-
Ogden's Cinco de Mayo festival brought live music, vendors and a car show to a sunny Saturday downtown. But attendees and organizers say some community members stayed home due to fears about an immigration crackdown.
-
During the pandemic, the country lost thousands of movie screens. Utah has seen theater closures over the past few years in towns like Park City, Sandy, American Fork, and West Valley City.
-
Many in the movie business continue to deal with the devastating fallout from the Los Angeles-area wildfires, but some are decamping to Park City for fresh air, new films and community.
-
For two decades, Heidi Posnien owned a burger bar in Huntsville, Utah. But she wasn’t born there. The story of her childhood years is told in a new book “A Child in Berlin.”
-
While Cox says the state will do “everything we possibly can” to keep the Sundance Film Festival local, he isn’t open to offering the festival the pots of money Cincinnati and Colorado are.
-
Ice Castles, the company behind the temporary art installations, is now in Utah, Minnesota, two locations in Colorado and New Hampshire. The company has expanded since its first installation in 2011.
-
Sibling Merrill Osmond posted on his Facebook page that Wayne died this week at a Salt Lake City hospital after suffering a “massive stroke.” Wayne Osmond was the second oldest of nine children raised in Ogden.
-
More than 200,000 minimalist black and white plates have been issued. Intentionally or not, drivers are supporting the new Museum of Utah.
-
To outsiders, Utah can seem a mysterious place. But the rise of reality TV like the “Secret Lives of Mormon Wives” and others have given people a peek inside.
-
The simple mayonnaise and ketchup-based dipping sauce can be found throughout the state as an accoutrement to french fries and has become one of Utah’s most famous foods.
-
Utah isn’t just a hot spot for fantasy readers, the state has also produced several best-selling authors like Orson Scott Card and Shannon Hale.
-
The festival kicks off on Jan. 23 in Park City, just days after the presidential inauguration. Starting Jan. 30 over 60% of the program will also be available for ticket buyers to stream online.
-
After Black Friday and Cyber Monday, it was tranquil the Tuesday after at the Nativity in the Glen — even though people still had to beat the crowds.
-
As Salt Lake City grows, neighborhoods are faced with a choice to maintain their historic identities or give in to change. Central Ninth and the Granary District are finding ways to keep what matters most to their communities while making room for development.