SEATTLE Sky incident, Seattle tragedy, and a WNBA win: news digest
In this edition: an incident involving a Boeing 737 Ryanair flight, in which a passenger was partially sucked out through a broken window; the fatal death of a suspect during an arrest in Seattle; and the Atlanta Dream’s win over the Seattle Storm in women’s WNBA action, snapping a losing streak.
Boeing 737 incident: passenger partially sucked out through broken window, sources say
A Boeing 737 passenger jet operated by Irish low-cost carrier Ryanair made an emergency landing in Greece after an...
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EVENTS Summer in Seattle: events from July 10 to 17, 2026
Mid-July in Seattle promises to be as packed as possible: from sea and farmers’ festivals to craft fairs, major parades, and evening strolls through...

EVENTS Events in Seattle: August–September 2026 plan (as of July 10)
This is a roundup for early planning: starting July 10, 2026, you can pick ahead of time where to go in Seattle in August and September—from baseball...
USA Pressure, Safety and Priorities: What These News Stories Have in Common
If you look at these three reports together, it becomes clear that they share one key theme: in the United States, very different—but equally...

WEATHER 🌤️ 10-Day Weather Forecast for Seattle, Washington
Today, July 10th, Friday. In the morning, partly cloudy skies, temperature around 59°F, with a northeast wind of 1 mph. During the day, expect sunny...

WORLD Venezuela after the earthquake: damage, investment and challenges
A double earthquake that struck Venezuela on June 24 caused massive damage: according to a technical report by UNDRR, direct physical losses were...

WORLD Iranian Slogans of “Death to Traitors” at Khamenei’s Funeral Split the Elite
At the funeral of former Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei in Mashhad, shortly before the burial, not only the customary calls of “Death to America” and...
SEATTLE Sale of the “Seahawks”: two bidders and a record; Raleigh injury tied to the WBC
In the digest: the race to buy the Seattle Seahawks has reached its final stage—two main contenders have been identified, with a record sum expected...

WORLD Trump’s Hardline Foreign Policy: Iran, Allies, and the Fallout
In this episode, attention focuses on how the US president’s tough line on the world stage triggers a wave of reactions and doubts—especially in...

WORLD Qatar steps up diplomacy to de-escalate the US-Iran conflict
On Thursday, Qatar’s prime minister and foreign minister, Sheikh Muhammad bin Abdulrahman Al Thani, held a series of phone calls with the foreign...
Seattle

Leonard Williams — NFL’s top defensive tackle; Seattle’s transit grinds to a halt
ESPN has named the Seahawks defender the best at his position. On the morning of April 17, a power outage shut down Sound Transit light rail,...

Wildfire near Seattle: Vantage residents evacuated, I-90 closed
A fast-moving wildfire in the Vantage area in Kittitas County has prompted authorities to issue a mandatory evacuation and close the interstate...

Power outage paralyzed Seattle’s trams
On Thursday morning in Seattle, due to power issues, Link Light Rail trains were halted on the segment between Northgate and Capitol Hill. Both lines...
Copper Theft and a Forest Fire in Washington
In Seattle, a suspect in the theft of copper wire from a bridge has fled; the damage is $100,000. In the city of Vantage in Washington, a forest fire...

Seattle incidents: stabbing, car theft and death on an e-bike
In Seattle, a man was hospitalized after being stabbed in a student area; the suspect fled on a stolen bicycle. In West Seattle, police detained a...

Seattle Sports: Husky Triumph and Mariners’ Trade Deadline Dilemma
A look at the biggest stories out of Seattle: the women’s team at the University of Washington won the Big Ten championship for the first time,...
Seattle: machete attack on a bus, woman killed after being hit by train
Seattle saw two high-profile incidents: a man with a machete smashed a bus after being refused boarding, and in Carkeek Park, a woman died after...
Seattle: conviction, camps and teen’s death
In Seattle, a man has been convicted of human trafficking. Residents in Mount Baker are concerned about the return of tent encampments, and a...
Seattle News Digest: Tragedy, the World Cup and Hockey
Three people were injured in an explosion of a found firecracker in Kent. The United States national team lost to Belgium in a simulated 2026 World...
Neighbors

British Columbia Hotels Named Best, Nurse Strike Backed, and Rescue
In brief: four hotels in British Columbia made Travel + Leisure’s list of Canada’s best city hotels; police patrolling the waters during the World Cup saved 11 people from an overturned canoe off West Vancouver; and well-known influencer Nurse Blake backed striking nurses in the province, who are calling for improved working conditions.
Travelers Choose British Columbia: Four Province Hotels Named the Best in Canada
Each year, Travel + Leisure publishes its prestigious World’s Best Awards, and...

