When the closed-door showdown between Seattle's dailies begins, P-I owner Hearst has a legal bombshell: a sworn deposition by a former Times circulation vice president who says the paper violated the joint operating agreement with the P-I and used a "ruse" to trick its way into the morning market.
The Met's experiment in highly produced telecasts to local film screens proves surprisingly successful, especially at the bargain prices. Our reviewer reports on the first five shows, as seen in suburban Seattle and London.
A discussion about the Seattle School District's obsession with racism suggests that even talking about the problem won't help, because the conversation is rigged.
It's pretty awkward for Seattle's dailies to write about themselves, but there are plenty of conflicts of interest to go around. We've got a few ourselves.