SEATTLE Grand Cinema theater in Tacoma reopens after threat
Over the weekend, an unknown person issued threats against the Grand Cinema theater in Tacoma, Washington. Police thoroughly searched the building twice, but management decided not to open on Sunday, as a precaution. As Elizabeth Calhoun, the executive director, said, officers confirmed the threat is no longer present and the premises are fully safe, so the theater reopened on Monday.
To reduce risks, the administration has introduced temporary measures: this week, visitors are prohibited from...
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EVENTS Seattle, a week of bright events: June 23 to 30, 2026
From June 23, Seattle and the surrounding area begin to live at a summer pace: from big stadium performances and concerts to intimate shows by the...

EVENTS Late June and July–August 2026: pick your dates in advance
To make sure you have time for everything and don’t derail your plans, we’ve rounded up key events from June 23 through August 2026: from major...

OPINIONS Seattle's World Cup Week: What's Happening on June 23 and What's Coming Next
Seattle, June 23, 2026 — A guide to FIFA World Cup 2026 in Seattle: match schedules, scores, free watch-party locations, cultural events, and...

USA From Biofouling to Market Panic
At first glance, these three pieces are about entirely different things: oil tankers, a collapse in the technology market, and the death of music...

SEATTLE Targeting Retirement Theft: PlayStation, Pokémon and Millions Seized in Washington
In Longview, Washington, 39-year-old Robert George Scott was arrested. He is suspected of running a large-scale retail theft ring. A two-year...

WEATHER 🌤️ 10-Day Weather Forecast for Seattle, Washington
Today, June 23, Seattle is expected to be mostly sunny and very warm. The high will reach 85°F, while the low will drop to 64°F. The wind is north,...

WORLD Delcy Rodríguez: A Diplomatic Path With the United States — the Right Choice
Acting President of Venezuela Delcy Rodríguez said that restoring diplomatic relations with the United States was the right decision to ensure peace...

WORLD Netanyahu became the biggest loser after the US-Iran deal
German media outlets continue to criticize Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu after the United States, in recent days, announced that it had...

SEATTLE Portland takes top spot from Seattle for share of same-sex couples
In the middle of Pride Month, new Census data in the United States showed that Seattle has lost its title as the large-city with the highest share of...
Seattle

World Beekeepers Congress in Eastern Washington: How to Save Bees?
After the largest winter die-off of honey bee colonies in U.S. history in 2024, professional beekeepers and hobbyists are not only rebuilding their...

Maltby Cafe with giant buns is moving to “Maltby Village”
The legendary Maltby Cafe, known for its oversized cinnamon rolls bigger than a hand, is preparing to move into a new building right on its current...

Bosnians in Seattle Celebrate Their Team’s World Cup Berth
It’s hard to overstate the joy that swept through the home of Selma Mänsell on March 31, when Esmir Bayraktarević scored the winning penalty against...
Summer bus to Golden Gardens Beach: how to get there without a car
In Seattle, a new seasonal bus route is being launched to help people reach the popular Golden Gardens park without a personal car. The Golden...

Seattle Solstice: Summer Arrives With a Peak of Light and Heat
Summer truly arrived on Sunday with the summer solstice — the longest day of the year for the Northern Hemisphere. In Seattle, the sun shone for 15...

Seattle: summer bus, baseball talent, and Mariners’ win
Summer digest: a new bus route to Golden Gardens Beach, school pitcher Eli Herst draws MLB attention, and the Mariners beat the Red Sox 3-1, avoiding...

Cowlitz Tribe’s tuition assistance changes lives across generations
Rosalie Fish, preparing to enroll at the University of Washington — a major research university in Seattle with strong programs in engineering,...

Losses We Rarely Mourn
We’re used to thinking that grief is only about death. But in fact, we mourn not only people, but also our dreams, plans, and whole imagined versions...

West Seattle beaches reopen after sewage spill
The King County Department of Health has lifted warnings for beaches near Constellation Park and the viewing area at Charles Roychi Sr. Overdue...
Neighbors

Digest: football comeback, wildfires and refugees
Egypt’s national team secured a hard-fought victory over New Zealand in Vancouver. On Vancouver Island, two human-caused wildfires broke out. Ahead of World Refugee Day, stories of refugee success in Canada.
Egypt pulled off a historic comeback in Vancouver: 3-1 win over New Zealand
As part of a series of pre-season or friendly matches held in preparation for the World Cup, Egypt’s national team earned a dramatic win over New Zealand. The match took place in Vancouver and quickly became one of...

