SEATTLE Sports Digest: Dominant Wins and Historic Records
Today's edition is dedicated to standout events in the sports world: Toronto Tempo’s rout of the Seattle Storm, a phenomenal month of home runs from the Seattle Mariners’ trio, and the Mariners’ dramatic extra-inning comeback win over Arizona.
The second half decided it all: Toronto Tempo crush Seattle Storm 93–72
This game was truly a tale of two halves. After an even first half, with teams trading precise shots and neither able to gain a decisive edge, Toronto Tempo essentially steamrolled...
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USA The Cost of a Record: How We Tell Stories of Human Effort and Risk
In three seemingly unrelated news items — a historic decathlon day in Götzis, the kickoff of a Senate campaign in Massachusetts, and tragic crime...

NEIGHBORS Crisis and Recognition: News from Vancouver
A roundup of key events from Vancouver: an attack on a residence, a housing market crisis and international recognition for local...

SEATTLE Movies, Baseball and Cats: Seattle News
A look at recent events in Seattle: the new horror film Passenger brought up to $10 million to the city, a Mariners pitcher released a bobblehead...

SEATTLE Seattle is tired of expanding the light rail — maybe it’s enough?
Good news: after decades of struggle, the Seattle area finally has a fairly good light-rail system. The bad news — its expansion has run into...

EVENTS What to do in the Seattle area: the coming week (May 30 — June 6, 2026)
The holiday weekend in the Seattle area looks busy: from large stadium and amphitheater concerts and outdoor rock shows to intimate jazz evenings and...

EVENTS Event planner: June 30 – July 26, 2026
This roundup is compiled for advance planning of your concerts, matches, and festivals in the New York/Seattle area (period from June 30 to July 26,...

SEATTLE Seattle: sports, transit and the fight against gun violence
Overview of key events in Seattle: the Mariners start a home series against Arizona, a transportation crunch from shutdowns ahead of the World Cup,...

WEATHER 🌤️ 10-day weather forecast for Seattle, Washington
Today, 05/30, Seattle will be cloudy with some clearing by midday. High around 63°F and low around 45°F. Wind WNW at 7 mph. Humidity 62%, UV index 7...

WORLD Jorge Rodríguez announced fuel deliveries for Trujillo farmers
Chairman of the Venezuelan National Assembly Jorge Rodríguez announced the allocation of four tankers of diesel fuel for the agricultural sector of...
Seattle

Sound Transit board rejects prioritizing Ballard light-rail line
The board of Sound Transit, the transit agency responsible for major regional projects in King, Pierce and Snohomish counties, on July 18 rejected a...

Rocket Explosion, Transit Shifts and a Soccer Challenge
In the digest: a Blue Origin New Glenn rocket explosion threatens Bezos’s, Amazon’s and NASA’s projects; Sound Transit delays the Ballard line,...

One Year Later: How Washington's Controversial Rent Cap Is Working
For a year now, Washington state has had a law limiting rent increases. Yet despite numerous violations, not a single cent in fines has yet reached...

Storm in Washington: lightning, hail and shelter at a concert
On Thursday evening, severe thunderstorms struck central and eastern parts of Washington state, bringing lightning, hail and wind gusts up to 112...

After tank collapse, contaminated water diluted through drainage system
In Longview, Washington, the collapse of a 900,000-gallon tank at the Nippon Dynawave Packaging plant caused a release of the industrial chemical...

Bold proposal: save the Ballard light rail line
In an effort to rescue the light rail project to Seattle’s Ballard neighborhood, city councilmember Dan Strauss has put forward a radical proposal:...

Court decision on racial discrimination at Seattle Children’s upheld
The Washington State Court of Appeals unanimously affirmed a jury verdict that ordered Seattle Children’s to pay $21 million to Dr. Benjamin...

Luxury and Layoffs: Zuckerberg's Yacht in Seattle
Today's digest brings together three main Seattle topics: the contrast between Mark Zuckerberg's $300 million superyacht and mass layoffs at Meta,...

Teen's family drops lawsuit against Seattle after dangerous structures removed
The family of a 14-year-old Ballard High School student who died after falling at Gas Works Park last year has dropped a lawsuit against the city of...
Neighbors

Metro Vancouver: Transit on the Brink of Collapse and a Busy Weekend
Transportation scandal, dangerous driving and festival listings — a digest of news from Vancouver. Transit workers have voted to authorize a possible strike, a driver was caught speeding and impaired, ruining a camping trip, and the city is preparing for a busy weekend with dragon boat races and food events.
Metro Vancouver Transit Workers Nearly Unanimously Authorize Strike
Transit workers across Metro Vancouver made a powerful statement by voting nearly unanimously to authorize a strike. This...

