Underwriters Report and the Pasini Era (1920s–1990s)
Event Date: 1920s–1990s Category: Trade Press • Regional Culture • Distribution Ecosystem • California Market History
Summary
For most of the 20th century, Underwriters Report (UR) was the unofficial social network of the California insurance industry. Founded in the 1920s and presided over from the 1950s onward by its larger‑than‑life publisher Roy Pasini, UR was more than a trade publication — it was a clubhouse, a gossip exchange, a power center, and a daily ritual for carrier presidents, E&S brokers, wholesalers, and regulators.
UR survived on personality, relationships, and the gravitational pull of Roy’s North Beach lunch table. It thrived during the Liability Crisis thanks to a surge of E&S advertising dollars, and it collapsed when that tide receded. Roy refused to sell the publication even when serious buyers emerged, and when UR finally shut down, it died with him — exactly as he seemed to want.
UR is a window into a vanished world: a regional, relationship‑driven insurance culture that no longer exists.
Origins (1920s–1950s)
Underwriters Report began as a small, regional trade paper serving the California insurance community. Its early decades were defined by:
- carrier appointment notices
- regulatory updates
- market gossip
- people moves
- a layout that looked like it had been typeset during Prohibition
It was modest, local, and deeply tied to the rhythms of the West Coast market.
Everything changed when Roy Pasini took over.
The Pasini Era (1950s–1980s)
Roy didn’t just run UR — he embodied it. He was:
- a raconteur
- a connector
- a gossip broker
- a political operator
- a social force
And he held court almost daily at Gino’s or the Fior d’Italia in North Beach — restaurants where the waiters knew him, the presidents of California carriers knew where to find him, and E&S brokers knew better than to interrupt him before his second glass of red.
UR as a Social Institution
UR wasn’t just read. It was performed — through Roy’s lunches, his phone calls, his stories, and his presence.
If you wanted to know what was happening in the California market, you didn’t read UR. You talked to Roy.
Roy the Speaker — The Market Oracle
Roy was also a gifted speaker. He could extemporize for an hour — two, if you let him — weaving inside stories, market gossip, and sharp opinions into a performance that left audiences rapt. In an era before webinars, podcasts, or LinkedIn commentary, Roy was the commentary class of the California market.
The UR Cover as a Badge of Honor
Being featured on the cover of Underwriters Report was, for many California insurance professionals, the moment they felt they had “made it.” My boss Peter Hawes — three times my boss, in three different chapters of his own distinguished career — used to say that appearing on the cover of UR was the epitome of making your name in the industry.
The Iconic Red Cover — Half the Story
UR’s visual identity was as memorable as its content. For decades, every issue arrived with the same unmistakable design:
- a solid red cover
- a black‑and‑white portrait of a middle‑aged insurance company or surplus‑lines president
- the title Underwriters’ Report in black Helvetica
- a layout that hadn’t changed since the 1920s
It was so stark — and so funereal — that the industry affectionately called it the “Undertakers’ Report.” Even thirty years later, people can still picture that red cover instantly.
Being featured on it wasn’t just publicity. It was a career milestone.
Roy’s Prose
Roy’s writing style was famously meandering — part sermon, part gossip, part reminiscence. A typical paragraph wandered like a North Beach lunch. He might begin with a carrier appointment, detour into a story about a broker he’d known since ’58, and end with a warning about “market conditions that bear watching,” a phrase he used so often it became a punchline.
His prose wasn’t pithy. It was Roy.
The Ancient Press and the Shopping Papers
UR’s office was a time capsule. Roy kept the doors open by printing weekly shopping newspapers on an ancient press that looked like it had rolled straight out of the 1920s. The irony was that UR itself still looked like it was being typeset on that same machine.
Mike Pasini, the Technical Conscience
Roy’s son Mike was the techie of the operation — meticulous about how copy had to be submitted, even though the layout hadn’t changed in half a century. Mike understood the machinery. Roy understood the market. Together, they kept UR alive long after similar publications had modernized or died.
The UC Berkeley Chair
Roy’s stature in California journalism was cemented by a dedicated chair at the UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism, something he was immensely proud of. It symbolized his belief that UR wasn’t just a trade paper — it was part of the state’s journalistic fabric.
The Liability Crisis and the E&S Advertising Boom (1980s)
When the Liability Crisis hit and admitted carriers withdrew from entire classes of business, the E&S market exploded — and with it, E&S advertising budgets.
UR became a prime beneficiary.
- wholesalers
- MGAs
- non‑admitted carriers
- Lloyd’s syndicates
…all poured money into advertising, trying to reach retail agents desperate for markets.
This surge kept UR alive through the 1980s. It was the publication’s last great boom.
The Decline (1990s)
When the E&S boom cooled:
- ad dollars vanished
- UR’s business model collapsed
- the ancient press couldn’t be modernized
- the publication shut down
And here is where the story becomes personal — and revealing.
Roy’s Refusal to Sell
Roy told people UR was for sale. He floated numbers. He hinted at wanting a successor.
But when serious buyers appeared — including Carlos Kaslow (publisher of Smart’s Insurance Bulletin for a few years in the 80s), who offered a very real $1 million — Roy refused.
No negotiation. No counter. Just no.
And yet, after UR shut down, he told me during lunch with Fred Pilot at the Fior d’Italia:
“I wish you would have bought it.”
But he had never said a word when it mattered.
It was classic Roy: proud, stubborn, sentimental, and unable to imagine UR existing without him. If he couldn’t run it, no one should.
UR didn’t die because it failed. It died because Roy couldn’t let it live without him.
Legacy
Underwriters Report left behind:
- a UC Berkeley journalism chair
- a generation of California insurance professionals who grew up reading (and being written about by) Roy
- a cultural memory of North Beach lunches where the real business of the market was done
- a model of regional trade journalism that no longer exists
UR wasn’t just a publication. It was a world — and when Roy left it, the world disappeared.
Why It Mattered
UR and the Pasini era illuminate:
- the regional identity of the California insurance market
- the role of personality in pre‑digital trade journalism
- the social architecture of the industry before consolidation
- the dependence of trade publications on advertising cycles
- the cultural impact of the E&S boom
- the disappearance of local, relationship‑driven media
Related Events
- Late 1970s–Mid‑1980s — The Liability Crisis — the market upheaval that drove E&S advertising dollars into UR and prolonged its late‑era boom
- Late 1970s–1990s — Rise of Surplus & Excess Lines Brokers — the expansion of California’s E&S ecosystem that fed UR’s advertiser base and social orbit
- 1980s–1990s — E&S Advertising Boom — the surge of non‑admitted‑market marketing that kept UR financially afloat during its final strong decade (forthcoming)
- 1990s — Collapse of Regional Trade Publications — the digital‑era contraction that eventually consumed UR and its peer publications (forthcoming)
- 2011 — NRRA Modernizes Surplus Lines Regulation — the federal reform that reshaped the regulatory landscape long after UR’s era ended