Sundance Film Festival underway, Utah leaders, locals and longtime attendees are making a final push - one that could include paying millions of dollars - to keep the world-renowned film festival as its directors consider uprooting.
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.
The story keeps getting better: the former NBA star easily could call it a career, probably has all the money he ever needs to live comfortably for the rest of
No disrespect to his old school, but don't expect to see Isaiah Thomas back at University of Washington basketball games any time soon. No public-address announ
One former NBA All-Star is back in the league, and his debut performance proves that age is really just a number.
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.
A day after announcing the final three names under consideration, Utah's NHL team is pulling an audible (eh, making a line change?). The Utah Wasatch is being swapped out for Utah Outlaws.
For Park City’s full-time residents, many of whom have grown up with the Sundance Film Festival, the idea of it leaving seems unimaginable.
In her State of the City address, Erin Mendenhall said the city is focused on public safety, affordable housing.
A person lays on a bench near the Salt Lake City Police department and library in Salt Lake City on Tuesday. Salt Lake City Mayor Erin Mendenhall said Tuesday that public safety, homelessness and affordable housing are "urgent" issues the city plans to tackle this year. (Scott G Winterton, Deseret News)