Author: Art Thiel

Never having met a metaphor he could not twist beyond recognition, Art has been illuminating, agitating, amusing and annoying Puget Sound sports readers for a long time. Along with Steve Rudman, he co-founded Sports Press Northwest because it didn’t seem right that the Google monster should aggregate daily journalism into oblivion without at least a flesh wound from somebody. Thiel and Rudman labored under the Seattle Post-Intelligencer globe until the print edition died an undeserved death in March, 2009. Art continued on at its online successor seattlepi.com while working on SPNW’s creation. His radio commentaries can be heard Friday and Saturday mornings and Friday afternoon on KPLU-FM 88.9. In 2003 he wrote the definitive book about the Seattle Mariners, “Out of Left Field,” which became a regional bestseller. In 2009, along with Rudman and KJR 950 afternoon host Mike Gastineau, Thiel authored “The Great Book of Seattle Sports Lists,” a cross between historylink.org and Mad Magazine that has become mandatory reading for any sports fan who has an indoor bathroom. A graduate of Pacific Lutheran University as well as two dead papers and a live one, the News Tribune of Tacoma, he has become a fan of entrepreneurial online journalism because it allows him to continue a lifelong passion to take the English language to places it rarely visits willingly, and does not involve the cleaning of kennels or stables.

Much time in Seattle is spent these days discussing the many millions needed to fund another sports palace. Inevitably, laments pile up over the absence of similar funding   lesser enterprises and younger kids. One man who is attacking the problem, from the ground up instead of the mayor down, is Donte Robinson, who has an

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After a presentation by staffers of the King County Council’s finance committee staff Thursday morning, Julia Patterson was the  first of the council to recognize publicly that Chris Hansen’s proposed $490 million plan was . . . well, let her tell it. “As a member of the state Legislature, I voted no on two different

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As the longtime chairman of the Seattle City Council’s land use committee, Richard Conlin knows a few things about dirt and what goes on top of it. At the moment, however he finds himself under a fair amount of real estate after basketball fans heard about  a letter he sent constituents that said of the

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