Culture Black Arts Legacies: Modernist spaces with Northwest flavor Benjamin F. McAdoo Jr. changed Seattle’s cityscape, pairing sleek buildings with a civic-minded approach to his work. by Jasmine Mahmoud / June 23, 2022
Culture Podcast | The afterlives of Seattle’s groundbreaking Black Arts/West theater Though the Madrona theater closed in 1980, several artists trace their current work to its heyday. by Brooklyn Jamerson-Flowers / June 22, 2022
Inside Cascade PBS When meeting journalistic standards is not enough Maleeha Syed's recent reporting on birth doulas taught her that what’s fair game in journalism can still cause harm. by Maleeha Syed / June 21, 2022
Culture Afrofuturism reigns at Seattle museums this June MoPOP and the Museum of Museums explore a galaxy of Black culture by way of science fiction, fashion and art installations. by Margo Vansynghel / June 20, 2022
Culture Black Arts Legacies: Shaping the Seattle sound Seattle music pioneer Dave Lewis defined Northwest rock. Now, The Black Tones are helping him carry the legacy forward. by Tifa Tomb / June 17, 2022
Culture ArtSEA: Summer celebrations from solstice to Juneteenth Plus, an immersive new show on Capitol Hill lands evolved alien life in Seattle. by Brangien Davis / June 16, 2022
Culture Black Arts Legacies: The visceral verse of poet Anastacia-Reneé With an emphasis on experimentation, the artist’s practice is ever expanding. by Kemi Adeyemi / June 16, 2022
Inside Cascade PBS How we decided what stories to tell in our Black Arts Legacies project Project editors Jasmine Mahmoud and Kemi Adeyemi discuss their approach to the history of Black artists building culture 'against all odds.' by Caroline Gerdes / June 16, 2022
Culture Podcast | A history of many hopes at the NW African American Museum The Central District institution has a complicated backstory and an important role to play for Seattle's Black arts community. by Brooklyn Jamerson-Flowers / June 15, 2022
Inside Cascade PBS Roe v. Wade was never the whole story As a teenager, reporter Megan Burbank thought the gains her mother’s generation made for equality were here to stay. As a journalist, she found the opposite was true. by Megan Burbank / June 14, 2022