Crash, picket and an island: British Columbia news digest
A fatal crash on the Sea to Sky highway tied up traffic, Vancouver nurses took to picketing, and the price of a private island dropped by $150,000.
Sea to Sky crash in British Columbia: fatal collision leaves thousands stuck in traffic
A tragedy on one of Canada’s most scenic—but also most dangerous—roads has again brought safety concerns back to the spotlight. On Sunday, on the Sea to Sky Highway connecting Vancouver to the Whistler ski resort, there were two collisions, one of which resulted...

British Columbia: strike, a nonstop swim, and orcas
Metro Vancouver is on strike, a woman is preparing a record-setting swim across Okanagan Lake, and orcas were spotted in Vancouver Harbour.
Metro Vancouver parks strike: more than 100 workers walk out indefinitely
Over the weekend, more than 100 Metro Vancouver regional park employees announced an indefinite strike, stopping cleaning, repairs, trail maintenance, and first-aid services for visitors. As reported by CBC News, the union representing workers (Greater Vancouver Regional District...

British Columbia: strike, missing person and football triumph
Vancouver nurses have announced picketing due to staffing shortages. Police are searching for a woman whose car was found on a ferry. Switzerland’s national team advanced to the Round of 16 at the World Cup.
British Columbia nurses announce picket outside Vancouver hospital: strike escalation
The British Columbia Nurses’ Union (BCNU) announced that it will begin picketing Vancouver General Hospital starting Tuesday at 5:30 a.m. local time. It is the first time since 1989 that nurses have taken...

British Columbia: nurses strike, condo buyouts, and home prices fall
In this edition: B.C. nurses step up their protest with a picket at the province’s largest hospital; the government buys unsold condos for affordable housing, but developers criticize the plan; Fraser Valley home prices are down 26% from the 2022 peak, and the market remains sluggish due to high interest rates.
B.C. nurses escalate strike: picket planned at Vancouver General Hospital
The British Columbia Nurses’ Union (BCNU) says it plans to hold a picket at Vancouver General Hospital (VGH) on...

British Columbia and Canada Agreements: Housing, Infrastructure, Environment
The governments of British Columbia and Ottawa have struck a series of agreements: buying unsold condos to create affordable housing, a multi-billion-dollar deal to develop ports with a ban on oil tankers, and a framework for developing Vancouver Island.
Eby compares the condo purchase plan to a “liquidation sale”: government buys unsold housing below construction cost
British Columbia Premier David Eby and Prime Minister Mark Carney announced a sweeping program to buy unsold condos and turn...

World Cup in Vancouver: Restaurants up, hotels down
Restaurants and bars in Vancouver are seeing record revenue thanks to Canada’s national team matches, but hotels and shops on Granville Island are facing a drop in demand due to high prices and the way fans are spread across the region. Provincial authorities, despite an uneven impact, are forecasting a long-term tourism boom and are already building mini-fields as a legacy of the tournament.
Vancouver’s World Cup promises an economic boom—but delivers uneven results
British Columbia is...

“Giants” Move, Housing Deal and Search Off Vancouver’s Coast
The Vancouver Giants are relocating to Surrey with a new 10,000-seat arena; British Columbia developers are skeptical about the Carney-Eby housing deal to reduce development fees; and a search continues off the coast of Vancouver for six people who went missing after four were rescued.
Vancouver Giants Move to Surrey: 10,000-Seat Hockey Arena
The Western Hockey League (WHL) Vancouver Giants are preparing for another move — this time to Surrey, one of the fastest-growing cities in British...
USA

The Strait of Hormuz is once again a frontline
The first clear takeaway from all the material is this: the central story here is not simply another round of exchanges of blows between the United States and Iran, but the struggle for control of the Strait of Hormuz—one of the most important nodes of global energy and maritime trade. Escalation has once again swirled around it, and Donald Trump’s political rhetoric, the actions of CENTCOM, Tehran’s response, the alarm of the Arab monarchies, and rising oil prices all add up to a single...