Canada beats Qatar at the World Cup, as whales return to the shores
Canada’s national team secured a historic 6-0 victory over Qatar at the home World Cup in Vancouver. At the same time, scientists are noting a rise in the whale population in coastal waters, including rare species.
Canada’s Triumph: Historic Win Over Qatar at the Home FIFA World Cup
The Canada men’s national soccer team has made its name in history by claiming the first ever win at the men’s World Cup. The group-stage match against Qatar, played on June 18, 2026, at BC Place Stadium in...

Water limits, football frenzy and elite real estate
Surrey backed away from regional water restrictions, sparking anger. Fans splurged huge sums on tickets for Canada’s historic win. The luxury real estate market is shifting from big cities to the suburbs.
Surrey defies Metro Vancouver water limits: what’s behind the decision?
The city of Surrey has found itself at the center of a controversy: it is the only municipality within the Metro Vancouver water district that refused to move to the third level of restrictions, staying on the second. As...

Vancouver: World Cup, Housing and a Possible Whitecaps Move
Canada’s World Cup win brings playoff matches closer to Vancouver; Karin and Eby announced a $3.2 billion plan to buy unsold condos; Premier Eby called a possible “Vancouver Whitecaps” move to Las Vegas a tragedy.
Canada’s World Cup win boosts the odds of playoff matches in Vancouver
Canada’s resounding group-stage win over Qatar at the FIFA World Cup not only brings the team closer to a historic trip to the knockout rounds, but also significantly increases the likelihood that fans in Vancouver...

World Cup in Vancouver: records, marches and a red city
Vancouver is experiencing a football boom: Australian fans nearly drained the bars on Granville Street, Canadian supporters are preparing a historic march to BC Place to back the national team in the match against Qatar, and the city is turning red.
Vancouver's Granville Street Bars Survive a World Cup Beer Tsunami: Aussie Fans Almost Drink the City Dry
The opening weekend of the FIFA World Cup in Vancouver brought a surge of business that no one could have fully anticipated, with one bar...

Incidents in Vancouver: investigations and infrastructure issues
Today's news touches on several key events in Metro Vancouver: an independent probe into the death of a man in police custody, a large power outage in the southern part of the city, and a full strike by 700 utility workers threatening parks and water treatment systems.
Death under mysterious circumstances: British Columbia's police watchdog investigates after man dies in cell
A new scandal involving police actions is unfolding in the Canadian province of British Columbia. The Independent...

Canada Riding a Wave of Events: World Cup, Strikes and Heat in Vancouver
The spotlight is on three key topics: a successful World Cup kickoff in Vancouver on natural turf, a large-scale strike by Metro Vancouver infrastructure workers, and a forecast of potentially record heat in the region.
Australia Praises BC Place Pitch: "Perfect Playing Conditions"
The natural grass pitch installed at BC Place in Vancouver for the FIFA World Cup received high marks from world-class players after passing its first test in a group-stage match. On Saturday Australia earned a...

Strike and Heat: What Awaits Vancouver
Vancouver faces a triple challenge: a municipal workers' strike is disrupting infrastructure services, an extreme heat wave is forcing water conservation due to critical repair work, and at the same time cross-border rail service to the U.S. is improving with new measures on the train route.
The route from Vancouver to Seattle is shorter: what's changed on the Amtrak route
The train trip from Canadian Vancouver to American Seattle has become slightly faster, which is especially important now as...

Vancouver: Bankruptcy, World Cup and Pet Rescue
In the latest Vancouver news roundup: developer Helen Chan Sun declared bankrupt while in jail; the 2026 FIFA World Cup kicked off with Australia vs. Turkey and Science World was transformed; and a touching story of stolen dogs and cats reunited with their owners after a suspect was arrested in British Columbia.
Vancouver developer Helen Chan Sun declared bankrupt while jailed for contempt of court
Recent weeks have been a true ordeal for Helen Chan Sun, once a multimillionaire and a notable...
USA

U.S. Politics as a Mirror of a Crisis of Trust and Power
If you look at these three pieces together, they form a fairly coherent picture: American politics and public life are increasingly living in a state of heightened polarization, where not only elections and the appointment of officials come to the fore, but also questions of legitimacy, trust in institutions, control of the public sphere, and the struggle over how events are interpreted. In one storyline, this shows up through the criminal case involving the death of Charlie Kirk and the legal...

When instinct is louder than noise
The common thread of these pieces is unexpectedly the same: in very different circumstances — at war, in a local public spat, in sport, and even in everyday life — the deciding moment is when a person either follows an inner impulse or yields to public pressure. In a New York Times report, this is evident through a photograph from Gaza, where the return of displaced Palestinians to the north after the announcement of a cease-fire is not just news, but a visual testament to fragile hope. In a...

