Mike Lewis out from behind the bar, onward to Patch

When I last checked in with former Seattle P-I columnist Mike Lewis, he was spending most of his time pouring drinks and growing business at the Streamline Tavern, the Lower Queen Anne bar he purchased with three partners last year.

Lewis, who lost his job at the P-I when the paper ceased publication as a print news product, admitted to missing journalism. Though he still wrote freelance articles, he longed for the chaos of a newsroom and the excitement of regularly chasing down scoops.

He didn’t have to miss the news biz for long. Lewis recently signed on as Seattle regional editor for Patch, AOL’s new neighborhood news network. He’ll oversee 12 local Patch sites south of Seattle. AOL still needs to hire a second regional editor to run 12 blogs north of the city.

Today, Patch launched the first of its Seattle sites, University Place Patch. The next sites slated for launch in the Seattle area are Bellevue, Mercer Island, Bonney Lake-Sumner, and Lakewood. They will likely go live at the end of October.

Lewis didn’t seek out the Patch position on his own. He only heard about AOL’s ambitious nationwide neighborhood news efforts in July, a full year after AOL acquired the start-up Patch Media and began growing the network. One of Lewis’ former Seattle University journalism students had been speaking to a Patch recruiter about becoming a local editor, and she recommended Lewis for the regional editor position.

When Patch’s hiring team called up Lewis, he wasn’t sure if he wanted the job. But he met Patch’s west coast editorial director, Marcia Parker, at the Seattle Marriott, and after a few hours together he became convinced that AOL was serious about the venture.

Lewis learned AOL planned to spend $50 million to build Patch this year alone, and another $50 million next year. He sensed the company’s enthusiasm for the project and dedication to hiring good people.

“I like the way they are running things,” Lewis said. “AOL is taking a big gamble on this and putting a lot of money into it.”

Lewis hopes his role as regional editor will allow him to do some writing down the road. Right now, he’s working on hiring local editors for the 24 community sites around the region. Patch will also bring on board a roving editor, copy editor, sports editor, and calendar editor for each of the 12-site clusters in the Seattle area.

Patch offered Lewis his choice of north or south Seattle, and he selected south, mainly because he spent more time there reporting when he was at the Seattle P-I. Should the company hire a second regional editor with strong preference for the south end, however, Lewis is also willing to work with the north communities.

AOL has no plans at the moment to start sites for any of the urban Seattle neighborhoods, and Lewis said the city is already saturated with local blogs. Patch can compete in the suburbs, Lewis said. He could see the company eventually starting another 12-site cluster in another populated region of the state, however.

Nationwide, Patch currently has 220 sites in 17 states, with 16 more sites slated to go live this week. By next year, AOL plans to have 1,000 editors, making it one of the largest employers of journalists in the country.

Working for Patch reminds Lewis of being at a fast-moving, well-funded start-up. He’s juggling the time consuming new gig with finishing up several freelance projects and working one night a week at the Streamline.

“I’m running as hard as I can to get everything out,” Lewis said. “But that’s the nature of modern journalism.”

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Tom Skerritt on TheFilmSchool’s growth and new home

With lips sunburned from a recent fly fishing trip in Jackson Hole and a baseball cap on his head, Tom Skerritt looked every bit the unassuming Seattleite sipping tea from his Starbucks mug last week.

And as he began talking and his enthusiasm grew, it was not to promote his own movie star projects, but to share the latest progress made by TheFilmSchool.

“TheFilmSchool has had a really great year,” Skerritt said.

I met Skerritt at the Madison Park Starbucks to catch up on

TheFilmSchool, the screenwriting program Skerritt helped found six years ago. I’ve kept in touch with Skerritt since attending TheFilmSchool several years ago to learn about script writing, and I’m always eager to hear about the school’s progress.

By Skerrit’s account, TheFilmSchool has never been stronger. Applicant numbers have been rising each year, and the school now has 350 graduates. TheFilmSchool will for the first time offer three separate three-week intensive sessions this year, up from two in years past. In addition, this summer marked the inaugural Prodigy Camp, a week-long summer program on Whidbey Island for teens.

Each of the adult sessions attracted 20 to 30 students, and Prodigy Camp hosted 15 kids. TheFilmSchool drew applicants from around the world, including Australia, Estonia, and the United Kingdom. Students receive instruction from Skerritt and fellow school founders Warren Etheredge, John Jacobsen, Rick Stevenson, and Stewart Stern.

