Jason David Newton
Moses Lake
Covers:
Faith and Christianity, Fatherhood, Blue-Collar Trades & Maintenance, Work-Life Balance, Pacific Northwest Lifestyle, Personal Photography
Doesn't Cover:
National/international politics, breaking news/current events, investing/finance, consumer tech reviews, celebrity entertainment, sports analysis, medical or legal advice, highly debated social issues
Mechanical Technician | Moses Lake, WA | Faith, family & PNW life | Group 14 Technologies | USCG Merchant Mariner | jasondavidnewton.com
Interview
What was your first job as a journalist?
Never had one. I'm a full time Mechanical Technician at Group 14 Technologies in Moses Lake, Washington. Over a decade in hands on maintenance, fabrication, and keeping operations running safely. That's my career and that's where my professional identity lives.
My first real step into writing was just starting my own blog. No editor, no paycheck, no press badge. Just me sitting down and deciding I had something worth saying about faith, fatherhood, and life in Central Washington and that I was going to say it honestly.
That first post on jasondavidnewton.com was my first job as a writer in any sense of the word. Nobody assigned it to me. Nobody was waiting on it. I just wrote it because it was true and I figured if it helped one other working dad somewhere feel less alone then it was worth the time it took to put it together.
That's still pretty much the job description.
jasondavidnewton.com/blog
Have you ever used a typewriter?
Yeah, a few times as a kid. My grandpa had an old manual typewriter sitting in the garage, one of those heavy clunky Underwood models from the 60s or 70s, and I remember messing around on it and thinking it was the coolest thing. The clack clack of the keys, having to actually pound them to get a good impression on the page. No backspace, no delete, no autocorrect. Just pure commitment to every single letter.
There's something honest about that. You had to think before you typed because fixing a mistake meant starting over or breaking out the Wite-Out. That's a different relationship with words than we have now.
These days I'm on a laptop or my phone writing reflections on faith, fatherhood, and life in Moses Lake, Washington over at jasondavidnewton.com. The tools are a lot faster and a lot more forgiving. But that old typewriter in my grandpa's garage taught me something I still carry. Think before you commit to something. Whether that's a sentence on a page or a repair decision on the floor at Group 14 Technologies, slow down and get it right the first time.
My grandpa would probably get a kick out of knowing that thing left a mark on me.
How is social media changing news?
News breaks on X, TikTok, Instagram Reels, and Threads now. By the time it hits TV or a newspaper somebody already posted the video from their phone twenty minutes ago. That's just the reality we live in.
The barrier to entry is basically gone. Anyone with a smartphone and something worth saying is a citizen journalist whether they call themselves that or not. That's mostly a good thing. Voices that never would have made it past a newsroom gatekeeper are getting heard now. Stories that would have died on a desk somewhere are getting out.
The downside is obvious though. Speed beats accuracy constantly. Something goes viral before anyone verifies it and by the time the correction comes out nobody sees it because the algorithm already moved on. You have to train yourself to slow down and ask who filmed this, where did this actually come from, does this check out.
For me personally social media changed how I think about sharing my own story. I'm a Mechanical Technician in Moses Lake, Washington. I'm not a reporter. But I can post about faith, fatherhood, and life in the Pacific Northwest and reach people who actually needed to hear exactly that. That wouldn't have been possible fifteen years ago. The tools are there. What you do with them is on you.
The responsibility piece matters more now than ever. Just because you can post something in thirty seconds doesn't mean you should. Integrity still counts even when nobody is fact checking you.
Who's your favorite fictional journalist?
Clark Kent. Not Superman, Clark Kent.
Everyone focuses on the cape but I've always been more interested in the guy who shows up to the Daily Planet every morning, does the work, keeps his head down, and doesn't need the credit. He's got more going on than anyone around him knows and he's not out here broadcasting it. He just does the right thing consistently and quietly and goes home.
That resonates with me more than I expected it to honestly. I'm a Mechanical Technician in Moses Lake, Washington. I show up to Group 14 Technologies, I fix what needs fixing, I keep things running safely, and then I go home and try to be a present dad and a man of actual faith. Nobody's handing out awards for that. That's just the job.
