Editor's Note

All Eyes on Seattle

All Eyes on Seattle

Note from the Editor

The new Bill & Melinda Gates Center for Computer Science & Engineering at the University of Washington.

Mental Health Issues Take a Bite Out of Productivity and Life

Mental Health Issues Take a Bite Out of Productivity and Life

Companies are now focusing on mental health in the workplace

This article appears in print in the March 2020 issue. Click here for a free subscription. Type hostile workplace into a search engine, and one of the top hits is an article this magazine published way back in 2011 about, well, workplace hostility. Every month, its still one of the publications most-read stories. According to…

Chef Finds a Niche Sating the Palates of Big Hitters in the Sports World

Chef Finds a Niche Sating the Palates of Big Hitters in the Sports World

Chef Bonnie Rae makes sure the Mariners opponents are well-fed

This article appears in print in the November 2019 issue. Click here for a free subscription. When the Cincinnati Reds come to town to play the Seattle Mariners, Bonnie McPike prepares lots of Latin-inspired cuisine. For the Houston Astros, she plans several vegan options. McPike specializes in feeding professional athletes through her Seattle-based personal chef…

Seattle Needs to Better Promote Its Success as a Brand-Making Machine

Seattle Needs to Better Promote Its Success as a Brand-Making Machine

Its a well-kept secret that Seattle is home to a host of major national brands

This article appears in the September 2019 issue. Click here for a free subscription. In 1901, John W. Nordstrom used his stake from the Alaska Gold Rush to open a shoe store in Seattle. Fifteen years later, William E. Boeing founded a small company that would become perhaps the most iconic plane manufacturer on the…

The Crusade Against Breast Cancer Is Everyone's Fight

The Crusade Against Breast Cancer Is Everyone’s Fight

Here's why real men will wear pink this year

This story appears in the August 2019 issue. Click here for a free subscription. About 12% of women in the United States will develop invasive breast cancer in their lifetimes. Thats according to the American Cancer Society, which also notes that about 268,600 women will be diagnosed with new cases of invasive breast cancer this…

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