When stress, power and trust break down
If you look at these three stories together, one common theme emerges: the fragility of the systems that underpin everyday confidence. In one case, it’s local power and the police in a small town in West Virginia, where the sudden removal of an entire department sparked suspicions of abuse and a lack of transparency. In the second, it’s international security, where the United States and Iran are again sending hard signals after the breakdown of an agreement to halt attacks in the area of the...

Awards, Departures, and Reconsidering Decisions
At first glance, three pieces of news that seem completely unrelated share one important theme: institutional decisions that alter the trajectory of large systems. In one case, it’s about a long tenure in a university—and how one person shapes the reputation and financial strength of an entire institution. In the second, it’s about how an international sports organization is reconsidering a controversial disciplinary decision during the tournament itself. In the third, it’s about the television...

When symbols, structures and risks become news
Nearly all the texts you sent circle around one big theme—how a fragile moment can instantly change the public agenda. In one case, it’s a sports loss turned into a conspicuous political performance; in another, it’s a real threat of a building collapse in the heart of New York, where human caution and engineering decisions matter more than any flashy gestures. These stories are very different in scale and tone, but they share a common nerve: when tension reaches its limit, it’s not...

The Fragility of Systems Under Pressure
At first glance, these three news stories seem completely different: one is about a scandal in an election campaign in the U.S. state of Maine, another about tensions within NATO amid the war in Ukraine and a conflict with Iran, and the third about a baffling injury suffered by footballer Jordan Henderson after England’s victory. But they share the same underlying narrative: systems that look stable and familiar suddenly prove vulnerable because of a sudden shock, abnormal behavior, or built-up...

When Decisions and Rules Lose Trust
In almost all the stories presented — from a royal scandal in London to a football dispute at the World Cup and to threats to health amid extreme heat in the United States — the same plot keeps recurring: institutions of power are forced to make decisions under pressure, while society increasingly doubts their transparency, consistency, and fairness. Whether it is Buckingham Palace, FIFA, or civil protection services, the main point of contention is not only the decision itself, but also how it...

Sport, endurance and risk: how the body and the elements rewrite the script
At first glance, these three pieces of news seem almost unrelated: Serena Williams is forced to withdraw from the Wimbledon doubles tournament due to a knee injury, Kelsey Pfendler—a California rafting guide—sets a record by crossing the Pacific Ocean alone, and a live Fox News broadcast with Bret Baier is interrupted by a hailstorm warning. But if you zoom out, all three stories say the same thing: even the most prepared people—athletes, travelers, journalists—remain subject to physical...

America Between Fear, a Record, and a Celebration
In three very different news stories — about a shooting in Hampton, about a record-breaking solo crossing of the Pacific, and about a celebratory fireworks show in Washington — a single common thread unexpectedly emerges: how people and society live through the limits of what they can do. In some places, that limit is tied to violence and anxiety; in others, to physical and psychological endurance; and in still others, to the technological and symbolic scale of a national holiday. In one case,...

America as a Stage for Testing and Self-Assertion
The American news gathered in these three pieces, at first glance, is about completely different events: a festive Independence Day program in Washington, a large-scale patriotic project by an artist, and a solo ocean swim that ended with a historic record. But if you look more closely, all three texts are about the same thing—how, in the United States today, national identity is lived not only as an abstract idea, but as public action, spectacle, and a personal challenge. Here, patriotism,...
Reactions

War, NATO and Iran: how the US is reshuffling the balance of power
The world increasingly looks at US foreign policy through the lens of risks and consequences: in some places it is seen as a driver of conflict, in...

How People Abroad View the United States: Independence, Trump, and the Theatricality of...
While at home the United States is marking yet more anniversaries of Independence Day, abroad attention often shifts not to the details of programs...
Ally anxiety and the reshuffling of strategies amid the changing role of the United States
A series of reports about reworking ties with Washington paints an overall picture of cautious concern and pragmatic course corrections. Allies are...
World

Trump posts old video of Rubio criticizing socialism as a con
U.S. President Donald Trump shared on his Truth Social account a 2020 speech in which the current Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, calls “democratic socialism” a Marxist ideology built on a false promise: in exchange for citizens’ personal freedom, they are offered security, free healthcare, and education—but once those in power fail to deliver, it is no longer possible to reclaim the rights that were lost. Rubio stresses that real freedom is not limited to elections—it is the right to choose a...

