Connect with us

Opinion & Analysis

Golf Digest puts Jimmy Fallon on its cover

Published

on

When Golf Digest teased us on Instagram a few days ago, with a silhouette of who would be on the next cover of the latest issue, I don’t believe many people’s first, second, or even third thought would have been Jimmy Fallon. What does the host of the Tonight Show have to do with golf anyway?

The obvious answer is that there was a 30-second clip in the movie Fever Pitch in which Fallon was playing golf with the parents of his new girlfriend, who was played by Drew Barrymore.

But seriously, what is Jimmy Fallon doing on golf’s most coveted magazine cover. Well, if you haven’t already noticed, Golf Digest’s image and brand has changed. Look no closer than the new Golf Digest logo and website. The re-launch of Golf Digest’s website is now more user-friendly, and follows a look and feel consistent to the new trend of web design. According to Golf Digest, the restyling initiative is to draw more attention to new points of emphasis; that being technology, golf science and statistics. Its product has also become “edgier” and has “more attitude” than ever, you could say.

The facts are the facts, and they are that the golf industry is struggling. When it comes to the growth of the game, getting new participants to pay their hard-earned dollars and commit to five hour rounds is an uphill battle. From Golf Digest’s perspective, would having Tiger or Phil on the cover for the 30th time discussing their “Secret Tips for Going Low” be interesting enough to make their magazine fly off the shelves? Probably not, which is why Golf Digest has changed its course.

The goal for Golf Digest seems to be to move golf away from its perception as a game for 55-year-old men who belong to country clubs, because that generation is no longer who advertisers in Golf Digest are looking to spend their dollars on.

In an article in the New York Times, Bill Pennington discusses how those who advertise in Golf Digest are looking to target the “Millennial Generation (ages 18 to 34) to market their new products and initiatives in the game. In the June Issue, in which Fallon is on the cover, you will find surveys from millennial golfers where 11 percent of those surveyed have admitted to smoking marijuana on the golf course versus 3 percent of those ages 35 to 54, and 1 percent of golfers over 55. The article lists more statistics about the patterns of the different generations of golfers, alluding to the popularity of the millennial golfer.

paulinagretzky2
Paulina Gretzky, daughter of hockey legend Wayne Gretzky and fiance of PGA Tour player Dustin Johnson, was Golf Digest’s choice for its May 2014 Fitness Issue. In 2013, the magazine selected Golf Channel Personality Holly Sonders for its fitness issue. 

Golf is currently perceived as more of a lifestyle than a sport, and the approach Golf Digest has taken is placing more of an emphasis on the lifestyle of the people who play golf. Coupled with the fact that magazine sales, not just in the golf industry, are probably down substantially from their heyday, Golf Digest has had to make a switch in the content they present. If their target is this so-called Millennial Generation, a generation that will respond better to Paulina Gretzky and Jimmy Fallon than Dave Stockton and Thorbjorn Olesen, then I really don’t have any beef with that.

Over the last decade, I have probably read more “Secret Tips for Putting into the Wind” than one needs to in an entire lifetime. So hearing about Jimmy Fallon’s ties to golf, and how golf courses in Colorado might give you a joint at No. 10 if you also buy a hot dog and a coke is definitely something that I (a proud Millennial Golfer) would spend money to read about.

To be honest, this revamping of the magazine doesn’t mean that the traditional Golf Digest content needs to be compromised. It just probably won’t be the magazine’s focus in the future.

Oliver Berg is a golf fanatic whose roots in the game were formed in the rugged and rocky golf links of Southern Ontario, Canada. By putting the pen to paper, or more appropriately, his fingers to the keyboard, Oliver turned his passion for ‘talking golf’ online by starting The High Fade Golf Blog. Oliver works in the digital marketing space in the fashion industry in Toronto and has applied what he’s learned from social media marketing to his own Instagram golf account - @thehighfade. Having grown up in a family of golfers, Oliver was given a special gift at young age from his grandmother -- a pillow that reads “Life’s a game, but Golf is serious” is something that he sleeps beside every night, and he pretty much lives by that!

23 Comments

23 Comments

  1. DerTrommler

    May 9, 2014 at 11:39 am

    Canceling my GD subscription now. It’s official. Paulina Gretzky on the cover was ridiculous. Now Jimmy Fallon. I don’t care that he’s a 6, or played on his HS golf team. I think he’s very good at his comedic craft, but that’s not why I subscribed to GD.

    Like others have said, golf is tough and not cheap. It is what it is. GQ is for cool & trendy. The geniuses at GD are free to change their brand & theme & content. I have elected not to follow.

