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Sporting Classics with Chris Dorsey Returns to Outdoor Channel for 8th Season

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The return of Sporting Classics with Chris Dorsey for an eighth season on Outdoor Channel isn’t just another hunting show renewal—it’s a signal that traditional sporting media still commands serious attention in an era of fragmented digital content. With 2.4 million views logged in 2025 and a Thursday-night slot locked through 2026, the series backed by Winchester Ammunition and Safari Club International is proving that long-form storytelling about ethical hunting, conservation, and the heritage of the sporting lifestyle continues to resonate with viewers who value both the rifle and the responsibility that comes with it. In a media landscape where anti-hunting narratives often dominate mainstream outlets, Dorsey’s platform quietly reinforces the idea that lawful firearm ownership and sustainable use of wildlife resources are inseparable parts of American culture.

For the 2A community, the show’s sustained success carries a subtler but important implication: every time a program like this draws an audience, it normalizes the presence of firearms in everyday life rather than treating them as exotic or suspect. Sponsors such as Winchester understand that consistent, positive visibility helps counter the steady drip of legislation aimed at restricting ammunition and firearms under the guise of “public safety.” By showcasing hunts that emphasize fair chase, habitat stewardship, and the transfer of outdoor skills across generations, Sporting Classics keeps the conversation focused on responsible ownership instead of letting opponents frame all gun culture as reckless or unnecessary. That framing matters when statehouses debate magazine limits, suppressor rules, or the next round of “assault weapon” restrictions.

Perhaps most telling is the partnership model itself—Dorsey Pictures, Sporting Classics Magazine, and major industry players pooling resources to keep the content flowing. It demonstrates that Second Amendment advocacy isn’t limited to courtrooms or Capitol Hill; it also lives in the stories we choose to celebrate on screen. As long as audiences keep tuning in, the broader message remains clear: hunting and shooting sports are not relics of a bygone era but living traditions that reinforce the constitutional right to keep and bear arms for sport, sustenance, and self-defense.

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