TheFilmSchool is also gearing up for next year’s move into its own space. The school teamed up with the Seattle International Film Festival to lobby for city matching funds to renovate the Seattle Center’s Alki Room.

Construction will begin in October and wrap up next July. SIFF and TheFilmSchool will share office and classroom space and a film screening theater. Right now, SIFF has offices in South Lake Union and TheFilmSchool uses rooms in the Seattle Center’s Northwest Rooms and Center House.

Skerritt believes TheFilmSchool’s new shared space and partnership with SIFF will strengthen the local film community. SIFF’s mission to showcase quality films fits right with TheFilmSchool’s aims, Skerritt said.

“We can work together to legitimize the Seattle film community,” Skerritt said.

Skerritt and the school’s other founders started TheFilmSchool because they wanted to teach students how to become better story tellers, and produce the kind of scripts worth turning into films. At the time, Hollywood was bypassing Seattle as a filming venue for cheaper locations in Canada. If Seattle couldn’t attract movie projects, Skerritt and the rest of the team figured, the city needed to create its own.

Skerritt continues to make TheFilmSchool his priority, even though his life is hectic. He also juggles continued onscreen roles and his own screenwriting projects. Right now, Skerritt is trying to find funding to turn one of his screenplays into a feature film. The story surrounds a wounded World War II veteran passing on life knowledge to a young man.

In addition, Skerritt spends much of his time being a father to three-year-old Emiko. Skerritt, who also has grown children from his first marriage, adopted Emiko with his wife, Julie. Their quiet family life suits Skerritt well.

“I never thought I’d do fatherhood again, but here I am, and I absolutely love it,” Skerritt said.

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What I Read: Tom Skerritt

When I arranged an afternoon coffee session with actor, screenwriter, and TheFilmSchool teacher and founder Tom Skerritt, my main objective was finding out about progress and growth at the school. I realized, though, that I could also tap Skerritt for our weekly “What I Read” column. I wondered if Skerritt, who is part of the older generation yet remains in contact with young Hollywood, had embraced social media or any of the newer sources of information.

The answer is decidedly no. Skerritt doesn’t pay much attention to Facebook and Twitter, doesn’t spend much time online, and still prefers news delivery in old fashioned mediums. For this actor, the New York Times and Wall Street Journal are still the place to go.

What are your favorite local news outlets? Why?
PBS, Jim Lehrer, straight forward news. No local news outlet preference….

What do you consider “must reads” every day? Must watch? Must hear?
Try to read both NY Times and Wall Street Journal for balance and fuller reference on points of view….. Listening confined mostly to NPR, 88.5

Do you consume news through: print, television, radio, laptop, smart phone, ipad, podcasts, other?
Very little cyberspace interaction regarding news….

Do you use Facebook, LinkedIn, and/or Twitter for news and information?
I do not use any of these mediums, nor anything that requires my info.

What online news sites or aggregators do you visit regularly?
None.

Do you regularly visit any individual blogs for news, analysis and opinion?
No

Have your news consumption habits changed in the last few years? If so, how?
News consumption habits are unchanged, but the style of news broadcasting has.  Too much bullshit focus.

Do you read for fun? If so, what? Last novel you read? Non-fiction book?
I write too much to have draw to read.  Last book I read is Michael Lewis’ THE BIG SHORT.  With few exceptions, love non-fiction.

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Real Change flooded with high caliber applicants for editor job

The last time Real Change hired an editor, their best candidate was an ambitious young journalist fresh out of college.

What a difference a decade makes. This time around, Real Change executive director Tim Harris has been flooded with applications from writers and editors with over 10 years of experience at daily newspapers. Thanks to one of the toughest job markets for Seattle journalists ever – not to mention Real Change’s own growth – Harris has no shortage of candidates to lead editorial operations at the paper. It seems many local journalists are eager to join an activist publication sold on the street by Seattle’s homeless population.

“This environment is bad for journalists but good for us,” Harris said. “The applicants we are attracting represent an opportunity for us to take the newspaper to the next level of professionalism.”

Harris is in the midst of the final round of interviews and plans to make a hiring decision soon. The new Real Change editor will replace Adam Hyla, who is leaving the paper after a decade to take a job as communications director at the Children’s Alliance.

