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Outside magazine, August 2000
DEPT. OF DOT.COM GLORY:
We're still celebrating the news that our recently re-vamped Web site, Outside Online has brought home its first Webby—the Internet world's answer to the Academy Award—for Best Travel Site, beating out such formidable outfits as Discovery.com, Lonely Planet's Cityseek, and the Sierra Club. How'd we surf this particular wave to victory? "Few sites offer stories that inspire you to paddle Nicaragua's Mosquito Coast or hike hut-to-hut in Zwiesel, Germany," says OOL's executive director Amy Marr. "We fuel travel fantasies, and rev up your wanderlust."


WITH THE DEMOCRATIC and Republican Party national conventions around the corner, the Y2K presidential election is about to heat up like Phoenix in June. And if there's ever been a fight for the White

House more down and dirty over environmental issues than this one's likely to be, we're hard pressed to think of it. In this corner: Al Gore, Bill Clinton's green crusader and author of Earth in the Balance, a manifesto stuffed with more eco-data than Bruce Babbitt's hard drive. In the opposite corner: George W. Bush, governor of Texas, heir to the Bush political legacy, oilman, baseball fan, and a guy with an environmental record that seems negligible at best. Sound like a no-brainer for the green vote? Think again.

"There's this automatic preconception that Bush is not a friend of the environment," says Austin-based journalist Bill Minutaglio, who wrote this month's profile of the GOP contender ("Earth, Meet Dubya! Dubya, Earth!" page 82). "But part of his 'compassionate conservative' platform is saying, 'I can be a better steward of the environment than any other Republican.'" While researching his 1999 biography, First Son: George W. Bush and the Bush Family Dynasty, Minutaglio was twice granted an audience with the guv. But when Outside asked him to check into Bush's political ties to Mother Earth, Dubya's campaign managers tossed our man back and forth while they scrambled to hammer out environmental policy statements. "I'm pretty sure they saw me as this kind of low-grade affliction that just wouldn't go away," says Minutaglio, a senior reporter for the Dallas Morning News.

For Ned Martel, chief political correspondent for Voter.com, pinning down Al Gore ("Presidential Timber," page 74) wasn't so much difficult as intimidating. "He's phenomenally knowledgeable," says Martel, who did grad work at the University of Michigan in 1994 on a Ted Scripps Fellowship and later worked as a senior editor at George. "Al Gore is so convinced he's the most qualified candidate on green issues," Martel observes, "that he almost can't believe people take his challengers seriously."

Cristina Opdahl
Outside associate editor Cristina Opdahl spent two weeks in Tennessee following the rodeo kayak circuit and investigating the sport's growing pains for this month's cover story, "Throwing Down a Killer Hole" (page 50). "Boaters can make money now," she says, "but the rodeo circuit is still one big road trip in search of the perfect ride."
John Goodman
Boston native John Goodman photographed this month's cover story by stripping to his boxer shorts, wading into Tennessee's Ocoee River, and snapping frames while dodging the kayaks hurtling downriver. "I wasn't really prepared to get wet," says Goodman, "but to capture intimacy and intensity, you do what you gotta do."
Peter Heller
Denver-based writer Peter Heller is the author of Set Free in China: Sojourns on the Edge and an NPR commentator. His effort to kayak the Cuban coastline described in Ernest Hemingway's novel Islands in the Stream ("Cuba: A Dry Run," page 58) wasn't as easy as he'd hoped. "But it was fascinating to travel around and probe the Cuban coastal defense system," he concedes.
Sara Wheeler
"Antarctica is the ultimate tabula rasa," says London-based Sara Wheeler, author of Terra Incognita: Travels in Antarctica (1998). "Some people search all their lives to find something like it." Wheeler is a member of the Royal Geographic Society and the Royal Society of Literature. For her story on the Far South as an adventure-travel destination, "From the Bottom to the Top," please turn to page 28.
T. Coraghessan Boyle
"I'm afraid I really don't see any ray of hope for our species," says writer and Santa Barbara resident T. Coraghessan Boyle. His forthcoming novel, A Friend of the Earth (Viking, September), is excerpted this month starting on page 86. Boyle is the author of 12 books, including the highly acclaimed novels The Tortilla Curtain and The Road to Wellville.