Viva La Cola!

Founded in January 2009, PubliCola is a blog about Seattle written by journalists who are dedicated to non-partisan, original daily reporting that prioritizes a balanced approach to news. Started by longtime local editor and award-winning reporter Josh Feit, PubliCola is the first online-only news site in state history to get media credentials to cover the state capitol.

PubliCola was off and running. In June 2009, PubliCola hired another award-winning journalist, super-sourced Seattle city hall reporter Erica C. Barnett.

People were afraid that blogging would change journalism. Instead, we believe journalism can change blogging. Twenty-first century journalism may look and feel different, and yes Erica isn't afraid to get cranky, but we're committed to making sure online news still delivers independent, reliable, even-keeled coverage. And most of all, we're committed to making sure the coverage sparks honest civic debate.

Bringing you cola for the people, PubliCola is named after Publius Valerius PubliCola, the alias for the authors of the Federalist Papers—the original bloggers.

The first online-only news site in state history to get media credentials to cover the state capitol and Seattle city hall, PubliCola has been called a “must-read” by the Seattle Post Intelligencer and a hot “New Media Mover and Shaker” by Seattle Magazine—which also cited our own Erica C. Barnett as the city's No. 1 news nerd.

West Coast Underworld

calendar

1. A Rainier Beach community group called the Rainier Beach Community Empowerment Coalition is holding a neighborhood meeting tonight. Their subject is “Environmental Justice: Are We Getting Any?”

The group is primarily responsible for putting on Rainier Beach’s annual “Town Hall meeting,” which is coming in January. And recently, the RBCEC provided six teenagers with a 24-hour workshop to help them put on their own community events–resulting in an Environmental Justice Forum and a Hip Hop Dance Competition back in August.

Tonight at 6:30 at Rainier Beach Family Center (8825 Rainier Avenue South).

2. Back in high school, Jurassic 5 was my ish. The sole survivors of the Good Life Cafe hip hop crowd, their party-ready, old-school-tinged raps were perfect for bouncing around the burbs in Mom’s car. The two archive-attentive DJs were my favorite, but Chali 2na, their deep-voiced, seven-foot-tall center of gravity, arguably had the best flow of the entire crew.

Chali is playing at Neumo’s tonight with Gift of Gab, a favorite from my more mature music-listening years. If you can shake the $18 cover, you should go to that. Otherwise, you should scoot over the Easy Street Records in Queen Anne. Chali 2na’s doing a free in-store there at 6 to warm up for the Cap Hill gig.

Jurassic 5

Jurassic 5

Neumo’s at 8 pm, tickets are $18. Or, Easy Street Queen Anne, at 6 pm–admission is, obviously, free.

3. The Sexual Minorities Commission is meeting tonight at City Hall. Like the Women’s Commission, I recommended checking in on earlier this week, they’re tasked with watching out for a group that faces discrimination.

The fifteen-member Sexual Minority Commission advises the Mayor and City Council on city issues related to sexual orientation.

Tonight at City Hall, Room 370, at 6:30 pm.

4. Good Seattle history books are hard to come by. Sons of the Profits, which for some reason is the canon history of the city’s founding days, is a dopey, factually-spotty mess (it repeatedly refers to Native Americans as “Our Red Breathren”) written by Bill Speidel, the guy who started the Seattle underground tour. It’s a shame, too, because Seattle is one-in-a-million in terms of the hippies, anarchists, and rapscallions who, until the advent of Microsoft, took refuge in this gloomy outpost.

It’s going to take some serious writing chops and a much more patient eye than Speidel’s to tell that story, but this may be a start: Lorraine McConaghy, public historian at the Museum of History and Industry, has a new book—Warship Under Sail—about the USS Decatur, an American warship that coasted the Pacific Northwest shore in the very first years of Seattle existence, firing its cannons at Native Americans  and providing settlers with supplies.

The book is supposed to be well written, and even better, it’s supposed to get into that shady, West Coast underworld that characterized much of Seattle’s early history.

warship_fit_600x600

Tonight, McConaghy is giving a lecture at MOHAI about the Decatur, based on the book.

