Zach Gottschalk's profile photo

Zach Gottschalk

Seattle

Staff Writer at Lookout Landing

Articles

  • 1 month ago | lookoutlanding.com | Becca Weinberg |Kate Preusser |Grant Bronsdon |Zach Gottschalk

    Photo by Steph Chambers/Getty Images The renowned Italian poem L’infinito was written in 1826 as a result of author Giacomo Leopardi’s wish to travel beyond his restrictive home town of Recanati, and experience more of the world. Broken into two parts, the poem can be viewed first as an expression of concepts that are familiar to the author, and second as an imaginative exploration of the infinite unknown. Mariners left fielder Dominic Canzone enters the 2025 season facing many uncertainties.

  • Aug 15, 2024 | lookoutlanding.com | Zach Gottschalk

    Photo by Duane Burleson/Getty Images I had a conversation with a friend the other day about the relative merits of the Mariners’ last 10 seasons from a fan’s perspective. Which seasons have been the most successful? The most enjoyable? The most engaging? We agreed on some, of course. The most successful and enjoyable season of the last decade was the only one that saw the Mariners make the playoffs: 2022.

  • Aug 15, 2024 | lookoutlanding.com | Zach Gottschalk

    Photo by Scott W. Grau/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images Working: Bryce Miller (0.503 WPA)Watching the Mariners: Andrés Muñoz (-0.560 WPA)Comment of the day:

  • Aug 15, 2024 | lookoutlanding.com | Zach Gottschalk

    Photo by Duane Burleson/Getty Images So, this is the last time this year the Mariners play Detroit, right? Right. Thank goodness for that, because Mariners games against the Tigers this season have been a series of frustrating endeavors. Struggling to score runs against Tarik Skubal a couple times is one thing. The team’s struggles in bullpen games and inability to hold a lead is quite another. LineupsBaseball, breakfast and Bryce.

  • Aug 7, 2024 | lookoutlanding.com | Zach Gottschalk

    Photo by Stephen Brashear/Getty Images As the German philosopher Immanuel Kant once asked: “what the fuck is happening to us right now?”It’s an admittedly modern translation from the German in which Critique of Pure Reason was originally written. A more traditional translator might have instead written: “what do we know and how do we know it? How do we know that we know it?

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