The editor will join Real Change as the newspaper continues to grow, both in circulation and physical space. The newspaper moved from Belltown to larger digs in Pioneer Square in May.

Real Change needed to move because the office in Belltown could no longer accommodate 15 staff members and the increasing number of vendors, who now number about 350 each month. The vendors pay 35 cents a copy for the newspaper and then earn money by selling it for $1 apiece. Harris wanted quarters that would separate vendor services from newspaper production, and give everyone a bit of breathing room. A computer lab will allow for classes and training for vendors.

“The move was long overdue,” Harris said. “We no longer have the tension that comes from too many people in a packed space.”

The move proved more complicated than Harris had anticipated, as Pioneer Square community activists protested Real Change’s arrival. They asked the city to deny Real Change needed permits because they felt the neighborhood already played host to too many human service organizations. Harris pointed out that Real Change does not provide human services and never received complaints in Belltown.

In the end, law firm Davis Wright Tremaine took on Real Change’s case on a pro bono basis and convinced the Pioneer Square Community Association to drop the appeal. The matter finally reached resolution this month.

“The fight is very much done,” Harris said. “We’re moving on.”

Harris believes the new location and editor will help Real Change position itself as it continues to grow. The paper’s annual budget is now at $850,000, which comes largely from donations. Circulation has been rising by an average of 18 percent each year for the last four years, and is now at 18,000 a week.

Harris hopes to continue to grow Real Change’s reach by increasing online efforts. All of the top editor candidates bring web experience. Harris would like to see the paper add more audio, interviews, vendor blogging, and multimedia links to the web site.

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Hanging with the journalists of tomorrow

On Thursday, fellow Seattle reporter Kirsten Grind and I led a session on blogging at the University of Washington Journalism Day.

The annual daylong seminar, sponsored by the Washington Journalism Education Association, draws high school journalism students from around the state. The 800 participating teens could opt to attend sessions on everything from opinion writing to media ethics to news reporting.

In our classroom, Kirsten and I wanted to share with students how to write a blog, how to draw readers to a blog, and how to get paid to blog. Both of us blog professionally – I for the Washington News Council and running publications, and Kirsten for the Puget Sound Business Journal.

Before the class arrived, we commented to each other how such a session would not have existed when we were in high school. Even though we are both still relatively young in the professional world (age 31), the word blog hadn’t even been invented when we graduated from high school in 1997. I remember a class at my alma mater, Shorewood High School, called “What Is the Internet?”

Not so with the high school students we faced. Kirsten and I opened the session by asking where they found their news. The first response was Twitter and the second Facebook. NPR online, National Geographic online, and The New York Times online came later. Few students said they picked up a print newspaper. I immediately thought that if I asked a room of individuals my father’s age the same question, Twitter and Facebook would not likely appear at the top of the responses, if at all.

Kirsten and I also found many of the students were already immersed in the world of blogs, but more for personal reasons than news consumption. Most reported reading blogs written by their friends and acquaintances, or as one student put it, “blog stalking.” When they venture into blogs created by strangers, the sites most likely revolve around food, fashion, or music. The students saw blog reading as something fun to satisfy their own interests and curiosities.

While few students now read or produce news blogs, discussion indicated this may be soon coming. Just one group of students, from Roosevelt High School, currently produces a blog for their school newspaper. They said they regularly post short news updates, quirky features, multimedia clips, and other content that wouldn’t fit well in the print edition.

While the Roosevelt group were the only ones already news blogging, a number of other students said their high school newspaper staffs were beginning to discuss starting a blog. They expressed interest in learning about how to write an effective blog and how to maximize page views.

For Kirsten and me, the session provided an interesting window into the mentality of today’s high school students. I have no doubt that blogging will become a bigger part of high school journalism in short time, as these students are already so tech savvy and equipped to do so. Once they graduate, those same skills will no doubt be invaluable in the rapidly changing media world.

As if to further drive home the above observations, I noticed while preparing to post this blog on Friday morning that one of the students from yesterday had sent Kirsten and me a note. Via Twitter.

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What I Read: James Keblas

This week, we chatted with James Keblas, director of the City of Seattle Film and Music Office, about what he’s reading these days. We found Keblas is, appropriately, a bit of a news junkie and willing and eager to embrace new technology.

This is the second installment of a regular series we plan to run. We’re surveying prominent people around Seattle — authors, journalists, politicians, actors, chefs, and business leaders — to find out how their reading and media consumption habits have evolved in recent years.

