First Thursday standouts, a music festival in a warehouse, our 40th Anniversary and more.
Blue shirts versus red shirts in the final battle.
The author of Shrill could live wherever she wants. Why choose here?
The iconic brand hasn’t been locally owned for decades. But that doesn’t mean we don’t still love it as our own.
DoNormaal, JusMoni, Chanti Darling, The Dip, and Jo Passed.
Revisist Almost Live, see majestic, dark folk from Boise, or, maybe, just hang with Paul Simon.
The backers of Millennium Bulk Terminals, a proposed coal-export terminal in Longview, are scrambling to get on the last boat to Asia.
Seattle pizza guru Brandon Pettit calls forth his Jersey background in his latest place for pizza.
But some counter-protesters were also present.
Pivot Art + Culture’s new exhibition, Imagined Futures, is drawn from Paul Allen’s collection of outer-space paraphernalia and art. I expected it to be quirky and nostalgic, and it is. I didn’t expect it to be wryly funny, but it is.
Psychedelic witch anime, a maze about racism, conversations about net art, and more.
Damien Jurado, the Transgender Film Festival, Working Stiffs, and more.
Zeisler has a new book out, and it’s predictably Bitch-y.
Beyoncé-inspired industrial music, exhibits about tiny-living, and ‘Caddyshack’-inspired art shows.
A rally used orange ribbons to commemorate those who have been killed or jailed because of the War on Drugs.
Bleached, Erik Blood, weed, fatherhood, and more.
Aaron Posner loves his authors. He has since he was a kid in Eugene, Oregon, consuming every work by those writers who spoke to his particular understanding of the world.
A recent study suggests that only 35 percent of children in King County can tell time on an analog clock. Like other arguably antiquated abilities such as writing in cursive, telling time though on an analog clock seems to have been lost in the digital age.
From Taiwanese rappers to boozy classical music, all the best things to do this week.
