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Seattle Culture

Tales of a Cabbie

Writer explores the underbelly of an industry

By Rob Smith July 8, 2024

Cover of a vintage "seattle" magazine featuring a woman in a tropical shirt and fez, smoking a cigar, with headlines about shriners and Tales of a Cabbie.
Seattle magazine cover July 1969
Courtesy of Seattle magazine

This article originally appeared in the May/June 2024 issue of Seattle magazine.

With the rise of ridesharing companies such as Uber and Lyft, it’s never been easier to have a side hustle.

Seattle magazine’s July 1969 issue featured a first-person essay by writer Gordon Bowker who, from 5 p.m. until 3 a.m. five days a week, drove a cab. The story is rife with descriptions of long-forgotten icons of the city (the Blue Mouse, the Music Box, the Wee Piper) as well as some of the more interesting characters in search of a ride past midnight.

“Being a writer and being a cab driver are not so different, except that fewer writers get knocked over at night,” Bowker observed. In another passage, he expressed a common concern shared by cab drivers for decades: Would a drunk vomit in the back seat?

“The realtor comes to as we leave the freeway. I can smell stomach acid and stale bourbon. He is drooling profusely,” Bowker writes. “His suit is stained with booze and tomato sauce.” Some things never change.

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