Returning as a Form of Power
Taken together, these three news stories share one big theme: how public figures and institutions reassert their relevance through returning—back to the stage, back onto the court, and back to their city. Rod Stewart, despite his age and physical discomfort, continues to go out to meet the audience; Serena Williams, after years of absence, is back in major tennis; and the College National Finals Rodeo is locking in its long-running presence in Casper for another decade. In all three cases, it’s...

Power, Media and Sport Amid a Big American Summer
If you look at these three pieces together, they don’t add up to a random selection of news items, but rather to a fairly precise portrait of the moment: politics in the United States is becoming increasingly performative, television and media operate according to the logic of symbolic gestures and conflicts, and sport remains the space where attention shifts to records, emotion, and national storylines. The common theme here is the struggle for attention and control of the agenda. Donald Trump...

Roads, heat and the price of mistakes: common lessons from three stories
If you look at these three stories together, they’re united not by the subject as such, but by a deeper narrative: infrastructure, safety, and the human and managerial cost of underestimating risks. One article is about deadly heat on trails in Grand Canyon and how the natural environment can quickly become a threat to life. Another is about a crime committed during an ordinary taxi ride, and how the law-enforcement system unravels the consequences of violence. In the third, Iowa’s...

Tragedy on the North Side and the Role of Public Memory
Nearly all of the sources here discuss things that, in different ways, shape public memory: one piece about the death of James Burrows, a man who defined American television comedy for decades, others about a dramatic incident in San Antonio where violence, police work, and the fates of bystanders collided. At first glance, these are very different stories, but they share one theme: how society records the events and people who leave a mark—either in culture or in the day-to-day life of a city....

Land and Fire Conflicts: How Infrastructure Becomes a Flashpoint
Stories from Richmond, Virginia, and rural Oregon might seem completely different: in one case, a high‑profile federal defamation suit between a developer and the owner of a Minor League Baseball club; in the other, fires near a solar farm, a highway, and an RV campground. But underlying all these events is the same theme: how pieces of modern infrastructure (stadiums, commercial real estate, solar panels, roads, recreation areas) become arenas not only of economic competition but of legal and...

Fragile security: how sudden violence and the elements reshape everyday life
Each of the three reports from different parts of the U.S. — a nighttime storm in Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana; a deadly crash involving cyclists in California; and a manhunt for a shooter in Maryland — may at first seem unrelated. Together, however, they form a very familiar picture: the ordinary, seemingly stable routines of daily life can be shattered at any moment — by nature, human recklessness, or intentional violence. People go to work, ride bikes along the ocean, attend university, and...

Fragility of Big Plans: Elections, Disasters and Sport as a Mirror of Uncertainty
In all three stories — from the Georgia primaries to a wildfire near Spokane and the injury of a Tour de France star — there seems at first glance to be nothing in common. Political intrigue in the American South, a local tragedy in the U.S. Northwest, and a decision by a European cycling team look like plots from different worlds. But viewed more broadly, they form a single narrative about how fragile even the most carefully laid plans become when confronted with reality — political, natural,...
Reactions

U.S. Influence Under the Spotlight: Allies, Iran, and Disputes Over Diplomacy
Tensions around the United States are rising: how Washington applies force and conducts policy at home and abroad, how its approach to partners...

How Beijing, Ankara and Kyiv See the U.S. Today
In June 2026 the United States simultaneously represents a source of threat, a security guarantor and a key economic partner for many countries....

Venezuela and Turkey react to a possible US–Iran deal
Recent reports of a potential agreement between the United States and Iran have prompted a wave of commentary and political interpretation in...

How the World Argues About the US: Europe, the Gulf and China
In mid‑June 2026, foreign debates about the United States are concentrated on several overlapping threads. First, there is Washington’s foreign...

How the World Debates America: Russia, China and Turkey on US Foreign Policy
In mid‑June 2026, discussion of the United States in international media again reminds us that Washington remains the main "distribution center" of...

America in the Crosshairs: Germany, Ukraine and Japan Debate the US Role
Today, outside the United States, discussions are not about one or two headline episodes but about a knot of issues in which Washington has become...
![US President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meet at Mar-a-Lago, Trump's resort, in Palm Beach, Florida, on December 29, 2025 [Jonathan Ernst/Reuters]](https://www.aljazeera.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/2025-12-29T223347Z_1840689475_RC2KQIAV30GG_RTRMADP_3_ISRAEL-PALESTINIANS-TRUMP-NETANYAHU-1772474025.jpg?resize=770%2C513&quality=80)
How the world reads Washington: Israel, Australia and Ukraine on a new phase of American power
In mid‑June 2026 the United States again finds itself at the epicenter of global debate — but this time not only as a "hegemon," rather as the...

