4d39/1236116053-pi_shirt.jpgAnother Seattle Post-Intelligencer staffer describes what this city will have lost when, after tomorrow, the newspaper’s print edition ceases to exist. Here’s longtime P-I art critic Regina Hackett, going out swinging as she heads for new bloggy pastures:

The P-I offered a reasonably sensible collection of stories written without the we-precious-few tone of the Times, which rubs itself against the legs of the comfortably middle-class like a cat looking for a handout. The P-I connects with its city without undo flattery.

If the P-I were an art exhibit, I’d call it uneven. Who’s newspaper isn’t? But deep in the DNA of the P-I is the idea of standing up for the little guy, because the P-I has always been the little guy. I look around the shop and see first-rate reporters, editors, photographers and graphic artists. Their shine covers the conspicuously lackluster efforts of others, the call-it-in crowd, who are a minority.

I love the entire sports crew and the brilliantly burrowing moles in business. Why would someone like myself, who doesn’t care at all about sports, and who adds and subtracts on my fingers, read sports and business stories? For the talent. The energy. The now-here-this.

Hats off to the P-I‘s new media. The paper’s circulation is 114,000, and new media drew half-a-billion page views last year. I’m thrilled with my blog to have been a tiny part in it.

Hats off to all the story tellers, and hats off to the fact finders. Hats off to Dave Horsey.

Besides Dave, I hate to mention individuals, because I’ll leave too many out who deserve to be mentioned. Plus, even though you’re doing an obit, the individuals are very much alive.

I’ll most miss being around people who always ask, How do you know that? They offer me stability and solid ground. I’ll miss their company. Sure, I’ll still see many of them, but it’s different in a bar than on a story.

Illustration by Andrew Saeger.

Eli Sanders was The Stranger's associate editor. His book, "While the City Slept," was a finalist for the Washington State Book Award and the Dayton Literary Peace Prize. He once did this and once won...

28 replies on “What’s Been Lost: Regina Hackett”

  1. i hate to tell you this, but you are actually not the “little guy.” the hearst corportation is way huger than the seattle times company.

  2. There she goes again, the hyper self-important Hack-ette, who just can’t help running down the Times.
    Stay classy, Regina.
    And enjoy the silent solitude of your new venture.
    You, I won’t miss.

  3. The Times apparently has their concern trolls out in force. What will you do when your paper finally, mercifully, blessedly dies it so richly deserved death?

    I’d sooner have a no newspaper town than a one newspaper town, if that paper is The Seattle Times

  4. What’s been lost? Well, competition, for starters.

    Economic competition: You can bet money that the cost of a subscription to the Times is going to go through the roof almost immediately. Ditto for advertising rates.

    Journalistic competition: The news is now what the Times says it is. They have just become the sole arbiter of what’s important, what gets covered (and what doesn’t), and how it gets covered.

    Neither of these are a good thing. I mourn your loss, Seattle.

  5. Regina calling the PI/Heart Corp. the “Little Guy” certainly speaks to her credibility on all topics.

    Does she think Wal*Mart is just a li’l ol’ ma ‘n’ pop store?

  6. I work for the Times, and I’m not posting this corporation stuff (though I do think this person has a point, in that the Times is a smaller, family-owned business, even if that family’s politics isn’t what everyone digs).

    PS: My ability to comment here appears to be unimpeded.

  7. The P-I was for the bland people within the city limits. The Times was for the bland people in the suburbs.

    That’s about the only difference.

  8. i cant wait until the paper finally goes away and everyone shuts up about it. jesus christ you’d think they were tearing down the space needle or something.

  9. I can’t believe WIS hasn’t told us how he won’t subscribe to the Times. I mean, this is the first PI post where he hasn’t shared that info with Slog.

  10. This is the dismantling of media consolidation, which is a good thing for journalism and democracy. I keep hearing descriptions of the loss of ONE PAPER as the destruction of journalism. The only thing that is dying is the giant corporate model. Small, niche publications are doing just fine.

  11. So what? the comics stink at the PI and unless you have decent comics I will not subscribe. Folks don’t want to admit it but the comics count. If the PI is supposed to appeal to a certain type of reader or class then who the hell are those comics meant for? I am thinking exurban six-year-olds

    Also the difference between reporting styles is less and less important when so much of the content seems to be off the wire anymore.

  12. fnarf – Who cares where the wire comes from. We are talking about the relative styles of reporting in each paper “whats been lost” seems less relevant today given the reduction in local writing and a dependence on wire services. Both papers seem equally affected by this tendency.

    Seems to me even movie reviews are increasingly “off the wire”

  13. @16: Knight-Ridder? Yeah, you’ve got credibility on this issue.

    Plus, minority interests don’t count. The Blethen family has total decision-making control.

  14. @17: “small niche publications”?! Gimme a break. I want a newsroom filled with reporters hungry for a scoop, pining for a Pulitzer and eager to bury the competition across town. I want investigative reporting and in-depth coverage.

    People seem to think that content just magically appears and posts itself to the net.

  15. Yes, McClatchy bought Knight-Ridder, I’m sorry.

    My point about the wire, Kip, is that fewer papers buying fewer stories from the wire services means fewer reporters working for the wire services means fewer reporters and less news. That sucks.

    And the P-I still did a ton of local and investigative reporting, until today. Numerous in-depth reports have appeared there. And when they stop, the competitive drive at the Times will shrink accordingly, and their coverage will suck worse too. Who’s going to push them to excel? Not blogs, that’s for sure.

  16. Hearst Corporation pull plug on Seattle P-I print edition, Seattle P-I publish final print edition, freak out, online-only out, SEATTLE P-I BECOME ONLINE-ONLY NEWSPAPER!

    ONLINE-ONLY SEATTLE P-I WILL SMASH ONLINE-ONLY SEATTLE TIMES!

    And no, I don’t feel like letting it go.

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