Dyer Oxley
Online Editor/Producer
About
Dyer Oxley joined KUOW as a web editor in 2020, handling day-to-day upkeep of the station’s website while providing editorial oversight. He also helms KUOW’s daily newsletter.
A newspaper reporter at heart, Dyer came to KUOW via various Seattle-area media — spanning talk radio, podcasts, and TV — where he covered the emerging opioid epidemic, transportation, local government, and the region's pop culture community (he argues the Northwest is one of the nerdiest places on the planet). You can count on him to keep up on the region’s many comic cons, science, and entertainment news.
Location: Pacific Northwest
Languages: English, Limited Klingon and Vulcan
Stories
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Arts & Life
More Paul Allen treasures are up for sale: Art, outer space, and computer history
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Law & Courts
What's an 'entheogen'? Magic mushrooms are now a low priority in Olympia
The Olympia City Council has knocked psilocybin, and similar drugs, down to a "low enforcement priority" for Olympia police, essentially decriminalizing the drugs in the city.
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It's a bike. It's a scooter. It's a LimeGlider! Seattle's latest wheels for rent
Lime has offered ebikes for rent in Seattle for years. In 2022, it introduced electric scooters (which riders stand on). The LimeGlider fits in the middle of the two vehicles.
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Business
With its new CEO, is Boeing about to write the 'turnaround story of the century'?
With the selection of its new CEO, Boeing charted a course Wednesday that is giving some officials hope for the future of the aerospace company.
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Business
DoorDash raises fees in Seattle again, blaming City Council
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Elections
Washington state's Democratic delegates vote to endorse Kamala Harris for president
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Arts & Life
Kent in disguise: An unofficial, underground Transformers fan fest for Washington
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Health
Tacoma woman is cured of tuberculosis after legal and medical intervention
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Arts & Life
Alaska Airlines passengers will now be greeted with chill Sub Pop tunes
Move over Muzak.
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Seattle's accessory dwelling unit boom continues, outnumbering single-family permits 2 to 1
Seattle has entered a new era of housing, with skyrocketing permits for backyard cottages and in-home apartments, primarily in the city's single-family zoned neighborhoods.