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Slog (Free subscription) | 11/21/2009
On NPR's On the Media . ( The Stranger 's story about the project is here .) Paul Mullin accompanies this announcement with his usual broadside. There’s a stereotype about Seattle, and especially its artists, and even more especially its theatre aritists, that we have an inferiority complex. We have trouble believing that anyone who lives and creates their art here can really be...
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David Horsey's Drawing Power (Free subscription) | 11/16/2009
... playwrights and put before an audience in less than eight months. The lead author of the play, Paul Mullin , envisioned the work as a series of performed newspaper articles that would tell the story of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer's end as a print product and explore what the closure means for the community. What has resulted from the effort is not unlike a series of Saturday Night...
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Slog (Free subscription) | 11/06/2009
It began in a bar, with a journalist (former P-I science writer Tom Paulson) and a playwright (Stranger Genius Paul Mullin) were holding a two-man pity party: "Paul and I were drinking beer one night," Paulson says. "And I was complaining about the death of the P-I . And Paul said: 'Fuck you, man. You think you've got it tough? I'm a playwright...
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Chaos Theory (Free subscription) | 11/05/2009
"Paulson took his turn on the other side of the tape recorder as part of a theater project called It's Not in the P-I: A Living Newspaper about a Dying Newspaper. In the past few months, six Seattle playwrights—Dawson Nichols,...
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Skysports.com (Free subscription) | 11/01/2009
Phil Jevons doubled the advantage just before half time with his second penalty in successive weeks and Paul Mullin secured the points on 53 minutes with a close range finish from Neil Wainwright's excellent right wing cross.
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Everyday Ethics (Free subscription) | 10/19/2009
Seattlepi.com Paul Mullin , whose "It's Not in the P-I" opens next month, says: "I hope when people walk out of the theater they understand reporters aren't heroes but they certainly have a purpose and they play a role in our democracy and our culture."