Keblas’ answers seem to jibe with a new Pew Research Center survey showing that people are consuming more news now than ever, and finding that news from a more diverse array of sources. Here’s a link to a Washington Post article on the survey.

Below are Keblas’ responses to questions about what he reads:

1. What are your favorite local news outlets? Why?

My favorite places to read daily local news are all on the web.  I can’t remember the last time I picked up an actual paper.  When I get up in the morning I make an espresso and read through about 10 different blogs sites, including Publicola, neighborhood blogs, The Stranger, Puget Sound Business Journal, etc.

2. What do you consider “must reads” every day? Must watch? Must hear?

If you care about local politics, then Publicola is a must read.  Very little gets by that team.  Working in a public office, it is great reading Publicola because it’s like a City Hall/ Olympia newsletter.  I don’t always agree with them but I like their coverage.

3. Do you consume news through: print, television, radio, laptop, smart phone, ipad, podcasts, other?

NPR is a must for me first thing in the morning.  It’s like getting my daily news read to me by Burl Ives.  Great long, in-depth stories presented without shouting and no commercials (yes, I am a member).  My wife loves MSNBC so we watch that sometimes in the evening.  I have an iPhone so it’s really easy for me to get all my news and information all day long where ever I am.

4. Do you use Facebook, LinkedIn, and/or Twitter for news and information?

I use social networking personally and professionally to disseminate information, but to be honest I don’t read it much.

5. What online news sites or aggregators do you visit regularly?

For the most part I use Google Reader and let everything come to me.

6. Do you regularly visit any individual blogs for news, analysis and opinion?

Huffington Post is a good aggregator so I occasionally check it out.  I am a major technophile so also read sites like Engadget, Wired, Fast Company and Gizmodo to fill that fix.

7. Have your news consumption habits changed in the last few years? If so, how?

I used to religiously read the Seattle Times and the Seattle PI daily because those were the best sources.  I still read them and think they play an important role, but I go to many other sites beforehand now.

8. Do you read for fun? If so, what? Last novel you read? Non-fiction book?

I have to read for fun otherwise I risk becoming one of those people who take relatively unimportant things too seriously.   I don’t trust people who only read serious news and non-fiction.  They don’t have perspective or imagination.  To keep my sense of humor in shape I read The Onion, The Stranger and Stewart/Colbert.  To keep my imagination in shape, I subscribe to Yanko Design and read Kerri Harrop’s blog, generalbonkers.com.  I also try to keep a fiction book going at all times.  Right now I am reading all of Jonathan Troppers books.  He is insightful, funny and an eloquent writer.  I just finished the book, This is Where I Leave You.  Highly recommended.

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KING-FM hard at work to build nonprofit

On the air at KING-FM 98.1, classical music continues to play 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Just like always.

Behind the scenes, though, station staff members are hard at work to transform KING from a commercial venture to a listener-supported station.

Beginning next July, KING-FM will no longer operate on advertising dollars. At that time, the station’s seven-year commercial partnership with Fisher Communications ends. KING decided against renewing the relationship.

In September, KING plans to kick off its first major capital campaign. The station will approach major donors with the goal of raising an initial $2 million. KING is also already in the process of becoming a 501c3 and obtaining a nonprofit radio license from the FCC.

Next year, the station will start appealing to listeners for donations. KING-FM is still developing a target fundraising goal for audience pledges.

According to KING general manager Jennifer Ridewood, the station first started contemplating breaking ties with advertisers last year. Ridewood took a road trip to visit listener-supported classical stations in Los Angeles, Chicago, New York City, Washington D.C., and North Carolina.

She found that the stations were thriving on donations, even during the recession. While grant funding dipped when the economy took a nosedive, listener support did not.

Classical music stations work with the nonprofit model, Ridewood said, because the typical listener – an affluent individual age 55 or older – is the sort most likely to make a donation. Advertisers, on the other hand, prefer a far younger audience, meaning they’re less likely to want to support a classical station than the listeners themselves.

“We have a great demographic because they are committed to their community and classical music,” Ridewood said.

Ridewood also talked to Seattle NPR stations KUOW and KPLU, both of whom expressed support for the idea. The station managers told Ridewood that Seattleites are eager and willing to support radio they care about.

In April, the KING-FM board voted to become a nonprofit. Since then, in addition to building the future financial structure, the station has launched ventures that Ridewood feels befit the listener-supported model.