New U.S. Strikes on Iran: escalation or a war-at-the-edge game?
A recent wave of U.S. airstrikes on Iranian targets and Tehran’s retaliatory actions have once again raised the question of whether the current standoff will grow into a full-scale war or remain a limited conflict amid negotiations. The U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) said it had completed a series of strikes on 90 targets, including air-defense systems, coastal surveillance assets, stockpiles of missiles and drones, and naval infrastructure. In its statement, CENTCOM emphasized that the actions...

A Victory Parade and a Period of Mourning: Iran and the US Await a Deal
As the streets of Tehran filled with hundreds of thousands of mourners at the funeral of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, US President Donald Trump in Washington turned the celebration of Independence Day into a triumphant statement about “total victory” over Iran. Delaying his remarks because of a storm, Trump announced that American forces “sank the entire Iranian fleet — 159 ships — and did it in an instant.” As The Guardian notes, the evening became “the strangest show on Earth”: talk of...

Venezuela assesses the plan to clear rubble in La Guaira after earthquakes
Acting President of Venezuela Delcy Rodríguez held a working meeting with national and international authorities to coordinate the phases of a plan to clear and remove debris in the state of La Guaira. The meeting was attended by the secretaries for public works and digital government, as well as the head of the commission responsible for assessing the suitability of infrastructure. International technical support was provided by Israel’s Ambassador Gassan Tarif and a representative of that...

Oil jumps 5% on U.S.-Iran conflict in the Strait of Hormuz
On Wednesday, global oil prices surged sharply by more than 5% amid heightened military tension between the United States and Iran. The price of the benchmark Brent climbed by $3.9 to reach $78.1 per barrel, while U.S. WTI rose by $3.5 to $74.15. Investors are concerned about the security of supplies from the Persian Gulf region after Washington revoked a license to sell Iranian oil, and both sides exchanged strikes.
The escalation began when the United States carried out airstrikes on Iranian...

US defeat at the World Cup: scandal, criticism, and mockery of “American ambitions”
The story of the United States team’s elimination from the World Cup quickly went beyond an ordinary sports recap: international attention converged on disappointment, unpleasant episodes, and a growing wave of criticism. Not only the results of the matches came under scrutiny, but also questions about the coaching staff’s work—and how the team is perceived at a moment when more is expected of it. Amid controversial decisions and sharp assessments, there are also biting comments from abroad:...

New Attacks on Tankers in the Strait of Hormuz: Two Vessels Damaged
Two attacks on oil tankers in the Strait of Hormuz have triggered a new wave of concern about the safety of shipping through this key maritime corridor. The incidents occurred amid a fragile truce between the United States and Iran, as ship traffic gradually began to resume. According to British sources, one of the tankers caught fire after being hit by a projectile, but no crew members were injured. Analysts warn that the intensity of the attacks could return to the level seen before the...

Luis Eduardo Martínez calls for consensus to save Venezuela
The rector of the Central University of Technology of Venezuela, Luis Eduardo Martínez, said that only a nationwide consensus will make it possible to quickly restore the economy and save thousands of families affected by the crisis. He emphasized that, despite the deep pain caused by the tragedy of June 24 (in which hundreds of people died), the best tribute to the victims is to build an entirely different, united nation. Martínez recalled that in 1811 it was national unity that helped...

Iran Warns the US: Respect the Memorandum, or There Will Be No Talks
Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi said on Tuesday that Washington must abide by the memorandum of understanding signed between the two countries and stop issuing threats. He stressed that talks on a final agreement would not begin as long as the American side continues to use the language of ultimatums. In a post on the social media platform X, the diplomat noted that millions of Iranians had rallied together and that no threats would intimidate them.
Citing paragraph 13 of the document...
Knowledge

Reporters Without Credentials: How Seattle Invented News for Everyone
Imagine this: in your city, something very important is happening—but the big TV networks only show what they’ve been allowed to film. Everything else feels as if it doesn’t exist. That’s almost what happened in Seattle in November 1999. But a small group of people with cameras and laptops decided it wouldn’t be that way. And they changed how the whole world finds out about the news—forever. They did it in a tiny room, with no money and no authorization.
A Big Meeting—and Even Bigger...

