Bowen Yang, the “Wicked” actor and “Saturday Night Live” comedian, said he's in favor of having the Sundance Film Festival move to Salt Lake City, with some events remaining in Park City, rather than leave Utah entirely.
The National Weather Service has issued a winter storm warning for the Wasatch and Western Uinta mountains, which could receive up to 2 feet of snow or more over the weekend and into early next week. The agency also issued a winter weather advisory that covers the central mountains, which could receive up to a foot of new snow.
And then there were three. But how did we get here? The naming of Utah’s hockey franchise — currently known as Utah Hockey Club — has become a dramatic, lengthy process because of copyright issues in seemingly every direction.
For now, it is going by a generic placeholder name, the Utah Hockey Club. As the team underwent its rapid move in the spring (normally, sports franchise relocations unfold over years, not months), its new ownership began to submit a flurry of trademark applications for possible names.
In her State of the City address, Erin Mendenhall said the city is focused on public safety, affordable housing.
Utah leaders, locals and longtime attendees of the Sundance Film Festival are making their final push to keep the world-renowned independent film festival in the state as its directors consider uprooting it.
The long-term future of Smith’s Ballpark is finally becoming clear a little more than two years after the Salt Lake Bees announced they would be moving out. The 31-year-old baseball stadium will be "repurposed" to serve as an entertainment venue with creative spaces and retail,
A new website strives to make Salt Lake City's affordable housing efforts more transparent. It offers a better look into funding sources and project locations.
The Utah Hockey Club has chosen three finalists for the permanent team name it will adopt beginning with the 2025-26 NHL season. Yeti isn’t one of them.
As Sundance Film Festival organizers consider leaving for Colorado or Ohio, Utah’s governor is making a final financial push to keep the annual event in its longtime home.
“Imagine being in Moab in 40 minutes,” said Aaron Starks, president of 47G. “Imagine living in Huntsville, Utah, or Logan, where I grew up, and being able to fly to Salt Lake in 16 minutes. … That’s the reality, and it’s here.”
A new report highlighting Salt Lake City's place among the country's hottest housing markets is sure to elicit simultaneous cheers and eye rolls across northern Utah.