7 pm at the Museum of History and Industry, at 2700 24th Ave. E. Tickets are $7.

Know about any important meetings, rad shows, weirdo lectures, or other noteworthy events? Please e-mail me at chris@publicola.net.


  • Mikos

    Chris– I agree that a really good history of Seattle has not been written but I think people would be better off reading Roger Sale’s “Seattle Past to Present”. And I wouldn’t total eschew Speidel. Like historical writing, it too has become an artifact of history. In other words, nothing can rise above history including the attempts to describe and understand it.

  • Mikos

    Chris– I agree that a really good history of Seattle has not been written but I think people would be better off reading Roger Sale’s “Seattle Past to Present”. And I wouldn’t total eschew Speidel. Like historical writing, it too has become an artifact of history. In other words, nothing can rise above history including the attempts to describe and understand it.

  • Mikos

    Chris– I agree that a really good history of Seattle has not been written but I think people would be better off reading Roger Sale’s “Seattle Past to Present”. And I wouldn’t total eschew Speidel. Like historical writing, it too has become an artifact of history. In other words, nothing can rise above history including the attempts to describe and understand it.

  • RossB

    I read “Seattle Past to Present” and liked it as well. It wasn’t a great book, but I thought it was a good one.

  • RossB

    I read “Seattle Past to Present” and liked it as well. It wasn’t a great book, but I thought it was a good one.

  • RossB

    I read “Seattle Past to Present” and liked it as well. It wasn’t a great book, but I thought it was a good one.

  • RossB

    Oh, and the book I really wish would be written would be “Seattle’s Changing Geography” (or something catchier). I think it would be fascinating to put together a big coffee table book complete with maps (some old and some new) describing all the ways in which Seattle has changed from a physical standpoint. The rivers that used to flow from here to there, the hills that were washed away, etc. I’ve read a lot about the changes, but without big maps (which, by the way, are hard to view on a computer monitor) it is difficult to tie it all together.

  • http://newsdex.net/taylor/ Chuck Taylor

    Um, Sons of the Profits is the canon? Since when? That book’s always been regarded as a literal joke.

    If there’s one book every Seattleite should read, it’s Skid Road by Murray Morgan.

  • http://newsdex.net/taylor/ Chuck Taylor

    Um, Sons of the Profits is the canon? Since when? That book’s always been regarded as a literal joke.

    If there’s one book every Seattleite should read, it’s Skid Road by Murray Morgan.

  • http://seattleposttimes.typepad.com Chuck Taylor

    Um, Sons of the Profits is the canon? Since when? That book’s always been regarded as a literal joke.

    If there’s one book every Seattleite should read, it’s Skid Road by Murray Morgan.

  • http://publicola.net/ Josh Feit

    If there’s one book every Seattleite should read, it’s The Family by Ed Sanders.

  • http://publicola.net/ Josh Feit

    If there’s one book every Seattleite should read, it’s The Family by Ed Sanders.

  • http://publicola.net/ Josh Feit

    If there’s one book every Seattleite should read, it’s The Family by Ed Sanders.

  • Mikos

    Josh — this is a serious discussion. Utopias on Puget Sound by Charles LeWarne. Fascinating.

  • Mikos

    Josh — this is a serious discussion. Utopias on Puget Sound by Charles LeWarne. Fascinating.

  • Mikos

    Josh — this is a serious discussion. Utopias on Puget Sound by Charles LeWarne. Fascinating.

  • sarah68

    3. The Womens’ Commission issues advice on sexual orientation? Being a woman is an orientation?

  • sarah68

    3. The Womens’ Commission issues advice on sexual orientation? Being a woman is an orientation?

  • sarah68

    3. The Womens’ Commission issues advice on sexual orientation? Being a woman is an orientation?

  • http://publicola.net/ Josh Feit

    @7,
    Bad grammar. Not sexism. Will fix. Sorry.

    @6,
    True. Sorry. It was late in the day, and I was feeling goofy.