How the World Sees America Now: Germany, Japan and Israel Debate Trump
The American agenda is once again dominating the planet’s information airwaves, but the set of questions being asked in Berlin, Tokyo and Tel Aviv...

How the World Argues with America: Brazil, Saudi Arabia and Australia
In June 2026, discussion of the United States in the foreign press and among experts noticeably shifted: the foreground is no longer the abstract...
World

Latin America’s Reaction to U.S. Influence
Latin America continues to closely monitor how decisions by American politicians and the United States’ diplomatic moves affect the region. In some reports, the focus is on Washington’s efforts to strengthen ties with local allies and involve countries more actively in a shared agenda. In others, attention is drawn to the role of the United States as one of the key players in global conflicts, including the topic of Iran. At the same time, the news carries a broader political meaning: for many,...

The US and Iran move into a technical phase of talks
The first round of political consultations between the United States and Iran in Switzerland has concluded, and the two sides are now focusing on the technical work needed to iron out the details. Qatar and Pakistan served as mediators. An agreement has been reached to form several working groups to address key issues—ranging from the nuclear program to sanctions and dispute-resolution mechanisms. It is expected that it is the technical teams who, in the coming days, will lay the groundwork for...

International Giants Are Back: Venezuela Opens for Investment
Venezuela’s economy is taking a significant turn: after a long period of isolation, the country is once again attracting major multinational corporations. Thanks to a new openness strategy initiated by the government, Venezuela is becoming an attractive destination for investment in key sectors—energy, infrastructure, and natural resource extraction. This influx of capital signals a shift in the country’s global image: investors see long-term strategic opportunities here.
American oil giant...

Iran’s Central Bank chief: progress in freeing assets and lifting oil sanctions
According to Iran’s Central Bank chief, significant progress has been made in unblocking frozen Iranian assets, and agreement has also been reached with the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) to grant a sanctions exemption for the sale of Iranian oil. Although the negotiations were intense and complex, their outcome fully matches the objectives set by the Iranian delegation, paving the way for improving the country’s financial situation on the international stage.

US Diplomat Denied Talks With Iran Were Derailed in Switzerland
Contrary to reports from several media outlets, US-Iranian talks in Swiss Burgenstock have not been interrupted, a US State Department representative said in an interview with Axios. The diplomat уточнил that consultations began on Sunday morning and continued uninterrupted in various formats. The main topics included the fate of the Strait of Hormuz, the nuclear deal, mechanisms to prevent direct clashes, and implementation of the Lebanon ceasefire agreement. The talks were held both directly...

In Venezuela, people’s voting is being expanded: condominium boards will join the national...
Acting President of Venezuela Delcy Rodríguez announced that the second National People’s Consultation will take place on July 12, 2026, and for the first time it will include not only community councils, but also condominium boards across the country. This innovation is intended to broaden the territorial and social reach of the citizen direct-participation mechanism. According to Rodríguez, during the voting, residents will directly determine the allocation of public funds, based on...

Preliminary U.S.-Iran talks begin in Switzerland with Qatar and Pakistan mediating…
On Sunday, technical consultations began in Switzerland between U.S. and Iranian delegations, with representatives of Qatar and Pakistan also taking part. The meetings are intended to lay the groundwork for a new round of talks connected with implementing the memorandum of understanding on the cessation of hostilities.
According to Pakistan’s state television, the technical sessions involving members of the four countries’ delegations may continue until Monday. Switzerland’s foreign ministry...

Iran closes the Strait of Hormuz and demands guarantees ahead of talks with the United States
The diplomatic channel between Washington and Tehran remains open despite rising tensions. On Sunday, technical consultations mediated by Pakistan and Qatar were scheduled to take place in Burgenstock, Switzerland. The Iranian delegation has already flown to Switzerland, while from the U.S. side special envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner arrived in the region. However, due to escalation in Lebanon, the precise start date of the meetings remains in doubt.
The Iranian delegation has been given...

