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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883
Rob Curley

Rob Curley

Current Position: Executive Editor

Rob Curley is the executive editor of The Spokesman-Review and joined the newspaper in 2016. He has previously held leadership positions at The Orange County Register, Las Vegas Sun, Washington Post and Lawrence Journal-World. His work in newsrooms, dating back to the 1990s, resulted in some of the largest and most award-winning news sites on the internet, but local journalism and community engagement have always been the main focal points of Curley’s work. He has started several, large-scale community initiatives through the newspaper — including the Northwest Passages events series and the largest, paid high school newspaper internship program in the country. During his time, the newspaper has become a national leader in philanthropic-funded journalism and the use of Creative Commons. This alternate funding has allowed The Spokesman-Review to become the smallest newspaper in the nation to have a bureau in the nation’s capital, to continue to have a bureau in Olympia, WA., covering statewide issues and politics, and — with one of the nation’s largest Ukrainian populations in the nation — The Spokesman-Review was one of the smallest news organizations in the world to send a reporter to Ukraine to cover the war with Russia through the eyes of its own community. In 2023, the news nonprofit Curley founded -- the Comma community journalism lab -- received its 501c3 status from the Internal Revenue Service, and helped relaunch the region's Black newspaper, The Black Lens.

All Stories

Opinion >  Column

Rob Curley: One last ride ’round as county fair winds down

She couldn’t have been 5. Her face was painted like a tiger. There was a pink ribbon in her hair. She had just “won” a stuffed husky. It was too early to have a name picked out for the puppy dog, but the few being discussed indicated gender wasn’t going to be a huge concern.
Opinion >  Column

Rob Curley: We missed a teaching moment

In Saturday’s edition of The Spokesman-Review, we ran a column from a local pastor. We do that almost every Saturday. Spirituality and beliefs are so important to so many of us. When I read it for the first time – in likely the same fashion many of you did – I was shocked.
News >  Military

Q&A with Gen. Everhart: Fairchild ‘a remarkable asset’

Gen. Carlton Dewey Everhart serves as commander of the U.S. Air Mobility Command. He sat down with Spokesman-Review editor Rob Curley on Monday to talk about the strategic value of Fairchild Air Force Base and its future in the region. Q: What role does Fairchild play for this country’s national defense, both today and in the future?
Opinion >  Column

Rob Curley: Gonzaga returns home to hero’s welcome as players and fans show the love

The plane ride from Phoenix to Spokane was quiet. Some slept. Others read. Many of the players wore headphones, listening to music they may or may not have actually been hearing. But as soon as the chartered jet carrying the Gonzaga basketball team landed in Spokane, that uneasy, anxious feeling – a mixture of exhaustion and sadness, really – began to change a little.