VOCAL is inviting the public into a mock safe consumption space all over Seattle for the next week.
“We are here to help untie their hands.”
Almost two years after its first formative protest, hours after two more catalyzing killings, Seattle’s Black Lives Matter movement comes to a crossroads.
The power to spread awareness of injustice is an undeniable good. But how do we maintain our sanity as the bad news mounts?
This new Ballard restaurant comes with high expectations, but manages to deliver.
Celebrating its 20th anniversary, the volunteer-driven celebration takes on the Third Symphony.
It’s about the crowd, not the quality, at Seattle’s bad-movie screenings.
Kathleen Hanna returns with an exhilarating album and a band fully on board.
A samurai battles robots in a compelling new novella from a Seattle press.
A bike-powered festival, monstrous music, a swirling cacophony, and more.
PSE has finally agreed on an end date to its dirtiest power source.
A ballot initiative seeks to protect gun owners’ most common victims: themselves.
The 11-year-old electronic music gathering is suspending operations, but founder Sean Horton tells Seattle Weekly its legacy will live on.
The final vote on the police contract will be public, but it’s arguably just for show.
“One of the things I know is violence begets violence. We can’t continue to hurt one another.”
“Oversight for all people is necessary. We’re offering healing for the community.”
The Just Want Privacy campaign did not, in the end, get enough support to make the ballot.
‘We cannot let this gulf of distrust divide us and continue to cause us fear.’
It’s not clear how this will impact the impending Seattle police contract.
No data exists about how much the widely adopted program is actually used.