Clark Kent is the guy who understood that showing up with integrity every single day matters more than the spotlight. Colossians 3:23 in a cape basically. Whatever you do, work at it with all your heart. He did that as a reporter and he did that as Superman and he never seemed to think one was more important than the other.
That's the kind of character I want to be. Under the radar, doing the work, standing for what's true, protecting the people around me. No spotlight required.
What does it mean to be a journalist?
At its core I think being a journalist means being a truthful witness to real life.
It's not about chasing headlines or farming clicks. It's about showing up with integrity, paying attention, and sharing what actually happens so other people can understand something better, learn something useful, or just feel a little less alone in what they're going through. Whether that's a reporter in a newsroom or a guy in Moses Lake, Washington writing honest reflections on a personal blog, the heart of it is the same. Seek truth, treat people with respect, and don't twist reality just to get attention.
For me that looks like documenting everyday moments. Long shifts at Group 14 Technologies. Coming home tired and choosing to be present for my son anyway. Living out faith at Grace Harvest Church and trying to mean it on a Tuesday not just a Sunday. Getting out on PNW trails and remembering what actually matters. I try to write about all of it with the same diligence I bring to fixing equipment at work. Carefully, honestly, and with everything I've got. Colossians 3:23 applies in the shop and at the keyboard.
Good writing builds trust. It encourages people. It points toward what is good and true even when the story is messy or unglamorous. Especially when it's messy and unglamorous honestly.
That's why I share what I do. Not because I'm trying to be a journalist. But because I want to be a faithful steward of the stories God puts in my path.
jasondavidnewton.com/blog
What's the funniest news-related #hashtag you've seen?
#Adulting
I know it's not breaking news but that one cracks me up every time because it's so accurate. Like congratulations you paid a bill on time, here's your hashtag. We're all just out here figuring it out and pretending we know what we're doing.
As a dad and a full time Mechanical Technician in Moses Lake, Washington I feel that one in my bones on a daily basis. Some days adulting looks like keeping the equipment running at Group 14 and getting Ryker to story time at the Moses Lake Public Library on time. Other days it's just making sure there's food in the house and everyone goes to bed at a reasonable hour.
The fact that an entire generation turned "being a functional adult" into a hashtag tells you everything you need to know about how overwhelming modern life feels sometimes. At least we're all laughing about it together.
How do you prefer to be pitched on stories?
Keep it real and keep it local. That's pretty much it.
I'm a Mechanical Technician in Moses Lake, Washington. I write about faith, fatherhood, blue collar work, and life in the Pacific Northwest. So if you're pitching me something that connects to any of that I'm already interested. Manufacturing, trades, working families in Central Washington, community life in small towns, faith in everyday life. Those are my lanes and I pay attention when something lands in one of them.
Be specific. Tell me why you thought of me specifically. If you read something I wrote and it made you think I'd be a good fit for what you're working on, say that. That kind of personalized pitch takes thirty extra seconds and it makes all the difference between me reading the whole thing versus moving on.
Keep it short. I'm not sitting at a desk all day. I'm in the shop, I'm with my son, I'm living the life I write about. A three paragraph pitch that gets to the point beats a six paragraph pitch that buries it every time.
And don't pitch me stuff that has nothing to do with my world. I'm not the guy for tech startup culture or political commentary or lifestyle content aimed at people in big cities. But if you've got a story about working families, the trades, faith in ordinary life, or what it actually looks like to build something real in a small town in the Pacific Northwest, I want to hear it.
jasondavidnewton.com/blog
What tools and software do you use to do your job?
On the job at Group 14 Technologies it's mostly physical and hands on. Precision hand tools, torque wrenches, multimeters, calipers, micrometers. The stuff you actually need when you're keeping advanced battery material production lines running safely in Moses Lake, Washington. For predictive maintenance I use an infrared thermography camera, vibration analyzers, ultrasonic leak detectors, and pressure gauges. Knowing what's about to fail before it fails is half the job.
On the software side I work out of a CMMS, think UpKeep or Fiix, for work orders, preventive maintenance schedules, and parts inventory. Microsoft Excel for quick data tracking and shift reports. AutoCAD or similar when I'm reading blueprints. And safety gear is always first, lockout tagout kits, full PPE, gas monitors. That stuff is non negotiable.