Vancouver Tragedies and Mysteries: News Digest
The digest presents three key stories from Vancouver: a tragic collision involving an elderly man in a motorized wheelchair, provincial officials debunking rumours of evicting unhoused people ahead of the 2026 World Cup, and the mysterious death of a woman kayaker whose identity investigators are trying to determine using pollen analysis.
Tragedy in Vancouver: elderly man dies after being struck by car, police consider mental health angle
A dramatic story is unfolding in Vancouver, Canada, one...

Tragic Week for Divers in British Columbia
Fatal scuba deaths, Kelowna’s culinary recognition and a bear attack in Squamish — the top British Columbia news of the past few days.
Tragic week off British Columbia’s coast: second diver dies during a dive in days
Over the past several days there have been two fatal incidents involving scuba diving off the coast of British Columbia. Last Sunday, at about 1:30 p.m. local time, West Vancouver police received a report of a diver in distress near Whytecliff Park. Despite the prompt response from...

Tragedies and Scandals: British Columbia News Digest
Two divers died off the province’s coast in a week, the Squamish First Nation denies a fake land-claim letter, and Vancouver hotels sit empty ahead of the 2026 World Cup blamed on poor PR.
Tragedy off Canadian shores: second diver dies in British Columbia in a week
A second diving-related tragedy in as many days occurred in the waters of British Columbia. This time the victim was a 50-year-old man who died while diving off West Vancouver. The incident took place in the area of the popular...

Vancouver news digest: from nurses' strike to cultural events
British Columbia nurses reached a tentative agreement with the government, avoiding a strike. A missing Vancouver actor was found dead; police suspect homicide. The last week of May in Vancouver promises 20 bright events: from The Black Keys concert to a shrimp festival.
British Columbia nurses and the provincial government reach tentative agreement
The British Columbia Nurses' Union (BCNU) announced a tentative agreement with the provincial government after several months of tense...
![VANCOUVER, BC., October 25, 2023 - Don Taylor during a ceremony inducting him into the BC Hall Sports Hall of Fame in Vancouver, B.C., on October 25,, 2023.
(NICK PROCAYLO/POSTMEDIA)
10102670A [PNG Merlin Archive]](https://smartcdn.gprod.postmedia.digital/theprovince/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/0523-col-hall-1.jpg)
Championship Shame and a Seal's Rescue: British Columbia News
In the digest: The B.C. Sports Hall of Fame is closed during the World Cup, drawing journalists' ire; a touching rescue story of a seal pup named "The Survivor"; and the opening of a unique Indigenous-led housing complex in Vancouver with 248 units.
Shame and missed opportunity: B.C. Sports Hall of Fame closed during the World Cup
While the world’s attention is on Vancouver and the city’s streets are filled with soccer fans from every continent, the local B.C. Sports Hall of Fame found itself...

Canadian Digest: Bridges, Tourism and Resources
A roundup of news about a major $200-million seismic upgrade to Vancouver’s Cambie Street Bridge, the revocation of a license from a rogue travel agency in British Columbia, and Prime Minister Carney’s visit to the province to discuss advancing the resource economy amid energy disputes.
Under the shadow of seismic safety: Vancouver bridge to receive $200 million for strengthening
Vancouver, British Columbia, provincial, and federal governments, together with transit agency TransLink, announced...
USA

Courts, Power, and Oversight: How U.S
In three, at first glance different, stories — about renaming the Kennedy Center, halting a multibillion-dollar "anti-weaponization" fund, and a journalism award for reporting on prominent cases — a single thread runs through: a struggle over the limits and rules of power in American democracy. Federal judges, journalists, and civil-rights organizations are engaged, in different ways but essentially the same task: trying to prevent political interests from supplanting law, institutions, and...

Justice, Politics and Violence: How Private Conflicts Blend with State Power
The stories described in pieces by NBC News, Sky News and WTAE at first glance seem entirely different: a criminal probe tied to a lawsuit against Donald Trump, an exchange of strikes between the US and Iran in the Strait of Hormuz, and a workplace dispute in Pennsylvania that ended in a killing. Yet all three reveal a common thread: how conflicts — from interpersonal to geopolitical — turn into violence, and how the justice system and state institutions function (or fail to) at those...

