'I think the world today is just such a mess. 'I really hope that we come to a place of acceptance, even within our own community,' he says.
Kuhns is crafting his own legacy now and hopes the magazine welcomes a fresh take on today's social justice movements. There was no way I was going to let go because if I did, I don't think this publication would have ever made it back to a place of substance.' 'I could not catch up with the academics, but when I got into the real world, the one thing I knew I had was that I'm strong and I'm driven. 'I'm a creative and a visual person, most importantly, and that was the main reason why I dropped out of college,' he explains. The shy and soft-spoken Kuhns originally had dreams of being a leader in the fashion industry after landing an internship at GQ before ultimately dropping out of college to pursue his own entrepreneurial ventures. The great-grandson of Eugene Meyer, former owner of The Washington Post whose family owned it until they sold it to Jeff Bezos in 2013, Kuhns is no stranger to the publishing world, though he credits his passion for media and journalism to a lucky coincidence.