For the blog side over at jasondavidnewton.com I keep it simple. Static HTML editing, Canva when I need a graphic, and honestly my phone camera does most of the heavy lifting for photography. I'm not running some elaborate content studio. It's just a guy in Moses Lake documenting real life with whatever is in his pocket.
Nothing flashy on either side of it. Just reliable tools that help me show up, do the work right, and go home to my son at the end of the day. Colossians 3:23 applies in the shop and at the keyboard. Whatever you do, work at it with all your heart. That's the standard I try to hold myself to across the board.
What's your favorite social network?
My favorite social network is X (@JasonDNewton). It’s fast, direct, and lets me share quick thoughts on faith, fatherhood, work life as a technician in Moses Lake, or PNW adventures without a lot of fluff. I love seeing real conversations, connecting with local folks in Central Washington, and staying updated on things that matter to me — from Grace Harvest Church events to community news.
That said, Instagram (@jasondavidnewton) is a close second for posting photos of family hikes, sunsets, and gallery moments — it’s visual and personal, perfect for capturing the Pacific Northwest beauty we enjoy. LinkedIn is my go-to for professional side (networking in manufacturing/tech), but X feels most like everyday me.
Who do you wish followed you?
Honestly anyone who wants a real unfiltered look at fatherhood, faith, and what it means to work hard in the Pacific Northwest.
Working dads in the trades who are trying to figure out how to be present for their kids after a long shift. Christian men who are newer to their faith and still figuring out what living it out actually looks like day to day. Guys in manufacturing and industrial work who don't see themselves represented much in the content they scroll past. Families in small towns like Moses Lake who are proud of where they live and tired of feeling like their story doesn't count because it didn't happen in a big city.
If you've ever come home with grease under your nails and still got down on the floor to play with your kid, I'm writing for you. If you've ever sat in church on a Sunday and wondered how to carry that into a Monday morning shift, I'm writing for you. If you love the Pacific Northwest not for the aesthetic but because it's actually home, I'm writing for you.
No influencer stuff, no perfectly curated feed, no content designed to make your life look worse by comparison. Just a Mechanical Technician in Moses Lake, Washington trying to document a real life honestly and hoping it connects with people living something similar.
jasondavidnewton.com/blog
Why did you become a journalist?
I didn't set out to become a journalist. I'm a Mechanical Technician at Group 14 Technologies in Moses Lake, Washington. Over 10 years in hands on maintenance, fabrication, and team leadership. That's my career and I love it.
I started writing because I wanted to document what actually matters in my everyday life. Faith, fatherhood, blue collar work, raising Ryker in Moses Lake, finding meaning in the Pacific Northwest. Nobody handed me a press credential or a beat. I just had something real to say and I figured out how to say it.
There was a season after I came to faith in January 2024 where I kept having thoughts and experiences that felt worth capturing. Not because I thought I was a writer but because I didn't want to forget them and I had a feeling other working dads in similar situations might relate. So I started putting it down. First on Medium, then on jasondavidnewton.com, and it just kept growing from there.
I think a lot of the most honest writing happening right now is coming from people who never called themselves journalists. People who just lived something real and decided to share it straight. No editor, no angle, no agenda. Just truth from a specific life in a specific place.
That's what I'm trying to do. Document what God puts in front of me and share it honestly with whoever needs to hear it.
jasondavidnewton.com/blog
Did you work for your high school newspaper? If so, what did you do there?
Nope. I was not the newspaper kid in high school. I was more likely to be found in the shop, on the field, or figuring out what was wrong with my 1993 Toyota pickup than writing for the school paper.
Honestly writing didn't really become a thing for me until way later in life. I came to faith in January 2024 and somewhere in that process I started feeling like I had something worth saying. Not because I had journalism training or a communications degree but because I was living a real life in Moses Lake, Washington and figured there were other working dads and guys in the trades who might relate to it.
So no high school newspaper. No journalism classes. Just a Mechanical Technician with a wrench in one hand and eventually a keyboard in the other trying to document faith, fatherhood, and life in the Pacific Northwest as honestly as he can.
jasondavidnewton.com/blog
What story are you most proud of writing or working on?
