About Roy and Bobbi Reiman
Roy Reiman grew up on a rented farm near Auburn, Iowa, where he attended a small rural high school with just 63 students and only 11 in his class.
His high school English teacher spotted his talent for writing, and was determined to have him become her first college journalism student. Upon graduation, he enrolled at Iowa State, but couldn’t begin until the January quarter, first needing to earn enough to cover the tuition.
Banking on the work ethic he’d developed on the farm, he paid all of his college expenses through various summer jobs—including operating a bulldozer on a road construction crew—as well as jobs on campus. He worked at the college print shop, sold advertising, wrote news releases, reported market news on Radio WOI, and served as a spotter for the play-by-play announcer at Iowa State football games.
He also waited tables at a sorority house and sold cookware, once tallying the highest sales in the Midwest for a one-week period. Still struggling to cover costs as a sophomore, he was encouraged by his counselor to take a senior course in “Magazine Freelance Writing.” The goal set for the class was to sell three articles to receive 3 hours of “A” credit.
But once Roy found he could make good money with his mind instead of his back, it wasn’t the grade but the payments that motivated him. By the end of the quarter he’d sold 27 articles to various publications and set a record that still stands today.
He graduated from Iowa State University in 1957 with a degree in Agricultural Journalism. Having completed the ROTC program while in college, he went directly into military service as Second Lieutenant at Fort Sill, Oklahoma.
After service his first job was with an ad agency in Kansas City. After a short term there, he was pursued by Capper’s Farmer magazine in Topeka, Kansas. That publication bought a number of his freelance articles and liked his writing style. Just two years after joining the staff, he became the Managing Editor at age 23.
Roy says the best part of his job in Topeka was when he met Bobbi, who was the executive secretary to the Editor. Even before they married, he took her for a tour of the Iowa State campus, and to this day she refers to Iowa State as “Roy’s Rome.”
After moving on to Milwaukee and working several years for a publishing firm there, he left to start his own publishing company, setting up a small office in the basement of his home. That was the beginning of Reiman Publications, which eventually grew to be the largest subscription-supported publishing firm in the United States with over 16 million paid subscribers.
It led to the launch of 14 national magazines: Country, Reminisce, Farm & Ranch Living, and others. Among them was Taste of Home magazine, which soon became the country’s leading food magazine with over 5.3 million paid subscribers, making it the sixth-largest magazine in America.