  2. crisis_denier

    May 2, 2014 at 7:51 pm

    If this move helps Golf Digest sell more magazines, go for it, but I’m completely over hearing about the tragic demise of the game. Golf is on the decline because the “Tiger Bubble” is loosing air. It was inevitable. Now there are any number of proposals (15″ holes?!) to “save” golf, mostly being peddled by people like Mark King, who have a financial interest in how many people play.

    Golf is not for everyone. It’s really, really, really difficult to become proficient. It is time consuming. It can be expensive and access to courses is an issue for some people. The deck is stacked against mass appeal, and that’s what makes it special for those of us who love the game.

  3. enrique

    May 2, 2014 at 9:38 am

    At least Fallon PLAYS golf.

  4. timbleking

    May 2, 2014 at 3:49 am

    I stopped buying and reading GD a long time ago. It seems that it was a good decision.
    Paulina is way right an eye catcher, but who is supposed to play golf in bra? That’s ridiculous…

  5. HackerDav

    May 1, 2014 at 8:49 pm

    It’s no wonder golf’s participation continues to decline every year. With geniuses like those commenting on Facebook about this, who are so steadfast in making sure “real golfers” are represented, its not wonder the game won’t grow. If it’s going to survive this game needs a shot in the arm, and guys like Fallon can help provide that as Sinatra, Hob Hope, Carson and others did before him.

    Golf lacks cool right now, and last I checked Kenny G isn’t really doing that, nor is 90% of the PGA tour. If you took ten seconds to google it, you’d find Fallon plays off a 6 and played on his high school team and loves the game. Stop your whining and wake up. Your precious, sacrosanct game is killing itself. Things like this are good for golf, especially in helping attract new players. Maybe try to welcome them in rather than judging them on your way to slicing your drive off the first tee box.

    • Tony Lynam

      May 1, 2014 at 10:02 pm

      I don’t know, it felt pretty cool shooting a 75 today and that took some skill and being “cool” had nothing to do with it. A lot of people thought Barack Obama was “cool” and it got him the double dip in the presidency. But it turns out that we needed a competent President not a “cool” one. My point is, “cool” is a frame of mind and/or someone’s perception about another person, place or thing. Does not help much in the game of golf or running a country.

      • HackerDav31

        May 1, 2014 at 10:15 pm

        Not sure what exactly you’re talking about, nor am I sure the hell the president has anything to do with this discussion, but sure…

        The point I was trying to make was that icons help make things attractive to those outside of an activity or sport. Tiger did it for golf in the early 2000’s and that spike has now dipped. Golf could use an image refresher to make it attractive to people who don’t play in the hopes of enticing them to do so. That was the point. You think golf is cool because you already play it, and so do I. Its the coolest sport on the planet. The problem is, people who don’t play don’t know that, and the image with which golf is associated is elitist, old, and drab. Why not align the games image with something fresher?

        • Tony Lynam

          May 2, 2014 at 9:00 pm

          My point was “cool” is in the eyes of the beholder, and at the end of the day what does it matter. You are right on the Tiger affect as I’m a product of that era as a golfer (although as a kid I caddied for the old stuffy types but never really got hooked until I gave up team sports and still needed athletic competition). I think that golf has made strides with clothing trends that are “cool”, but the single most glaring thing holding back golf from growth is cost. Look at equipment prices alone. $500 plus for a driver that material wise did not cost $100 (I know R&D drives prices for the most part, but really?) is just insane and that is only one economic issue plaguing golf. I do agree with your comments along the lines of stuffy people in golf, that is why I frequent courses where the staff and pro’s are younger men and women, because they get it and still believe in what they are doing and they believe in service to the customer. But all in all if you want more people playing, the golf industry needs to stop out pricing the masses out of the game to start.

          • Philip

            May 4, 2014 at 3:01 pm

            Actually, what is affecting the golf industry regarding how they price affects everything now. A friend at work cycles and I am interested in getting back into it. WTF – the prices are off this planet, yes I know that some of the tech costs a lot to produce, but on some things a little change doubles or triples the cost and we are not talking adding titanium or some other precious metal.

            We are in the age of “What the market will bear” and cost of production is not even remotely connected to market price. Golf is not even close to being an essential like clothing, cell phones and even televisions.

            It is all about perceived value for each of us as cost does not stop many from buying the latest gadget or outfit … etc.

          • Dale Mitchell

            May 15, 2014 at 2:55 pm

            This is so true. I’ve been saying for years that the cost of golf has far exceeded inflation for all the years since the “Tiger boom” began. The golf industry (including equipment and courses) just got way too greedy and drove off a lot of the lower and middle income players who could no longer justify the cost. And even for younger players, the cost can be prohibitive. The industry shot itself in the butt. The market is no longer bearing the cost, and the industry won’t adjust.