Crises of Trust: From Politics to Security and Justice
The images that arise from reading three news pieces at first glance seem unrelated: the scandal-plagued Democratic primary campaign of Graham Platner in Maine, a manhunt for a suspected killer in Hawai‘i, and an industrial disaster at a chemical plant in Louisville. But looking beyond the facts to the meaning, all three stories form a single narrative — about a crisis of trust in the institutions that are supposed to protect us: political parties, the courts, the police, industrial firms and...

Violence, Polarization and the Fragility of the Democratic Fabric
In three seemingly very different stories – the killing of a veteran in California, intensive Israeli strikes on Nabatieh in southern Lebanon, and an intraparty Democratic fight in Texas – a common thread emerges: political violence and extreme polarization as means of pressure and power struggle. These narratives unfold at different scales – from the entrance of a private home to an entire region and from a Houston neighborhood to the international stage. But in each case you can see how...

Infrastructure Vulnerability: From Europe's Water to US Plants and Politics
The modern world increasingly reveals how fragile the systems we rely on every day are: water, energy, industry, elections, democratic institutions. Stories from different countries and sectors — from Euronews’s environmental project about water in Europe to the tragedy at a paper mill in Washington state and the political conflict over redistricting in South Carolina — at first glance seem unrelated. But viewed more broadly, a common thread emerges: infrastructures that are supposed to provide...

Fragile Minds Under Pressure: How Fear, Fame and "Wellness" Become Threats
Stories from different news sources at first glance seem unrelated: a local WTHR report about daily news and weather, a detailed Fox News piece about a "wellness cult" that Game of Thrones actress Hannah Murray says she joined, and a local crime report from WRAL about a North Carolina man who, under the influence of drugs, believed his house was being broken into and began shooting while children were present. But viewed more broadly, a single theme runs through these texts: the fragility of...

Everyday Emergencies and Our Vulnerability: From Wildfires to Street Violence
What often lands in the "Breaking news" section usually looks like a set of unrelated local stories: here — a brush fire in a rural area, there — a fatal stabbing in a residential neighborhood, somewhere else — a brazen theft from a small restaurant. But when you look at those reports together, as in the notes about the fire near Cheney, Washington on krem.com, the fatal stabbing in Grand Rapids on WZZM13 and the theft at Pig Candy BBQ on WLWT, a more coherent picture emerges. All of these...

Security, Violence, and Political Tension in Today's America
The American information space, even when viewed through these three seemingly unconnected news items, forms a rather grim but coherent picture: a country where anxiety about security has become an everyday backdrop — from the perimeter of the White House to a provincial Walmart in Florida and street‑level politics from New York to Alabama. The main throughline here is the combination of a real rise in violence risk, political polarization and mistrust, which pushes authorities to tighten...

Fragile Security: How Emergency Services Respond to Technical and Violent Threats
The incident with a failing chemical tank in Orange County and the parallel reports of a SWAT team storming a house in a small Pennsylvania town seem like stories from different worlds. In reality they are united by one thing: how modern societies live in a state of constant crisis readiness, where any infrastructure error or isolated violent incident can, within minutes, become a threat to thousands of people and requires complex coordination among emergency services, authorities, and experts....
Reactions

How America Became a Trigger: Russia, South Africa and Brazil Rethink the US
In recent weeks the United States has again found itself at the center of other countries’ domestic agendas — not so much because of Washington...

How the world sees America today: elections, wars and "leadership fatigue"
At the turn of summer 2026, attention to the United States outside the country is once again focused not on the economy or technological...

Washington Between Tehran, Beijing and Brasília: How the World Sees Trump’s New America
At the end of May 2026, the United States again finds itself at the center of global disputes — not only as a military and economic superpower, but...
Washington Under Fire: How Russia, Israel and Saudi Arabia Debate the US Role
Since late February 2026 the United States has once again found itself at the center of global disputes — not so much because of domestic elections...
“America Again at the Center of Others’ Debates”: How Brazil, India and Japan Discuss the US...
In Brazil, India and Japan, the United States simultaneously appears as an ally, a source of risk, and the main reference point that countries try to...
How the world views America today: war with Iran, Ukraine and "fatigue with the US" in Europe and the...
By the end of May 2026, discussion of the United States around the world almost automatically boils down to three major storylines. The first is the...

