understand that Top of the Town is the best place for their message, as this issue of 5280 will sell nearly 30,000 copies on the newsstand alone, which means in Denver it will outsell InStyle, Oprah, and US Weekly combined. They understand that Top of the Town is firmly entrenched as the premier “Best Of” guide in Denver, meaning that readers will refer back to it again and again throughout the year ahead.
As an aside, it’s fun to see just how much we’ve grown since I wrote that column. Back then, we were proud to have received 21,000 votes in our Top of the Town balloting. This year, we topped 97,000 nominations. Top of the Town 2009 will hit newsstands in late June. It promises to be a great issue.
Posted at 3:00 pm by Daniel Brogan
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Our Writers Rock!
Thursday, April 30, 2009Accolades continue to come in for our talented writers:
- The Western Publishing Association honored Maximillian Potter’s “Second Nature” as 2008’s best Public Service Article. WPA also named our August cover as the year’s best consumer magazine cover.
- Shari Caudron’s “Uncorked” was just named Outstanding Profile by the American Society of Journalists and Authors.
And even when they’re not writing for us, our writers are making headlines:
- Contributing Editor Laura Pritchett will read from her new book “Going Green: True Tales from Gleaners, Scavengers and Dumpster Divers” at 2 p.m. Saturday at the LoDo Tattered Cover.
- 5280 alum Mike Kessler has a riveting piece on 72-year-old Aspen bank robber Jim Banning in the latest issue of Outside magazine that’s already generating big buzz.
- And tonight we’ll be rooting for story-telling strongman and karaoke king Andrew Corsello, who is up for a National Magazine Award for his GQ profile of gay Anglican bishop Gene Robinson. Corsello wrote about the Cooper Theatre for our November issue and has another piece for 5280 that’s now in the works.
I’m grateful that I get to work with such incredible folks.
Posted at 10:55 am by Daniel Brogan
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Who Needs a Drink?
Wednesday, April 29, 2009Join us Thursday after work as we kick off the first in a monthly series of 5280 Happy Hours. Here’s the skinny:
Join 5280 staffers and friends every month for drink specials and tasty appetizers at the hottest venues throughout Denver! Whether you’re stopping in to network, mingle or take advantage of sweet deals, we are excited to introduce you to these Mile High spots.
Don’t miss the first-ever 5280 Happy Hour on April 30th.
Great door prizes available from Landmark merchants including HW Home, Trouble Salon, and Comedy Works. 15% of all proceeds will benefit Project Angel Heart’s Dining Out for Life. Stay for dinner at Lucy and further benefit this outstanding charitable organization.
Thursday, April 30, 2009
Time:Â 5:00pm – 7:00pm
Location: Lila B at the Comedy Works Landmark, 5345 Landmark Place, #101, Greenwood Village, CO
If you haven’t been to the new Landmark development, this is a great opportunity to check it out. Here’s how to get there. If you’re on Facebook, check out this page for more details and to let us know if you’re coming.
Posted at 11:23 am by Daniel Brogan
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Sneak Peek at Our May Cover
Sunday, April 26, 2009As promised, here’s an early look at our May cover, which features an assumption-busting look at the Denver real-estate market. On newsstands Friday. Click for a larger view.
Posted at 11:34 am by Daniel Brogan
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