The story I'm most proud of is a Medium post I wrote called "Being a Christian Dad in Moses Lake: Balancing Faith, Family, and a Mechanical Tech Life."
It came out of a real season. Long shifts at Group 14 Technologies, coming home tired but not wanting to check out on my son. Trying to be fully present for Bible stories and bedtime prayers after a day that already had everything it could take out of me. Coaching youth football on the weekends. Showing up at Grace Harvest Church and trying to actually live what I was hearing on Sundays instead of just nodding along.
I wrote about how Colossians 3:23 applies to both the shop floor and the living room. Whatever you do, work at it with all your heart, as working for the Lord. That verse hits different when you're a blue collar dad in Central Washington just trying to hold it together and lead with integrity at the same time.
It's not a polished feature. There's no investigative angle or big scoop. It's just honest words from a working dad who needed to say something real and figured maybe one other guy out there needed to hear it.
When comments started coming in from other working parents in Moses Lake and similar small towns saying it encouraged them, that made every late night edit worth it. That's all I'm really going for. Real connection over perfection. Every single time.
jasondavidnewton.com/blog
What advice can you offer to aspiring journalists?
I'm not a career journalist, so take this for what it is. Advice from a Mechanical Technician in Moses Lake, Washington who started writing because he had something real to say.
Write what you actually know and live. The most powerful stuff comes from real experience, not research. For me that's faith showing up in daily work, being present as a dad, balancing long shifts with family time, and finding meaning in the simple things the Pacific Northwest offers. Authenticity beats polish every single time. Nobody needs another perfectly edited piece. They need something true.
Be consistent and patient. Start small, post regularly even if it's just once a month, and stop chasing viral. I started writing for my family and maybe one other working dad somewhere who needed to hear that he wasn't alone. The rest followed slowly. Slow is fine. Slow is actually how trust gets built.
Stay humble and truthful. Own your mistakes. Listen more than you talk. Always ask yourself does this honor God and does this actually help someone. Integrity in small things is what builds a reputation over time. People can tell when you're performing versus when you're being real.
Protect your time and your heart. Writing should add value to your life, not drain it. Family comes first. I pray before I hit publish. And it's okay to keep some stories private. Not everything needs to be content.
If you feel called to share, start today. Your voice matters, especially if it's the real one.
jasondavidnewton.com/blog
When's the best time to pitch you?
Morning before 9am is your best shot. Once the day gets rolling I'm in the shop at Group 14 Technologies in Moses Lake and my attention is on the equipment, not my inbox. Early morning is when I have coffee in hand, the house is quiet, Ryker is still asleep, and I can actually read something and give it a real response.
If you catch me in that window you've got my full attention. Miss it and you're competing with a full shift, a toddler, and whatever the Pacific Northwest throws at me that day.
Keep it short, keep it real, and send it early.
What's the best pitch you ever got?
Honestly I don't get a flood of pitches being a personal blogger in Moses Lake, Washington. But the best one I could imagine getting would be something like this. A local Central Washington reporter reaches out and says hey Jason, we're doing a story on how working families in Moses Lake balance long industrial shifts with faith and fatherhood and your post on showing up for your son after a tough day really resonated with us. Would you be open to sharing a quick thought on what keeps you anchored?
That would stop me in my tracks.
Because it's specific. They actually read something I wrote. It's local and grounded in real life here in Grant County. It respects what I actually do, the shop work at Group 14, Grace Harvest Church, being a dad, trying to live out faith in ordinary moments. And it's low pressure. It feels like a genuine conversation starter from someone who gets it, not a mass blast that went to fifty people.
The best pitches feel like the person did their homework. They're not trying to fit you into a story you don't belong in. They found you because you actually fit.
That's the kind of pitch I'd respond to in about thirty seconds flat.
What's the worst pitch you ever got?
Honestly I don't get a ton of pitches being a full time Mechanical Technician in Moses Lake who blogs on the side. But the ones that stick out as the worst are the completely off topic ones that make it obvious nobody spent two seconds looking at who I actually am.
