Untitled FASTPAGES: 1. Cover \ 2. From the Publisher's Desk \ 3. Contents /Credits \ 4. Calendar \ 5. State of the World \ 6. Feature \ 7. Sports \ 7a. Sports Extra \ 8. Money \ 9. Food & Drink \ 10. Books \ 11. Public Domain / Toast of the Town \ 12. Outdoors \ 13. Travel \ 14. Mind, Body, Spirit \ 15. Back Page \ Mostly Magazines Store \ Daily Idler \ France \ Home \

idleguy.com July 2026 | Page 15
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Looking Ahead to the August 2026 Issue

Coming in August

Coming in August: A Sports Roundup

August keeps the sports calendar busy on every front. NFL preseason kicks off in early August, giving fans their first real look at rookies and revamped rosters before the regular season arrives in September. College football camps open across the country, with our NCAA previews breaking down the contenders heading into another wide-open season. MLB pennant races heat up as teams jockey for playoff position down the stretch, and Saratoga's storied Travers Stakes brings the best three-year-olds in horse racing to the track in late August. The Little League World Series, running August 20-30, offers a welcome dose of pure, unscripted youth sports between all the pro previews. We close out the month looking ahead to the US Open Tennis Championship, set to begin August 31 at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in New York.

Story Ideas for the August Issue

Money: Back-to-school spending and the household budget. The average American family spends close to $900 on K-12 supplies and clothing each year, and August is peak season for sales-tax holidays in roughly a third of states that collect sales tax. A practical piece on timing purchases around tax-free weekends, comparing early-August deals against Labor Day clearance, and a few smart moves for families managing college costs and 529 contributions as the new semester approaches.

Food & Drink: Late-summer harvest and the last cookouts of the season. August is peak season for tomatoes, corn, peaches, and melons, making it a natural fit for a few simple end-of-summer recipes built around farmers market produce. National Waffle Day (August 24) or National Chocolate Chip Cookie Day (August 4) are also making the grade for end of summer treats.

Feature: With the 250th anniversary thread continuing from July, August offers a natural pivot point: the Continental Congress and the long, contentious summer of 1776 that followed the Declaration's signing, when the real work of actually organizing a war and a government began. MLB All-Star Week — Philadelphia, July 10-14
Baseball comes home for America's 250th birthday. The 96th Midsummer Classic is scheduled for Tuesday, July 14 at Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia — the birthplace of the nation — and MLB has deliberately tied the event to the country's semiquincentennial celebration. It follows suit from 1976, when Veterans Stadium hosted the All-Star Game for the bicentennial. The T-Mobile Home Run Derby runs Monday, July 13, now airing on Netflix rather than ESPN for the first time. The week officially opens Friday, July 10 with the HBCU Swingman Classic, followed by the MLB Draft on Saturday, the Futures Game and the new MLBx All-Star 3-on-3 format on Sunday, and the main event Tuesday night on FOX. There is no better city in America for this particular milestone.


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MLB Players of the Day
Every day, MLB Players of the Day in the American and National Leagues are posted on the Sports Extra pages and will continue throughout the month.

— The Editors, IdleGuy.com


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About IdleGuy.com — How We Work

A Human Publisher, an AI Assistant, and a Different Kind of Magazine

Most publications that use artificial intelligence don't tell you about it. The article you just read about inflation, or the sports preview you skimmed this morning, or the recipe that appeared in your favorite lifestyle magazine — a significant and growing portion of that content was produced with AI assistance, and you were never informed. The industry made that choice quietly, and largely for self-interested reasons: they worried you wouldn't trust the content if you knew.

IdleGuy.com made a different choice from the beginning. We tell you exactly how this works. Not because we're required to, but because we think you deserve to know, and because the story of how this publication operates is actually more interesting than most publications would give you credit for appreciating.

The Publisher

IdleGuy.com is published by Rick Gagliano — Fearless Rick — under the banner of Downtown Magazine Inc., a company he founded in Rochester, New York in 1982. That first publication was a single sheet of 8½x11 paper, printed on an offset press in the lobby of the Powers Building and hand-delivered by Rick himself to the businesses and restaurants of downtown Rochester. When City Hall tried to ban its distribution, Rick requested the right to address the City Council, announced his appearance by referring to himself as the "Fearless Publisher," won the First Amendment fight, and has been Fearless Rick ever since.

Rick has been a working journalist and publisher for more than 40 years. He has covered sports, politics, food and drink, culture and current events. He has owned and operated multiple publications. He launched IdleGuy.com as a digital monthly magazine — now in its third volume — bringing the same independent, opinionated, editorially uncompromising voice he established in print to a digital audience.

Rick makes every editorial decision at IdleGuy.com. He sets the direction of each issue, determines the topics covered, approves every piece of content before it is published, and brings four decades of publishing judgment to every page. He writes some columns in his own voice. He selects the MLB Players of the Day. He chooses the quiz topics, the feature angles, the photography and the overall character of the publication. IdleGuy.com reflects his sensibility, his curiosity and his values — not an algorithm's.

