SEATTLE NEWSPAPERS
The two most important and most widely known daily newspapers in Seattle are The Seattle Times and the Seattle Post Intelligencer.
The Post Intelligencer is the oldest paper, founded by J.R. Watson on December 10, 1863 as the Seattle Gazette. In 1867 it was taken over by Sam Maxwell and renamed the Weekly Intelligencer. In 1881, the Seattle Post and the Weekly Intelligencer merged, the name of the new paper was a combination of the two old ones and became the Post Intelligencer.
The Post Intelligencer is perceived to be more liberal than The Seattle Times, although also the Times can be called quite liberal. The Post Intelligencer is famous for its political coverage, and it has won several Pulitzer Prizes. Especially its columnists and editorial cartoonist have proven themselves to be outstanding. Editorial cartoonist David Horsey has won two Pulitzer Prizes. He won the first one in 1999, a good year for American cartoonists thanks to Bill Clinton’s adventures with his secretary. In 2003, Horsey won another Pulitzer Prize, mainly based on his commentaries on the Bush administration. Horsey has a bachelors’ degree in communications and a master’s in international relations from the University of Kent in England. He was born in 1951.
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Cartoon in Post Intelligencer |