FLW Outdoors Magazine Features and Benefits
- Information from the most expansive network of top anglers in the world.
- Access to the hottest trends and techniques proven to catch fish in top-level tourneys.
- Articles from some of the most established writers in fishing.
- A fresh perspective on fishing: from the hottest techniques to the latest innovations.
- Coast-to-coast content for readers across the country.
- Individual focus by species aimed at making you the best angler.
- All packaged into one the cleanest yet engaging designs in the industry.
- $15 for 1 year (savings of $16.60 off the newsstand price—like getting 4 issues for free)
- $28 for 2 years (savings of 35.20 off the newsstand price—like getting 9 issues for free)
- $39 for 3 years ( savings of 55.80 off the newsstand price—like getting 14 issues for free)
Why Subscribe to FLW Outdoors Magazine?
FLW Outdoors Magazine caters to serious anglers based on their favorite species. With a subscription to FLW Outdoors, you can choose the species and get the latest hands-on information from America’s top anglers delivered right to your doorstep for a fraction of what you pay at the newsstand. FLW Outdoors’ vast network of anglers all across the country relay to readers the most cutting edge tips and techniques. Readers are sure to get the most out of every article thanks to FLW Outdoors Magazine’s award winning editors, writers and angling authorities like Al Lindner, David Hart, Mark Hicks, Matt Williams, Rob Newell, Dave Csanda, David A. Brown, and more.
Each issue is jam packed with the know-how to make you a better angler. With articles covering the hottest proven techniques, the best destinations for catching more and bigger fish, thorough reviews of tournament winning strategies, the latest product introductions, innovative tackle tips, and quality hands-on reviews of hundreds of products and techniques each year, you’ll be a better angler regardless of the body of water.
FLW Outdoors Magazine’s editors tirelessly seek out the most entertaining and educational pieces and organize them to into fun and easy to read content in one of the most impressively designed publications in the industry. If you haven’t checked out a copy of the magazine lately, you’ve been missing out on the buzz in the fishing industry. The new and improved FLW Outdoors Magazine strives to produce the best information an angler can find anywhere coast to coast, season after season.
Click here to subscribe at a savings of $16.60 off the newsstand price.
Related Links
Jason Sealock, Editor of FLW Outdoors Magazine, started fishing at four years old and hasn’t stopped since. Growing up fishing for bass, crappie, walleyes, redfish and other inshore species gave him the foundation to turn his passion into a career. He’s been avidly following the sport of tournament bass fishing since the early 1980s and began writing about it in the late 1990s on a freelance basis. He gave up a lucrative profession in information technology to pursue a career in outdoor writing and his first true lovefishing. He hasn’t looked back since.His photography has won awards for excellence in craft among his peers. His philosophy on taking the positive approach to bring fishing to the masses is the foundation for his writing. When he’s not at work, he’s raising his four-year-old son to enjoy the outdoors or chasing bass around on Kentucky Lake. When the turkeys are in season, he might be propped up against a tree waiting for a big tom to come into range. But his true passion for the last 30 years has been bass fishing.
Favorite Lake: Lake Dardanelle, Russellville, Ark. “I like Dardanelle because it’s where my dad taught me the ropes in bass fishing, and I just feel comfortable fishing there.“
Favorite Technique: Walking a spook or sight fishing because he likes the interaction with fish.
Biggest Catches: a 42-pound striper, a 50 pound alligator gar, a 31-pound redfish and his favorite catch was a 6 pound smallmouth in Wisconsin with Chevy pro Tom Keenan.
An Ohio native, Associate Editor Curtis Niedermier was introduced to fishing in neighborhood ponds. He caught catfish, bluegills and bass and eventually graduated to local reservoirs to chase crappies and walleyes. Off the water, Niedermier spent his falls in the squirrel woods or looking for a dove field, and summers were time for hunting groundhogs on his neighbor’s farm. In 2007, he graduated from The Ohio State University, where he studied agricultural communication with a focus on journalism. In college, he wrote and edited copy for a student magazine and got his start in outdoor communication as an intern at the U.S. Sportsmen’s Alliance in Columbus, Ohio.
Niedermier joined the FLW Outdoors Magazine staff in June 2007 and now resides in Benton, Ky. On days away from the office, look for him to be on Kentucky Lake chasing bass, crappies, bluegills and the occasional sauger or practicing calls while scouting areas as a new duck hunter.
Sean Ostruszka, an associate editor for FLW Outdoor’s magazines, began his fishing career on the ponds and lakes in northeast Illinois and has since expanded to fish for a multitude of species across North and Central America. A 2007 graduate from Northern Illinois University, Ostruszka honed his writing skills as an award-winning sports reporter and editor for various Chicagoland newspapers for five years before joining the FLW staff.
Proof of Obsession:
In grade school Ostruszka used to get in trouble for drawing pictures of fish instead of paying attention. Fascinated with lures all his life, Ostruszka began building his own out of wood when his mother finally let him work a scroll saw and sander at the ripe old age of 11. He quickly scarred his hands and he continues to get new ones to this day.
Ostruszka managed the fishing section of a sporting goods store when he was only 16 which resulted in numerous paychecks going right back to the owner. He began fishing the Professional Musky Tournament Trail at 18. A large reason for Ostruszka choosing Northern Illinois University was a great fishing lake 30 minutes away. Ostruszka would plan his class attendance in college around weather reports and moon phases. One of his greatest life achievements was catching a 52 1/2-inch musky
Favorite Species: Musky
Biggest fish: 80-pound sailfish in Costa Rica which paled in comparison to his younger brother’s two larger sailfish.
Favorite body of water: Cave Run Lake, KY. There may be better fisheries, but Ostruszka has a soft spot for the lake that has been very good to him over the years.
Favorite technique: Jerkbaits. A nut for lure actions, Ostruszka loves imparting action instead of just cranking. And he’s a sucker for a topwater bite.





