| Type | Weekly newspaper[1] |
|---|---|
| Owner | Tiloben Publishing Company |
| Launched | 1970; 56 years ago (1970)[1] |
| City | Seattle |
| Country | United States |
| Circulation | 13,500 (as of 2022)[2] |
| ISSN | 0746-5394 |
| OCLC number | 10124671 |
| Website | seattlemedium |
TheSeattle Medium is anAfrican-American newspaper that servesSeattle,Washington. It was founded in January 1970, and bore the nameThe Medium from 1970 to 1983.[3]
Seattle's first successful Black-owned newspaper wasThe Seattle Republican, founded in 1896.[4] In the 1960s, a wave of Black-owned newspapers started in Seattle, including theAfro American Journal andThe Facts.[5]
Chris Bennett started theSeattle Medium in 1970, recalling later that he wanted to create a voice for the African American community during the racial unrest of the time. He had worked in journalism for slightly over a year and learned management and publishing skills as he began the paper. Cora Vaughn, who was studying journalism at theUniversity of Washington at the time, helped found theSeattle Medium as its first editor. The newspaper began with four pages but expanded to eight soon after its launch.[6]
Priscilla Hailey, Larry Williams, and Connie Cameron soon moved to Seattle to help with theSeattle Medium. Cameron, Bennett's sister, had a degree in broadcast journalism and became editor and publisher of theSeattle Medium.[7]
In its early days, the paper employed as many as 50 staff.[8]Omari Salisbury, of Converge Media, credited local Black newspapers of the time, including theSeattle Medium andThe Facts, as "the go-to news sources for Seattle's Black Community," and thus "politicians, policy makers, community leaders and even celebrities knew they needed to make the Black media rounds."[9]
When theYesler-Atlantic Community Center opened in the Central District in 1972, it shared regular news releases with theSeattle Medium, among other local media sources, to encourage participation in its new classes.[10] TheKCTS 9 showFocus: Black Perspectives often featured stories from theSeattle Medium, and in turn, the paper shared similar public television shows which broadcast Black voices.[11] As part of theSeattle Sonics' bid to attract popularity in spite of different racial demographics between the city and team, it provided free tickets to readers of theSeattle Medium for Black History Month.[12] In 1980, the paper won an award from theNational Newspaper Publishers Association, and Bennett was elected a member of the board.[13]
In 1984, theSeattle Medium expanded into radio, buying stations in Seattle, Tacoma, and Portland.[6] By 2003, it had become the largest Black-owned media company in the Pacific Northwest.[7]
By 2013 theSeattle Medium shrunk to 15 employees and 13,500 subscribers.[8] In 2014 the paper completed a redesign, and remained committed to publishing in print as well as online.[8] In 2016, the paper again won an award from the National Newspaper Publishers Association.[14] In 2020, Black Lives Matter Seattle-King County donated funds to a variety of organizations, including Black-owned media outlets like theSeattle Medium,South Seattle Emerald, and KRIZ Renton.[15]
In 2021, theSeattle Medium joinedWord in Black, a coalition of Black newspapers from across the U.S. that would produce a shared news portal online. By then, there were less than 250 Black newspapers in the country, and many local Black newspapers had consolidated in the face of economic pressures. The collective started with ten newspapers ranging in geography and politics, and had 2,700 subscribers six months after launch.[16]
The paper won threeNational Newspaper Publishers Association awards in 2021, including first place in the "Best Original Advertising" category.[17]
TheSeattle Medium's office is on Jackson Street in Seattle'sCentral District.[7]King County Metro and the Black Heritage Society of Washington State featured the paper in its mural project,Routed in History: History Rides on Community Shoulders. One mural at a bus stop at Jackson Street and MLK Jr Way, near theSeattle Medium's office, covers the history of Black-owned local newspapers. The mural includes photos of theSeattle Republican,Seattle Medium, andThe Facts, as well as Christopher H. Bennett and Chris B. Bennett.[4]