259 Venezuelans returned home from the United States on a repatriation flight
On Friday, June 19, Venezuela received the 162nd flight of the “Vuelta a la Patria” (Return to the Homeland) program, with 259 citizens from the United States—206 men, 35 women, 10 boys and 8 girls. The aircraft landed at Simón Bolívar International Airport in Maiquetía, where everyone was welcomed with dignity and according to all protocols to ensure a happy reunion with their families. In total, since the start of the program, more than 28,000 Venezuelans have already returned to their...
Knowledge

Fifteen Dollars of a Dream: How Airport Cleaners Changed America
Imagine working every day—cleaning, cooking, carrying heavy bags—but still not having enough money even for food. That’s how thousands of people living near Seattle were living. But one day, they came up with something very smart. And it changed not only their lives, but the lives of millions of people across America. Most astonishingly, this story didn’t start with wealthy businessmen or famous politicians. It started with ordinary women with buckets and rags.
A small town with a big...

A Road of Logs That Rolled Kindness: How Lumberjacks Invented a Seattle That Cares...
Have you ever heard the phrase “to end up at the bottom”? In English, there’s a similar one—“Skid Row”—and people all over the world know it. But few people know that the expression was born in one specific place: in Seattle, on a real road of logs. And even fewer know that it was around this road that a tradition of caring for people first took root—one that still lives on in the city today.
The road the giants slid down
Picture a massive forest—so dense that the trees there are taller than a...

A train from the future that was too cold: the story of Moscow’s monorail
Imagine a train racing over the city on a thin rail—like it’s straight out of a science-fiction movie. Sounds magical, right? Exactly such a train appeared in Moscow in 2004. It was called a “transport of the future,” and people were very proud of it. But the future had one big problem—it wasn’t at all ready for a real Russian winter.
Where the idea of a magical train came from
Long ago, back in the middle of the last century, huge celebrations and exhibitions were held in different...

A House With a Scary Name: How One Old Saloon Taught Cities to Preserve Their Stories
Imagine stepping into an old wooden house—and it starts telling you a story, not in words, but through creaking floorboards, scuffed tables, and faded photographs on the walls. That’s exactly how people feel when they visit the “Blood Bucket” saloon in the small American town of Virginia City. The building was almost torn down. But it was saved—and that act of saving changed how many towns think about their historic buildings.
Why Is the Saloon Called “Blood Bucket”?
Just the name alone sounds...

Words That Survived a Whole Battle: The Story of Chief Seattle
Have you ever wondered what real story lies behind every city name? Seattle is one of the best-known cities in America. It’s a rainy

People Who Saved the River by Simply Stopping Work
Imagine this: you work at a huge factory that smells of fish, your hands are constantly wet and cold, and outside the window a beautiful river flows—yet there are almost no fish left in it. That’s what life looked like for Filipino workers in salmon canneries in the U.S. state of Oregon in 1933. And when they decided to stop and say “no,” they didn’t just save themselves—they helped save the river.
Who were Filipino workers, and why did they come so far?
In the early 20th century, thousands of...
Fish That Remember the Way Home: How a Small Window Changed a Big City
Imagine you’re sailing very far from home — so far that all around you is only the endless ocean. Years pass. And then, suddenly, you know exactly where to go to return to the very spot where you were born. Not just back to your city — but to your street, to your house. This is exactly what salmon are able to do as they pass through the Ballard Locks in Seattle. And this discovery — made in part by ordinary schoolchildren — changed the way the entire city thinks about its rivers.
A Door Between...

A city under a city: how Seattle hid an entire street underground
Imagine walking down an ordinary street, going into a shop for ice cream — and then realizing that right under your feet there’s another street. With old storefronts, sidewalks, and even doors that nobody had opened for more than a hundred years. That’s exactly how Seattle is: a city with a secret lower level.
The fire that changed everything
In 1889, Seattle suffered a real disaster. A carpenter accidentally knocked over a kettle of hot glue, and a fire broke out. Wooden buildings caught fire...

The Troll Who Befriended an Entire City: How One Sculpture Changed Everything
Imagine a dark, dirty place under a massive bridge—somewhere nobody wanted to go. It was scary, unpleasant, and dangerous. Now imagine that a giant troll lives there, and that every resident in the neighborhood absolutely adores him: they bring him gifts and take photos next to him, like he’s an old friend. That’s exactly what happened in Seattle, in the Fremont neighborhood, where the famous Troll under the Aurora Bridge appeared in 1990. And this story isn’t just about a sculpture. It’s a...
Opinions

Seattle's World Cup Week: What's Happening Now and What's Coming Next
Seattle, June 18, 2026 — A guide to FIFA World Cup 2026 in Seattle: match recaps, the next Seattle Stadium fixtures, free fan celebrations around...

Seattle's World Cup Week: June 17, 2026
Seattle, June 17, 2026 — A guide to FIFA World Cup 2026 in Seattle: yesterday's tournament action and today's outlook, the next ten days of matches...