    • brad

      May 2, 2014 at 6:37 am

      +1
      Perhaps the most sensible comment on here in months (except maybe the dig at the end of the comment)

      • Brad

        May 2, 2014 at 6:41 am

        Dang. Meant to hang hat under @HackerDav’s post

  6. yo!

    May 1, 2014 at 8:29 pm

    pic of paulina squeezing her boobs together to demonstrate the golf address position is an eye catcher to say the least.

  7. Martin

    May 1, 2014 at 8:05 pm

    Almost as stupid as Paulina.

  8. DC

    May 1, 2014 at 6:16 pm

    Well this definitely helps clarify my decision to cancel my subscription. If I want to read about Paulina Gretzky or Jimmy Fallon I will buy US Weekly or People Magazine.

    • Tony Lynam

      May 1, 2014 at 10:04 pm

      Agree. Golfwrx takes care of pretty much everything the golf rags used to provide me and then some.

  9. Curtis

    May 1, 2014 at 6:11 pm

    Great idea!! I stopped buying GD (except for the Hot List of course) because I was sick of reading tips from mostly the same guys. I like where they are going finally! LT & Win from GC next!!

    • John Spalding

      May 1, 2014 at 6:24 pm

      I hope for their sake the new target readership will subscribe in the numbers equal to the loss of p1 subscribers….individual copy sales won’t feed the bulldog!

      • Hector

        May 1, 2014 at 7:04 pm

        they’d probably switch out some lost subscriptions for getting better numbers in the younger demo.

        • Tony Lynam

          May 1, 2014 at 10:06 pm

          Funny, that is what the Obama administration thought about Obamacare and the younger demo signing up to carry it.

          • Hector

            May 1, 2014 at 11:29 pm

            there’s no guesswork in the ad game, the younger demo is more attractive to advertisers as a whole

          • marionmg

            May 4, 2014 at 11:42 am

            Okay we get it Tony – you’re not an Obama fan.

          • Xreb

            May 4, 2014 at 8:32 pm

            You seem to want to drag the President into every conservation about golf….

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Opinion & Analysis

5 Things We Learned: Thursday at the PGA Championship

Published

on

Aronimink is not a storied club, but when Donald Ross himself proclaimed it to be as good as he can design and build, one had to take notice. Jay Sigel was the pre-eminent male amateur golfer from the mid-1970s to the mid-1990s. He might have called any number of Philadelphia clubs home, but he chose Aronimink. It served him well. Gary Player won a PGA Championship here in 1962, and was followed by the 1993 winner … nobody. Aronimink gave that event away to Inverness, for reasons of which it is certainly not proud. So be it. We had to wait sixty-four years for the PGA to return to Newtown Square, but here we are. Aronimink has been neo-restored by Gil Hanse and team, to return Ross features with an eye toward defense against the dark arts, errrr, high-tech equipment.

Day one saw Rory McIlroy and Bryson DeChambeau dig big holes, to the tune of plus-four and plus-six, respectively. Since the first-round lead will be minus-three at worst, many shots will need to be made up for the power couple to reach contention. By nightfall, seven golfers held the day-one lead at three-under par 67. Shots and sticks caught our attention, and we are proud to present Five Things We Learned on Tech Thursday at the 2026 PGA Championship. Thanks to InsideTourGolfer, Today’s Golfer, and GolfWRX for initial equipment research.

First, meet Min Woo Lee

Min Woo Lee, aka Dr. Chipinski, has once again thrust himself into the conversation of Can he, will he, when will he? Lee has so much talent, wins not nearly as often as we believe that he should, and has no major near-misses (much less titles) on his wiki. The young Aussie is getting older and wiser, but is he able to avoid the scarring that holds the older and wiser back from breaking through? Philadelphia offers another opportunity. Min Woo signed for five birdies and two bogeys on day one, and grabbed a share of the opening-day lead at Aronimink. Winners transcend history and the moment, and Lee will need that sort of ascent to lift the Wannamaker on Sunday.

Second, meet Aldrich Potgeiter

The young South African golfer can rip driver with the best of them. Aronimink tips out at nearly 7400 yards, but beyond the fairway bunkers that ensnare only the mortals, Potgeiter can take his chances with wedge from the rough. On Thursday, he spent plenty of time in the spinach. Like Popeye, he used his muscles to gouge and thrash and dig his way out. Six birdies against three bogeys on the card brought AP in a three deep.

