Those of you who are Sunday-only readers are getting your first look at our new redesign.
On Tuesday, we plan to launch our latest redesign of The News Tribune. Brace yourselves. We’re about to do something radical.
On Monday, Joint Base Lewis-McChord lost another soldier overseas. At 19, Pfc. Brandon Buttry was among the youngest of the 306 Lewis-McChord soldiers killed since the wars began in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Presidential candidates Barack Obama and Mitt Romney have received about equal amounts of coverage overall this year by the mainstream media and neither has received much of an advantage over the other, according to a study released Friday.
An anonymous caller left a message on the publisher’s phone line Wednesday. She was offering a compliment – “you know, the opposite of a complaint” – about Larry LaRue’s front page column, “When mental health is a laughing matter.”
Todd Milles’ Friday started at 8:30 a.m. It will end at
well, it won’t be Friday anymore when Milles walks out the door.
The negative ads. The robo-calls. The cable TV pundits yelling from the screen. It seems everyone has an opinion about the upcoming election.
Tough economic times have forced people in all lines of business to find new ways to get their jobs done with fewer resources. Our business is no different.
The latest version of The News Tribune – not quite a newspaper, not quite a website – is quickly gaining popularity.
I remember my reaction after touring the Northwest Detention Center in Tacoma a couple of years ago.
Who knew the posting of one 35-second video could be so complicated?
We received several calls last week from readers upset about our front-page story Tuesday on the wedding of Pablo Monroy and Derrick Peacock, two gay men.
I recently gave a talk for a local nonprofit on the theme: “10 Things You May Not Know about The News Tribune.” It generated a pretty good conversation, so I’m sharing those 10 Things here.
The News Tribune is made up of more than just ink and paper; it’s made up of people.
Sometimes the lengths to which a reporter goes to get a quote make the quote worth nothing at all.
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