Two realities exist, simultaneously, at Colman Pool. One is the fact of a swimming pool tucked so deep into the forested depths of Lincoln Park, even neighbors who have lived in the area for decades ...
Last night’s James Beard Awards ceremony in Chicago contained many wonderful things: Shout-outs to patient spouses. Acknowledgments of sobriety. Multiple winners repping traditional Japanese garments.
Washington’s natural playgrounds include dozens of rivers ready for a refreshing summer float, many with rental companies to dole out frisbee paddles, inflated tubes, dog floaties, and shuttle rides.
Seattle Met is celebrating Seattle Beer Week with a daily six-pack of brewery or beer recommendations. Once upon a time, taprooms offered a few perfunctory snacks—maybe pretzels—to wash down your IPA.
Don’t listen to Grandpa: He didn’t have to walk miles through the snow, uphill both ways, to get to school. Seattle once had a robust mass transit system that brought riders to the farthest reaches of ...
At the southwestern end of the Fremont Bridge—nestled into Queen Anne’s steep northern slope where Lake Union flows into the Ship Canal—there’s a new, if somewhat ephemeral, sight to behold: a rainbow ...
Outside, music is also coming from across-the-street neighbor La Josie’s; kitty-corner Biang Biang Noodles closed hours ago. People filter in and out of Pike Street’s venues, from Neumos and La Dive, ...
For all it promised, all it was not, and all it actually became, Seattle’s Capitol Hill Occupied Protests (better known as CHOP) has but one clear consensus: It existed for 23 precarious days in June.
The golden god first appeared in suburban Washington in 1977. Let’s put aside for the moment whether Ramtha is best described as a god, or the God—or a ghost, or an alien, or a total fiction.
At 10 pm on a Friday night, most of the people at Capitol Hill’s the Wash seem high enough for the entire bar to take flight, floating into the night sky on the good ship Lolli-pot. I feel every year ...
Drop the needle on the last century of Seattle music and you’ll hear, at first, silence. You can still go to Washington Hall, a venue at 14th and Fir Street. You can see the stage haloed by lights and ...
Leah Merchant drew an uneven breath and felt it catch in her throat. The Pacific Northwest Ballet dancer was grateful for the dimness of the theater, which obscured evidence of the tears she’d failed ...