Wed Live Music All American Metro Retro at 9 p.m. Baranof Kimball and the Fugitive Combo, Stick Shift Annie 8…
SEVEN IDEAS FOR SURVIVING SEATTLE ON A BUDGET
Send listings two weeks in advance to braincity@seattleweekly.com. Waterfronts for All: Lessons Learned from Our Neighbors Tackling the issue of…
Holland’s Bettie Serveert outruns the hype.
Send listings two weeks in advance to visualarts@seattleweekly.com. Lectures and Events Arf Art This city sure loves its dogs, so…
SURVIVORS VICTIMS President George W. Bush damn near choked on a pretzel while watching an NFL playoff game at home….
Open Government It might say something about the inadequacy of the state’s Open Records Act that not even a Supreme…
Lacking an opponent, Greg Nickels is showing signs of overreaching.
Seeing into the minds and hearts of Canadian artists.
Narrative, when you find it in the visual arts, is usually thick with mystery. In paint and photography, you don’t…
Women in transit battle for the best seat.
The city’s PacMed keeps losing millions.
Another Belltown hot spot: This one serves West African. Men in Senegal don’t cook. Especially not men from prominent families….
At 88, Northwest artist William Cumming has a legacy of vibrant art and an equally colorful story. A Depression-era survivor,…
A biography shows that Al’s more complex than you’d think.
It’s official: Seattle Weekly’s parent, Village Voice Media, and the New Times chain of urban weeklies propose to merge.
Got 20 minutes? Then you’ve got yourself a getaway.
This ‘meal of the century’ reveals why Thierry Rautureau just won the 1998 James Beard Award for Northwest Best Chef.
That subject of scorn, the TV, brings comfort as well as entertainment.
Where neighborhood noshing meets the mall.