Third, meet Martin Kaymer

Not a major event takes place without a where’s he been throwback moment. We know that Martin Kaymer left the PGA and DP World tours for LIV golf, but the two-time (US Open and PGA) major winner has a lifetime exemption into at least one major event, and he seizes the opportunity each May. Kaymer joined the six-seven brigade with four birdies and a solitary bogey on day one. Kaymer was never a long hitter, and the years are kind to no golfer. The German champion will need to uncork every bottle of guile and strategy in his cabinet to remain in contention. For today, though, he occupies a rung on the ladder of Tour Tech.

Fourth, meet Scottie Scheffler

Let’s see, he’s the defending champion at the PGA, and he found his way back to the top tier with five birdies against two bogeys. To be a favorite and then play up to that stature and expectation is quite difficult. Just ask Rory, Bryson, and some of the other pre-tournament heartthrobs. Scheffler’s game is complete, and to knock him off the OWGR #1 pedestal, one needs to defeat him at the majors. Aronimink is the sort of course that fits Scheffler’s game. Better yet, it unfits the game of many of his challengers. Don’t expect Scheffler to go away anytime soon. Come Sunday, he’ll be around.

Fifth, meet Stephan Jaeger

Clocking in for the unheralded players shift are Ryo Hisatsune and Stephan Jaeger. Hisatsune logged seven birdies on day one, but gave most of them back with four bogeys. Still, he’s tied at the top for a time. Jaeger pitched five birdies against two bogeys, including a run of three consecutive, from holes four through six. Odds are that one of the two will hang around through 36 holes. Odds also suggest that both will be gone by Saturday evening. Still, the PGA Championship has historically been the major most likely to be won by an under-known. Both Hisatsune and Jaeger feature on that list, so good luck, lads!

Continue Reading

Club Junkie

Club Junkie’s Titleist GTS driver fitting results!

Published

on

On this episode of the Club Junkie Podcast, I head to the Titleist Performance Institute for a full driver fitting with the new Titleist GTS lineup. We dive into the fitting process, talk about what made the biggest difference in performance, and break down how the different GTS heads and shaft combinations compare on the launch monitor. If you are thinking about a new driver setup for this season, there is a lot to take away from this one.

I also get into Brooks Koepka and the gear setup he brought to the PGA Championship, including the putters that caught my eye during the week. There are some interesting equipment trends showing up at the highest level right now and we break down what stands out.

To wrap things up, I talk about reshafting a few wedges, what I learned during the process, and swapping an adaptor onto a new shaft for another build project in the shop. A gear packed episode from start to finish for anyone who loves golf equipment and club building.

Follow Club Junkie everywhere:
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/clubjunkiepod/
X: https://x.com/ClubJunkiePod
TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@clubjunkiepod
Threads: https://www.threads.com/@clubjunkiepod

 

Continue Reading

Club Junkie

Club Junkie WITB, week 16: New Titleist GTS woods!

Published

on

Excited for this week’s WITB as we get to add the new Titleist GTS woods to the bag! I was fit at Titleist’s TPI facility in Oceanside California a few weeks ago and my new clubs just showed up. I am also adding a cool set of irons that I built last year some wild custom wedges into a new golf bag. Speaking of the bag I have a new Ghost Anyday Black Ops stand bag that I will be using on my Motocaddy Remote M7 electric cart.

 

Driver: Titleist GTS3 (11 degrees @ 10.25)
Shaft: Fujikura Ventus Red 6s

3-wood: Titleist GT1 3Tour (14.5 degrees)
Shaft: Graphite Design Tour AD CQ-7s

5-wood: Titleist GTS (18 degrees)
Shaft: Fujikura Ventus Red 7s

9-wood: Titleist GT1 (24 degress)
Shaft: Fujikura Ventus Red 7s

Irons: Bettinardi CB24 (5-PW)
Shafts: KBS C-Taper Lite 110 stiff

Wedge: TaylorMade MG5 (50-09 SB)
Shaft: Mitsubishi MMT 125 Stiff

Wedge: TaylorMade MG5 (56-12 SB)
Shaft: Mitsubishi MMT 125 Stiff

Wedge: TaylorMade MG5 (60-08 LB)
Shaft: Mitsubishi MMT 125 Stiff

Putter: Dan Carraher ZT Proto

Ball: Callaway Chrome Tour

Bag: Ghost Anyday Black Ops Stand Bag

Continue Reading

Announcement

Our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use have been updated as of January 29th, 2026. Please review the updated policies here Privacy Policy | Terms of Use. By continuing to use our site after January 29th, 2026, you agree to the changes.

WITB

Facebook

Trending