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Jelani Cobb Reflects on the Matter of Black Lives

Nick Licata interviews  Professor Jelani Cobb, a staff writer for the New Yorker, who has authored three groundbreaking books on race in America. The Matter of Black Lives: Writing from The New Yorker, which he co-authored with David Remnick, came out this fall. It collects many of the most thoughtful writers portraying Black life in America over the last century.


Booty Pop

Second in a series of articles educating the public about the media.

Today’s media outlets are under tremendous pressure to get eyeballs.  They are desperate to make money. Slashing the size of newsrooms and publishing canned content is only part of the story. The Media will do anything to get attention.  They will even shake their booty.

Briefly consider...


Feeding the Beast

First in a series of articles educating the public about the media. 

Imagine a world without newspapers. Every day another media outlet cuts their print counterpart to go strictly digital. And every media outlet reports a steady decline in revenue. Yet it’s hard to imagine a world without newspapers. There would be fewer materials to stuff broken windows and insulate walls....


Waiting for the Big One

Author’s note: In July 2015, I was in a media conference in New York City and when one of the participants learned I was from Seattle, he looked at me and said, You’re toast!  I didn’t know what he has talking about until he referred to the article in The New Yorker magazine, The Really Big One by Kathryn Schulz that convincingly asserts an earthquake will destroy a vast portion of the coastal Northwest. 

A good way to sell magazines is by inciting high voltage fear that scares readers to death. Even though I’m a seasoned P.R. professional, who understands how well scary spin increases magazine sales, I too can succumb to electrifying fear when the probability of disaster strikes close to home.

Full Disclosure: I do live in Seattle with my husband and we also own a home on the Oregon coast in Manzanita that is located in the heart of the subduction zone. The signs we see on the Pacific Coast Highway 101 clearly note when we are entering the Tsunami zone.  Since 2003 we’ve lived here and while there is plenty of grave geologic certainty that this part of the world is marked for a natural disaster, the exact timing of death and destruction also invites a spiritual exploration where all roads inevitably point to “Waiting for the Big One.”