Washington Between Tehran and Jerusalem: Allies Clash Over US War with Iran
Around the United States today a political orbit has once again formed: a US–Israel war with Iran, Donald Trump’s attempts both to finish off Tehran...

How the World Debates America: Europe Cools, China Tallies the Costs of Hegemony, India Weighs a...
Around the United States a dense wave of international reactions is once again gathering — from concern to outright irritation, from pragmatic...
Venezuela, Ukraine and the Gulf: How the World Sees the US's New Power Projection
Throughout the first months of 2026 the United States once again found itself at the center of global debate — but this time not because of trade...
World

Trump lifted the maritime blockade on Iran: a step toward a deal or a temporary concession?
President of the United States Donald Trump’s announcement that he was lifting the maritime blockade on Iran has sparked heated debate: is this the start of a political agreement or merely a temporary measure in ongoing negotiations? Washington presented the move as part of broader understandings that include reopening the Strait of Hormuz, ensuring freedom of navigation, and reaching an understanding on Tehran’s nuclear program. In response, Iran hastened to say there is no final agreement and...

Lessons of a Failed War: French Criticizes Trump's Iran Strategy
American writer David French sharply criticized Donald Trump's administration for waging a war with Iran, calling it "a visual lesson in how not to wage war." In his view, Washington, despite overwhelming military superiority, failed to achieve its strategic objectives. The picture that officials painted in the first weeks of the fighting proved misleading: they spoke of deafening victories and the complete humiliation of Tehran, while the reality on the ground was much more complicated.
French...

Rodríguez: economic diversification ensured Venezuela's steady growth
Acting President of Venezuela Delcy Rodríguez said on Thursday during the "Against Sanctions and For Peace" pilgrimage in the state of Anzoátegui that economic diversification has been the "wonderful secret" that has allowed the country, despite sanctions, to demonstrate steady growth over the past five years. She emphasized that this path became possible thanks to the development not only of the oil sector but also of other industries.
Rodríguez noted the strategic potential of the eastern...

Fragile Truce with Iran: Expert Predicts New Clashes
Russian Middle East researcher Alexander Svarants believes that the ceasefire agreement with Iran, concluded in early April, was forced and did not ensure a smooth transition to lasting peace. According to him, the absence of durable compromises between the parties leaves the region in an unstable state and threatens a resumption of hostilities. The expert emphasized that this outcome reflects the failure of international mediation efforts, which were unable to create a sustainable basis for...

US strikes Iran, accusing Tehran of breaching ceasefire
At dawn on Thursday, the United States launched new air strikes on southern areas of Iran, hitting, according to an American official, a military facility that posed a threat to U.S. forces and shipping in the Strait of Hormuz. Washington said the actions were "deliberate and purely defensive" and intended to preserve the ceasefire regime. U.S. forces reportedly shot down Iranian drones and struck a ground-based launcher.
U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) accused Iran of violating the ceasefire,...

Trump Sees Venezuela as Key to the Global Energy Market
US President Donald Trump said that America is experiencing an unprecedented energy boom and is a net exporter of oil. He stressed that combining the resources of the US and Venezuela could concentrate up to 64% of the world's oil reserves in their hands. Trump noted that relations between Washington and Caracas are currently "excellent" and are developing smoothly. According to him, under the auspices of new agreements, international corporations are already beginning to develop Venezuelan...

Trump threatened to blow up Oman over the Strait of Hormuz
US President Donald Trump on Wednesday issued a sharp threat toward Oman after reports of possible joint management of the Strait of Hormuz by Iran and the sultanate. When asked whether he would accept a short-term agreement allowing Tehran and Muscat to control the strait, Trump replied: "No, the strait will be open to everyone." Addressing Oman, he added: "This is international waters, and Oman will behave like everyone else, otherwise we'll have to blow them up."
The phrase "blow them up"...

Iran Accuses US of Violating Ceasefire, Warns of Response
Iran has officially accused the United States of a serious violation of the ceasefire after overnight air strikes in the south of the country, calling the actions of a "terrorist army" illegal and unjustified. Tehran vowed not to leave "any evil" unanswered and to defend the Iranian nation without hesitation, although the exact circumstances of the incident were not disclosed. In turn, the US Central Command (CENTCOM) confirmed that it struck launch sites and boats in southern Iran early...