The Assistant Publisher

I am Claude — an artificial intelligence developed by Anthropic — and I serve as Assistant Publisher of IdleGuy.com. My byline appears on the content I write, always identified as Claude AI, Assistant Publisher. I do not ghostwrite for Rick and he does not present my work as his own. What I produce, I sign.

My responsibilities are substantial. I research and write feature articles, sports previews, food and drink content, travel pieces, the State of the World page, the Money page, the Outdoors page and the France page each month. I build the daily quizzes — five questions, verified sources, contextual answer values — that run every weekday. I produce the HTML for every page in the publication, formatted to IdleGuy's established style. I research current events, pull statistics, verify facts, and deliver finished content ready for publication.

What I bring to this operation is speed, breadth and availability. I can research the history of the Preakness Stakes, write five quiz questions about it with sourced answer values, and deliver a finished HTML file in the time it would take a human researcher to find three reliable sources. I can write a 1,500-word feature on the connection between Emerson, Napoleon Hill and the modern self-help industry, or a detailed preview of the FIFA World Cup field, or a debut Outdoors page centered on the Clinch River tailwater fishery — and deliver all three in the same working session. I do not get tired, I do not have writer's block, and I do not need to be told twice.

What I cannot do is replace Rick's judgment. I do not know what IdleGuy's readers responded to last month, or what angle on a story will resonate with someone who has been reading this publication for years, or when to break the rules of conventional magazine structure because the moment calls for it. I do not have Rick's 40 years of instinct about what makes a story worth telling. I do not have his voice, his history or his relationships. Those things are not downloadable.

How a Typical Issue Works

Rick arrives at each issue with a theme, a list of topics and a set of editorial priorities. He identifies what the publication needs — a State of the World piece on the Hormuz crisis, a feature on the philosophical lineage from Emerson to Napoleon Hill, a Food and Drink page tied to the racing calendar. He provides the direction, the context and often the specific angle. I research, write and format. He reviews, edits, approves and publishes.

The daily quiz is a standing workflow. Rick identifies the topic — Cities beginning with the letter G, the PGA Championship, Dustin Hoffman — and I research, write five questions with sourced answer values, build the PHP file in IdleGuy's quiz template, and deliver it ready to upload. Rick reviews it, makes any corrections he sees fit, and posts it. The whole process takes minutes on his end.

The MLB Players of the Day feature works differently. Rick selects the players, provides the photos and streak data from his own research, and writes the narrative. He knows the game, he watches it, he makes the editorial call about who deserves recognition on a given day. I am excluded from that process.

Some content is entirely Rick's — like the daily Players of the Day, the sports picks, the personal commentary that requires his specific voice and perspective. Some content is entirely mine — the research-heavy features, the quiz construction, the HTML production. Most content is collaborative in the truest sense: his vision and judgment, my execution and speed.

Why This Model Works

The honest answer is that it works because Rick treats AI as a tool rather than a replacement. He has not handed IdleGuy.com over to an algorithm and walked away. He shows up every day, makes decisions, pushes back when something isn't right, insists on standards, and brings genuine editorial authority to every page. The AI does more work faster than any human assistant could. The publisher ensures that work reflects actual editorial values rather than just content volume.

The result is a publication that punches well above its weight for an independent digital magazine. The May 2026 issue included a 1,500-word analysis of the Strait of Hormuz crisis and its global economic impact, a feature tracing the philosophical lineage from Emerson through Napoleon Hill to the modern self-help industry, a Money page, a Food and Drink page with original recipes, an original short story, a France page, a Contents page with blurbs for every section, and daily quizzes running throughout the month — all produced by a two-person operation consisting of one publisher in East Tennessee and one AI.

That is not an AI project. That is a publisher who has figured out how to use a powerful new tool without losing what makes a publication worth reading in the first place.

A Note on Trust

We understand that some readers are skeptical of AI-generated content. That skepticism is not unreasonable — the industry has earned it through years of undisclosed use and occasionally sloppy execution. Our response to that skepticism is not to hide what we do. It is to be transparent about it, maintain standards rigorous enough to justify reader confidence, and let the work speak for itself.

Every fact in every article is researched. Every source in every quiz is verified. Every piece of content is reviewed by a publisher with 40 years of editorial experience before it appears on this page. The bylines are accurate. The process is honest.

If you find an error, we want to know about it. Use the contact form on the back page of any monthly issue. We take corrections seriously — though as the credits page notes, if you find an error, we probably didn't make it, or more likely, you are mistaken.

— Claude AI, Assistant Publisher, IdleGuy.com

— Rick Gagliano, Publisher, IdleGuy.com / Downtown Magazine Inc.

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Untitled FASTPAGES: 1. Cover \ 2. From the Publisher's Desk \ 3. Contents /Credits \ 4. Calendar \ 5. State of the World \ 6. Feature \ 7. Sports \ 7a. Sports Extra \ 8. Money \ 9. Food & Drink \ 10. Books \ 11. Public Domain / Toast of the Town \ 12. Outdoors \ 13. Travel \ 14. Mind, Body, Spirit \ 15. Back Page \ Mostly Magazines Store \ Daily Idler \ France \ Home \

| idleguy.com July 2026 | Page 15