Dennis Web page had two important passions in his life: music and basketball. In 1993, Web page was doing fairly effectively with one in every of them: He had helped launch the rock and roll journal, Guitar World, in 1980, and was now greater than a decade right into a profitable run as that magazine’s writer. He was completely satisfied sufficient to have deserted his earlier life purpose of being a deejay or working for Rolling Stone, however he was prepared to start out one thing new. 

Simply as Web page, who had all the time beloved hoops as a lot as music (even when he’d by no means labored within the sport), began to get anxious about what journal he would possibly launch subsequent, a pal of his from the music enterprise, Alan Grunblatt, urged he begin, successfully, “a hip-hop basketball journal.” 

Sports activities media would by no means be the identical.

Skilled athletes have been “cool” for nearly so long as sports activities have existed as a vocation. Web page’s first favourite gamers had been guys he noticed in particular person rising up in Trenton, NJ—native legend Tal Brody, and New York Metropolis’s Lew Alcindor, whose Energy Memorial group had visited Web page’s hometown to tackle Trenton Catholic. As Web page’s hoops publicity grew with sports activities media’s gradual progress, he fell in love with gamers like Earl “The Pearl” Monroe and Julius “Dr. J” Erving. Then there was Isiah Thomas. And by the early 90s, after all, there was Michael Jordan. However the best way these superheroes had been coated by the press stayed fairly static. Newspapers centered on video games and stats. TV centered on broadcasting video games. Avenue & Smith’s journal took the time to care about spotlighting younger gamers and Sport and Sports activities Illustrated raised the extent of writing within the area, and Web page devoured all of them. There wasn’t a lot taste, although.

As Web page writes within the intro to the lately launched ebook, 30 Years of SLAM: The Definition of Basketball Tradition, “The concept crystallized as a basketball-only journal from a hip-hop perspective. I may see it in my head clear as day; the design would appear to be these Nike/Mars Blackmon/Michael Jordan print adverts, the images could be nearly as good as VIBE, and the writing could be irreverent like Rolling Stone.”

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There have been some hiccups over the early years—Michael Jordan retired simply as Situation 1 was being deliberate, Reggie Miller didn’t admire a number of the jokes made at his expense, some long-time NBA execs and old-school reporters didn’t get pleasure from SLAM’s tone—however roughly, Web page’s imaginative and prescient performed out superbly. SLAM’s covers confirmed the gamers just like the “rock stars” they had been. SLAM launched style shoots to sports activities magazines and has coated the look of basketball gamers in some method ever since (most famously within the 2020s with its must-follow Instagram account, @leaguefits). SLAM launched a KICKS part about sneakers that for a few years was the primary place gamers and followers would flip after they opened a problem. The KICKS part begat a KICKS Journal that has come out yearly since 1998 and in some ways set the tone for the now-countless numbers of sneaker mags, blogs, and social media accounts (together with @slamkicks, natch) which have popped up since.

The magazine’s virtually continuous ascension as a enterprise lasted from launch in 1994 to early 2004, when the tenth anniversary concern dropped at a whopping, profitable and Vogue-like 260(!!) pages, filled with adverts from each sneaker model and hip-hop label you could possibly consider and it was the best-selling sports activities journal on American newsstands.

Then the web took over. SLAM—and specifically, Harris Publications, the old-school household writer that operated it—was fairly gradual to determine find out how to monetize on-line. Points shrank when it comes to income and web page depend. There have been some terribly laborious instances from a enterprise perspective, however the workers—Web page all the time had a present for hiring and empowering proficient people who had been on the rise within the occupation, the most effective of whom had a present for hiring and empowering an excellent newer technology of on-the-rise future stars—by no means stopped caring in regards to the sport, the life-style, or the “#slamfam” that stayed loyal by all of it. 

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Whereas SLAM had been gradual to transform to the world vast internet, it was lightning-quick as social media grew to become the brand new place to succeed in followers, surpassing a million followers on Twitter, Instagram, and Fb in a short time on every of these platforms with out ever spending a dime to “purchase” or “enhance” its attain. SLAM was, and is, an natural media outlet fueled by the love of the sport.

Within the most-recent stage of SLAM’s life, from about 2017, when SLAM was acquired by JDS Sports activities and Web page grew to become an precise half proprietor of the journal he’d began, to in the present day, you’ll often “hear” Web page say—both actually, in his traditional South Jersey accent, or nearly, through an Instagram submit or remark—“this shit ain’t straightforward.” 

It wasn’t. And isn’t. However with Web page’s dedication to the sport and the model, and the numerous nice people who realized from him matching that devotion, SLAM has made it to 30 years and reworked the game each step of the best way.


Reprinted from the 2024 Induction Weekend Program courtesy of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Corridor of Fame.

Ben Osborne is a longtime sports activities author and editor who served as SLAM’s Editor-in-Chief from 2007-2016.



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