Кто построил стеклянные шары: невидимые строители самого известного места Сиэтла
If you’ve ever seen photos of the huge glass spheres in the center of Seattle — the ones that look like space greenhouses or bubbles from another planet — you’ve probably wondered who came up with them. Maybe architects with beautiful blueprints. Or engineers with computers. But here’s a question that almost nobody asks: who built them? Who held a hammer, lifted glass panels, and mixed concrete in rainy Seattle mornings? The answer is a whole hidden story the city almost forgot forever.
How one...

The City Named After a Person Who Didn’t Want It
Imagine someone deciding to name an entire city after you. Sounds like a fairy tale, doesn’t it? But what if you didn’t want it at all—and were even a little afraid? That’s exactly what happened to a chief named Si’ahl, whom settlers anglicized as Seattle. And it’s his name that one of America’s best-known cities carries today.
Who was Chief Seattle, really?
Si’ahl was born around 1786 and was a chief of the Duwamish people—people who lived along rivers and inlets in the places where...

A Log Road That Hid Underground
Imagine walking down an ordinary street—and right under your feet there’s another street. With old shop windows, sidewalks, and even streetlights. That’s exactly how one of Seattle’s most unusual neighborhoods is set up: beneath the asphalt, a whole city is hidden—and it all began with a single wooden log road.
The Road Where Giants Slid
Long ago, in 1852, a man named Henry Yesler built a sawmill in Seattle—a large machine that cut trees into boards. But there was one problem: the forest grew...

Bubbles That Changed the City: How Ordinary Curious People Invented a New Seattle
Imagine you love, say, lemonade so much that you decide to make it yourself—right in your kitchen. You read books, ask questions, repurpose old pots and pans, and in the end you come up with a flavor that you can’t find anywhere in the store. Then your friends taste it—and they also want to try making it. And their friends. And before you know it, the whole neighborhood is drinking your lemonade, and then entire little lemonade workshops start popping up all over the city. That’s essentially...

Hammers in the Dark: Who Really Built Seattle’s Defense
Imagine this: night, January, cold wind blowing in from the bay. A small town at the edge of a vast forest. People know that by morning, fighting could begin. And someone—out in the dark, fast, never wasting a minute—drives nails, hauls timbers, and builds walls behind which others can hide. Almost none of these people were ever remembered. Their names never made it into textbooks. But without them, Seattle’s story might have ended very differently.
A Battle Everyone Doesn’t Know All About
On...

A tower with a celebration at the top—and musicians who weren’t let in
Imagine the tallest building on the entire West Coast of America. White, elegant, like a huge candle on a birthday cake. This is the Smith Tower in Seattle—it was built in 1914, and for years people looked up at it, both literally and figuratively. At the very top was the “Chinese Room”—a luxurious banquet hall with carved wooden panels imported from China, and an observation deck from which the whole city lay in plain view. That’s where, in the 1920s, dressed-up guests swirled in dances,...

A Log Road and a Table Where No Outsiders Sat
Imagine a road that wasn’t built from stone or asphalt—it was laid out of massive, grease-smeared logs so that the cut trees could slide straight to the sea. This road existed in Seattle more than 150 years ago, and for a long time the city tried to forget it. But when historians and archaeologists started digging—literally, with shovels—they uncovered something unexpected: on this slick, tar- and resin-smelling street, something rare and very important once took place.
A Road Where Trees Were...

The bridge that floats: how hard times gave Seattle a miracle
Imagine a bridge that doesn’t sit on the bottom of a lake, but simply… floats. Like a giant raft. Like a massive little ship you can drive across. It sounds like something out of a fairy tale—but such bridges really do exist in Seattle, and their story didn’t begin with a grand invention. It began during a very difficult time, when many people lost their jobs and didn’t know what to do next.
When everything fell apart
In 1929, a major disaster struck America. It’s called the Great Depression....