The one that takes the cake was a generic promo for some high end crypto investment tool. Subject line said something like "Boost Your Income as a Blogger!" Zero connection to faith, fatherhood, blue collar work, or anything remotely related to life in the Pacific Northwest. No personalization, no relevance, nothing. Just a mass blast that landed in my inbox by accident basically.
I write about Colossians 3:23 and showing up for my son after long shifts at Group 14 Technologies. I write about story time at the Moses Lake Public Library and what it feels like to watch your two year old take the whole thing completely seriously. Crypto tools are not exactly in that lane.
I smiled, hit delete, and got back to what actually matters.
The lesson is pretty simple. If you can swap out my name for anyone else's name and the pitch still makes perfect sense, you did it wrong. The best pitches feel like they were written specifically for you. The worst ones feel like you were just another email address on a list.
What's your favorite drink?
Black coffee, strong and hot — no fancy stuff. It's what gets me through early shifts at Group 14 Technologies and long days fixing equipment. On weekends or after a hike with my son in the PNW, I switch to iced tea or just water with lemon. Simple things that keep me grounded. Nothing beats a fresh cup while reading my Bible or watching the sun come up over Moses Lake.
When you're not at a computer, where are you most likely to be?
Honestly if I'm not at a computer or in the shop at Group 14 Technologies, I'm probably outside somewhere in the Pacific Northwest. Hiking with Ryker, chasing sunsets out around Moses Lake, exploring trails after a long shift. This part of Washington has a way of resetting you if you let it.
A big chunk of my time goes to church and family. Grace Harvest Church in Moses Lake is a big part of my week and so is just being present at home. Reading the Bible together, family devotions, coaching youth football when the season is going. That stuff is non-negotiable for me. Faith and fatherhood don't take days off.
Outside of that it's pretty simple. I lift weights in the garage pretty regularly, I take a lot of photos, and if Ryker has anything to say about it we're probably at McDonald's because that's where the big indoor toys are and that kid will find any excuse to go. He's two and he's already figured out how to work me on that one.
The rhythm I try to live by is pretty straightforward. Work hard, love well, rest intentionally. Show up fully for the people and the places God has put in front of you. Most days that looks a lot less glamorous than it sounds but I wouldn't trade it.
Aside from your own, what's your favorite publication to read?
Honestly the Bible. That's not a Sunday school answer, that's just the truth.
Proverbs especially. If you want practical wisdom for navigating work, relationships, leadership, and life in general it's all right there. I'll read a single proverb in the morning before a shift and it'll sit with me all day. There's nothing else I've found that cuts through the noise that fast and that clean.
The Gospels are where I go when I need to be reminded what actually matters. Reading about how Jesus moved through the world, how he treated people, how he handled pressure and criticism and exhaustion, that stuff is directly applicable to daily life as a dad and a mechanical technician in Moses Lake, Washington in ways that still surprise me.
I read other things too. I'll pick up articles on manufacturing, maintenance, Pacific Northwest outdoor stuff. But if you're asking what publication genuinely shapes how I think and how I show up every day, it's the Bible and it's not particularly close.
Everything else I read I'm filtering through what I already found in there anyway.
What's the most common misperception about your beat?
That it's soft lifestyle fluff. That's the big one.
People hear faith and family blogging and they picture perfectly staged photos, feel good quotes over sunset backgrounds, and content that never gets into anything real. Like everything is fine and God is good and here's a Bible verse with a nice font on it. That's not what I'm doing.
I'm a full time Mechanical Technician in Moses Lake, Washington. I come home from long shifts at Group 14 Technologies with grease under my nails and a tank that's running close to empty. I'm a single dad figuring out how to be fully present for Ryker after days that already took everything I had. I write about the gritty practical reality of trying to live out Colossians 3:23 on the shop floor and in the living room on the same day. That verse doesn't just apply when things are going well. It especially applies when they're not.
The misperception is that this kind of writing is easy or sentimental. The truth is it's about showing up every single day with integrity, owning it when you fall short, doing hard physical work and then coming home and doing the harder work of being a present father and a man of actual faith. Not performed faith. Real faith that gets tested on a Tuesday.
It's not influencer content. There's no aesthetic here. It's just honest life from a blue collar dad in Central Washington trying to get it right.
jasondavidnewton.com/blog
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