Every subculture has its leading media, which hardly anyone outside the specific thematic niches notices, but which are influential within their bubbles. For the powder sports niche, this has long been, well, powder. Rumors about the imminent demise of Powder first spread via Twitter, then became more concrete on the blogs and social media pages of various former and current Powder editors and were finally confirmed in a concise statement on Powder.com: Everything will be closed from the end of November, future uncertain.
Apart from the niche media, there have always been niche communication channels that serve the exchange between like-minded people - IRC chats, internet forums, modern social media and, in the past, analog versions of these: regulars' tables, bulletin boards, smoke signals. Currently, the few remaining powder-related forums with more than two active members are debating whether the end of powder is the beginning of the end of the ski industry, or simply the natural course of events? And perhaps even long overdue?
While Powder was always primarily an institution in the USA, many people here in Germany are also nostalgic: finding Powder in the mailbox in the fall created anticipation for the season. The pictures are always fun to look at, they are not immediately forgotten like on Instagram. What are you supposed to read on the toilet now? Powder was escapism and dream fodder. With the best editorials, you had the feeling: "Someone understands me here." The worse ones at least made you feel like someone like-minded was trying to make an engaging magazine. Former Powder editor-in-chief Steve Casimiro writes that the stacks of magazines in the editorial archives were always a symbol of optimism and hope for him.