At the end of July, KING-FM started the Arts Channel. The station records interviews and conversations with musicians and arts groups and streams them online. KING-FM also began a larger push to record live music. The station plays some of the shows on the air, and puts others on the web site. Both Arts Channel and the live music initiative came about because of listener feedback and requests, Ridewood said.

This is the first time in KING-FM’s lengthy history that the station will attempt to be supported by listeners. The commercial venture dates back to 1947, when Dorothy Bullitt started the KING radio and television broadcasting empire.

Dorothy Bullitt

In 1995, Bullitt’s two daughters donated KING-FM to the nonprofit Beethoven. At that time, KING-FM teamed up with commercial communications company Entercom, allowing the radio giant to sell ads for them.

When that agreement ran out seven years ago, KING paired up with Fisher. Now, KING-FM is venturing out on its own, and creating the next chapter for classical radio in Seattle.

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What I Read: Bill Dietrich

Bill DietrichWith new media options cropping up every week and existing media changing so rapidly, we at the Washington News Council have been watching our own news reading habits evolve. It made us wonder, are others in Seattle experiencing the same?

We decided to launch a regular blog series called “What I Read.” We’re picking journalists, politicians, foodies, celebrities, business leaders, and others in the Puget Sound region and asking them about their current news consumption habits.

We’ll feature new individuals on a fairly regular basis. To kick this series off, Washington News Council president John Hamer suggested I reach out to my own father, Bill Dietrich. He’s currently writing historical fiction (see www.williamdietrich.com) and teaching environmental journalism at Western Washington University. Before his life as a novelist, my dad worked as a Seattle Times reporter for over two decades, and was part of the Pulitzer Prize winning team that covered the Exxon Valdez oil spill.

Here are my dad’s answers to our questions on his changing news habits. Look for more personalities to be featured in weeks to come.

1. What are your favorite local news outlets? Why?

I live in Anacortes, so “local” for me is the Anacortes American (a weekly), the Skagit Valley Herald, and The Seattle Times.

2. What do you consider “must reads” every day? Must watch? Must hear?

Must read the above, although I’m frustrated that The Seattle Times has become intensely “Seattle-centric” and less regional. I often read NY Times and USA Today on my ipad, and Wall Street Journal is used as my home page on my computer. TV is usually KING, cable news stations (for a big story) or PBS (for background.) Radio is usually NPR (both KUOW and KPLU) and satellite radio stations including NPR, CNN, CNBC, and Bloomberg.

3. Do you consume news through: print, television, radio, laptop, smart phone, ipad, podcasts, other?

All of those listed except podcasts. Occasionally YouTube.

4. Do you use Facebook, LinkedIn, and/or Twitter for news and information?

No.

5. What online news sites or aggregators do you visit regularly?

NY Times, Wall Street Journal, USA Today. Sometimes Huffington Post, Sightline, Crosscut.

6. Do you regularly visit any individual blogs for news, analysis and opinion?

No.

7. Have your news consumption habits changed in the last few years? If so, how?

I consume more news from a wider array of outlets for less money (except for the gadgets) because of improved wireless and broadband and because they’re free. The ipad has changed my news browsing habits. I can read more while waiting.

8. Do you read for fun? If so, what? Last novel you read? Non-fiction book?

I’d better, since I want people to buy my novels for fun. Just finished Ken Follett’s “World Without End” and am reading Steig Larsen’s “The Girl Who Played With Fire.” Just finished Nicholas Wade’s “Before the Dawn” (on human evolution) and am reading “Empire of the Summer Moon.” (Comanche Indians)

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PubliCola succeeding in its niche

Josh Feit, Photo courtesy of PubliCola

When Scripps Newspapers asked me to profile a new media venture in Seattle for a series they’re running in papers across the country, I immediately thought of PubliCola.

Unlike some of the newer start-ups, the online political site has been around for a year and a half. In addition to that track record, PubliCola is attempting to make it as a for-profit company. Many of the journalism experiments emerging in Seattle are opting for grants and donations. I wanted to see how PubliCola, in this new age of media, was attempting to make it on old-fashioned advertising sales.

I discovered that PubliCola is hanging in there because founder and editor Josh Feit created a lean staff with a very focused mission. The site appeals to political junkies hungry for City Hall, Olympia, and Washington D.C. coverage. When PubliCola experimented with additional, broader content earlier this year, they spent more and didn’t attract more advertisers. And because of this, they retreated back to their original niche.