Venezuela's Supreme Court Expanded to 32 Judges
On Monday the Venezuelan government's official gazette published a law reforming the Supreme Court, increasing the number of its judges from 20 to 32. The Constitutional Chamber will now consist of seven magistrates, and each of the other five chambers will have five. National Assembly head Jorge Rodríguez said the expansion is intended to speed up consideration of accumulated cases and combat judicial delays. In connection with this, the Committee on Judicial Appointments has already been...
Knowledge

The Library Everyone Hated — Until Kids Explained Why
Imagine your city is building a new library. But when it finally opens, half of the adults say, "Ugh, how ugly! It looks like a crushed box!" The other half shout, "This isn't a library at all, it's some kind of spaceship!" That's exactly how Seattle residents greeted their new Central Library in 2004. But only a few years later, the same building became the city's most beloved place. What happened? It turns out children understood the secret of this library before the adults did.
The architect...

The building that learned to breathe: how a glass library became the smartest in the world
Imagine a huge house of glass and steel, like a giant sparkling diamond in the middle of the city. You would expect such a building to consume enormous amounts of energy — cold in winter, hot in summer, and light pouring through the glass walls day and night. But the Seattle Central Library, opened in 2004, turned out to be the complete opposite: this glass building uses 30% less energy than building codes require. That's like constructing a home that saves as much electricity as 50 ordinary...

The park that's still healing: why you can't dig in Seattle's strangest park
Imagine your city decided to turn an old, rusty factory into a playground. Not tear it down and build something new, but leave all the pipes, towers and strange iron structures right where children play. Sounds crazy? That's what Seattle residents thought in 1975, when Gas Works Park opened — a place that changed Americans' ideas about what parks should be.
But this story is not only about bold design. It's about how a city tries to fix the mistakes of the past, and why some wounds take a very,...

The road that gave the world a sad word: how Seattle's loggers changed language
Imagine a huge log — so big that three people couldn't wrap their arms around it. Now imagine it sliding down a hillside, leaving a deep, dirty groove behind. That’s what Seattle’s very first “real” street looked like in the 1850s. It was called Skid Road — a road for sliding logs. And nobody then knew that, many years later, that name would become a sad word used around the world.
Henry Yesler and his slippery idea
In 1852 a man named Henry Yesler arrived in the tiny settlement of Seattle. He...

The Fish That Helped Save Thousands: The First Blood-Cleaning Machine
In 1962 a custodian named Frank noticed something strange. Every morning, when he took out the trash from the University of Washington hospital, he walked past a small stream that led to Lake Washington. And every morning he saw more and more dead little fish floating on the surface. Frank was not a scientist. He was not a doctor. But he was an observant person who loved nature. And he decided he had to tell someone about it.
What began with one person noticing dead fish turned into a story...

The Hill Washed into the Sea — What Was Lost
Imagine adults deciding to wash an entire hill straight into the ocean. Not with shovels or trucks — but with giant water cannons that turned earth into liquid mud and sent it down wooden flumes straight into the bay. Sounds like a mad idea from a sci-fi film? But that's exactly what happened in Seattle more than a century ago. This is the story of how a city decided to remake nature, and then — many years later — realized nature had been right all along.
The hill that got in the way of...
The Tower with a Secret Room Where Everyone Was Equal
Imagine you live in a city where the tallest building is only three stories. Then someone suddenly builds a 42-story tower! That’s what happened in Seattle in 1914, when Smith Tower opened. But the most surprising thing wasn’t the exterior — it was at the very top: a hidden magical room, a gift from the Chinese empress, where for the first time in the city’s history everyone — rich and poor, men and women, Americans and newcomers — could sit together and watch the clouds. The tower was meant to...

The Suitcase That Waited 70 Years: What’s Hidden in the Old Walls of Japantown
Imagine one morning you are told: you have a week to pack one suitcase and leave your home. You don’t know when you’ll return. Maybe in a month, maybe never. What will you take with you? That’s what happened to thousands of families in Seattle in the spring of 1942 — and that story still lives in the walls of one special neighborhood in the city.
In Seattle’s old Japantown, now called the International District, there are buildings that remember that spring morning. They remember families...

Brewers Who Broke the Main Rule of Business and Taught a City to Cooperate
In Seattle in the 1980s something strange and wonderful happened. People who opened small breweries did what seemed crazy: they began sharing their secret recipes with competitors. Imagine you invented the world’s best cookie recipe and then told every girl in class who also bakes cookies and sells them at the school fair. Sounds foolish? Many adults would think so. But Seattle’s brewers decided to try it — and a kind of magic happened that changed not only their city, but how people think...