|
- City Weekly | Salt Lake City Weekly | News, Events Culture in Utah
This is a social-media hub curated for engagement by Salt Lake City Weekly staff
- Plumhouse rallies the after-hours community as SLC Council eyes . . .
The private, nonprofit social club hosts weekly late-night events in a permanent location, often collaborating with other local collectives who rent out the venue
- City Weekly looks back, and forward, on Utahs biggest stories of 2024.
This December, in lieu of our typical editorial Gift Guide, City Weekly is checking in on some of our biggest stories of the year In the pages that follow, our writers and partner contributors round up the notable developments to hit Utah and its capital city in 2024, updating with the latest twists and turns, when applicable, and looking
- City Weekly journalism wins five awards at annual Utah SPJ banquet.
In a prepared statement, City Weekly publisher Pete Saltas noted the significance of multiple winners in multiple categories, as smaller weekly publications are constrained in the amount of content they can publish each year, with a a limited pool of eligible features to submit in competition
- New LDS President Dallin H. Oaks faces a crossroads of progressive . . .
After the passing of former LDS church President Russell M Nelson, his longtime colleague Dallin H Oaks has taken the helm as prophet and president of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints—a transition that signals both continuity and conflict within the faith A complicated and often
- Members of the far-right Manosphere push a dangerous politics of male . . .
In a series of interviews and analyses of social media accounts dedicated to the so-called “manosphere” and concepts such as male supremacy, City Weekly gained a deeper understanding of specific online toxic masculinity groups
- FLASHBACK 1996: Louis Corays quest for Utahs original legal document.
In commemoration of City Weekly's 40th anniversary, we are digging into our archives to celebrate Each week, we FLASHBACK to a story or column from our past in honor of four decades of local alt-journalism
- New Utah Transit Authority price caps mean free rides for Farepay . . .
Since August, routine transit riders who utilize UTA's Farepay cards have enjoyed a new perk: no-cost trips after reaching daily and weekly price maximums
|
|
|