Scripps Newspapers targeted Seattle for one of the stories in its media coverage because this city is full of journalists who are experimenting. We can’t say for certain yet which ventures will take root, but PubliCola is an interesting study of a work in progress. They aren’t profitable just yet, but Feit believes he’s steering the operation in that direction.

The article on PubliCola appeared in the Kitsap Sun this week and will run in other Scripps papers and online. Here is a link to the piece.

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Kirsten Grind at work on WaMu book

A month ago, Kirsten Grind pounded out daily banking industry updates in the hectic downtown Seattle Puget Sound Business Journal newsroom.

These days, she’s more likely to be found driving around the state to the homes of aging former Washington Mutual executives. Grind spent an entire recent weekday in Skagit County with onetime WaMu CEO Lou Pepper. The two talked for hours.

“It’s therapy for them,” Grind said. “There’s a lot of anger and sadness about what happened.”

Grind’s life took a dramatic turn this summer when she began a nine-month leave from the PSBJ to write a book about the demise of WaMu. She landed the book contract after covering WaMu’s story extensively for the Business Journal, and receiving a prestigious Pulitzer nomination for her efforts.

(Full disclosure: I worked with Grind at the PSBJ and remain good friends with her. I’ve been hearing about her journey into the book writing world for the past several months, and found the project so interesting that I thought others would enjoy reading about it as well.)

Grind stumbled into the book world by chance. While she loves journalism, she’d never dreamed of penning her own book. But early this year, Seattle literary agent Elizabeth Wales heard Grind talking about WaMu on local public radio station KUOW. This could be a book, Wales thought.

Grind’s story with WaMu began when she took a job as the banking and finance reporter for the PSBJ in spring of 2008. A relative newcomer to Seattle, Grind knew very little about WaMu.

Six months later, on Sept. 25, 2008, federal regulators seized the bank. Grind was at a best friend’s wedding in California. She came back to Seattle, figuring the story was over. Not even close.

At the urging and support of PSBJ managing editor Al Scott, Grind spent the next year doing extensive investigative reporting on why WaMu failed. At times, she wanted to give up. She requested thousands of documents through public information requests, and received many back with pages blacked out. Since many sources refused to talk to her on the phone, Grind tracked down the addresses of former executives and bank regulators and drove to their homes.

“It was pulling teeth the entire way,” Grind said.

Grind’s efforts paid off. On a Friday in April, she signed on with Wales. That Monday, she found out she was a Pulitzer Prize finalist. Two months later, several publishing houses entered a bidding war for her book, with Simon and Schuster winning out.

“I had a really lucky few months,” Grind said. “I worked really hard to get to the bottom of WaMu, and it set me up as someone who really knows the story.”

Grind believes publishers were eager for the book because readers want to understand the financial crisis. The WaMu story in particular sparks interest, Grind said, because unlike a massive New York City investment firm, the average person had a WaMu account or worked for the bank.

“People can relate to WaMu,” Grind said.

On a recent Green Lake walk, Grind and I talked about why someone like myself – an avid reader, but not a banking or finance guru – would buy her book. We agreed that the various tragic personalities behind WaMu, from former CEO Kerry Killinger to the shareholder who lost everything, would sell the story.

“I don’t want to write a book only for people interested in banking,” Grind said. “I think a lot of people could find this fascinating because WaMu has such a great cast of characters.”

Grind began her nine-month leave from the PSBJ on Aug. 2. She’s adjusting to life away from a bustling newsroom, and learning how to plan her own daily schedule.

“It’s hard to not have coworkers running around and an editor breathing down your neck,” Grind said. “I miss the newsroom activity, but I also love having this big project I’m working on.”

Since Grind’s book covers the last 30 years of WaMu, she’s beginning with the 1980s. For the past few weeks, she’s been spending days with the former executives, driving to everywhere from Carnation to Anacortes.

When Grind begins researching the bank’s more recent past, she’ll make trips to California and the East Coast to talk to the bank’s former mortgage executives and federal regulators. WaMu’s onetime home loan center is just a half hour from her parents’ home in the San Diego area, so she’s planning on research time in California.

As for her own next chapter after WaMu, it’s too early for Grind to know.

“I never thought I’d write a book,” Grind said. “This has really been a surprise.”

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