  • http://publicola.net/ Josh Feit

    @7,
    Bad grammar. Not sexism. Will fix. Sorry.

    @6,
    True. Sorry. It was late in the day, and I was feeling goofy.

  • http://publicola.net/ Josh Feit

    @7,
    Bad grammar. Not sexism. Will fix. Sorry.

    @6,
    True. Sorry. It was late in the day, and I was feeling goofy.

  • http://www.totalhealthevents.com/ Jon Hoskins

    I thought Bill Speidel’s sequel “Doc Maynard” was actually a good read. It included the first time I’ve ever seen an author essentially say the first book was wrong and spend much of the book correcting the earlier problems.

  • http://www.totalhealthevents.com/ Jon Hoskins

    I thought Bill Speidel’s sequel “Doc Maynard” was actually a good read. It included the first time I’ve ever seen an author essentially say the first book was wrong and spend much of the book correcting the earlier problems.

  • http://www.totalhealthevents.com Jon Hoskins

    I thought Bill Speidel’s sequel “Doc Maynard” was actually a good read. It included the first time I’ve ever seen an author essentially say the first book was wrong and spend much of the book correcting the earlier problems.

  • Totally embarrassing

    The first book I read to figure out Seattle when I first moved here was David shields’ Black Planet about the Sonics and race.

    Wow. It blew me away how creepy and unsophisticated Seattle was about race. Not because Shields exposed his fellow citizens, but because Shields himself came across as creepy and unsophisticated.

    I thought: “This guy’s a local college prof? Help.”

  • Totally embarrassing

    The first book I read to figure out Seattle when I first moved here was David shields’ Black Planet about the Sonics and race.

    Wow. It blew me away how creepy and unsophisticated Seattle was about race. Not because Shields exposed his fellow citizens, but because Shields himself came across as creepy and unsophisticated.

    I thought: “This guy’s a local college prof? Help.”

  • Totally embarrassing

    The first book I read to figure out Seattle when I first moved here was David shields’ Black Planet about the Sonics and race.

    Wow. It blew me away how creepy and unsophisticated Seattle was about race. Not because Shields exposed his fellow citizens, but because Shields himself came across as creepy and unsophisticated.

    I thought: “This guy’s a local college prof? Help.”

  • Diet Cola

    @10,

    Agreed! His classes were dumb too.

  • Diet Cola

    @10,

    Agreed! His classes were dumb too.

  • Diet Cola

    @10,

    Agreed! His classes were dumb too.

  • paigew

    Emerald City: An Environmental History of Seattle by Matthew Klingle is seriously great. Narrative of land and power and culture.

  • paigew

    Emerald City: An Environmental History of Seattle by Matthew Klingle is seriously great. Narrative of land and power and culture.

  • paigew

    Emerald City: An Environmental History of Seattle by Matthew Klingle is seriously great. Narrative of land and power and culture.

  • http://publicola.net/ Josh Feit

    @12,

    Thanks for the rec. Sounds great. Available?

  • http://publicola.net/ Josh Feit

    @12,

    Thanks for the rec. Sounds great. Available?

  • http://publicola.net/ Josh Feit

    @12,

    Thanks for the rec. Sounds great. Available?

  • paigew

    @13,
    Elliott Bay (ooh ooh pick me! i need it!) / UW Bookstore / Amazon

  • paigew

    @13,
    Elliott Bay (ooh ooh pick me! i need it!) / UW Bookstore / Amazon

  • paigew

    @13,
    Elliott Bay (ooh ooh pick me! i need it!) / UW Bookstore / Amazon

  • RossB

    Oh, and the book I really wish would be written would be “Seattle's Changing Geography” (or something catchier). I think it would be fascinating to put together a big coffee table book complete with maps (some old and some new) describing all the ways in which Seattle has changed from a physical standpoint. The rivers that used to flow from here to there, the hills that were washed away, etc. I've read a lot about the changes, but without big maps (which, by the way, are hard to view on a computer monitor) it is difficult to tie it all together.