Arts Today 3:00 PM

Mythic Currents

Priscilla Dobler Dzul’s Cosmology Flows From Cenote to Sound 

When she was a child, Priscilla Dobler Dzul wanted to be an Egyptologist. Obsessed by ancient culture, she devoured Egyptian mythology and even practiced mummification under the tutelage of her Scottish American grandmother, a woman passionate about science who instructed Dobler Dzul how to preserve small roadkill with borax and salt. On clear nights in Wollochet Bay far from the haze of urban light, she would also take Dobler Dzul outside to teach her about the stars. “She would talk to us about the cosmologies and mythologies of my history,” Dobler Dzul recalls. “She would tell us, I need you to understand how the planets work and how to study the stars, so you can see what it is that people have always been fascinated by.”

But Dobler Dzul had a hard time wrapping her head around the scientific language of astronomy. Instead, it was the stories her Maya grandfather told that unlocked the mysteries of the heavens. “There’s beauty in astronomy, but I could never grasp it fully,” Dobler Dzul says. “But if you create a story to tell me how the tail of the crocodile was pushing all the stars, or how a giant serpent was eating all these stars and planets, flying through the sky…”

Drawing on the stories passed down from her ancestors is what drives Dobler Dzul’s work as an adult. Dobler Dzul now lives in Tacoma, where she works as an artist. Her solo exhibit, Water Carries the Stories of Our Stars, which opened last month at the Frye Art Museum, brings together a new body of sculpture, textiles, and video that tell a story about the connections threading through the Pacific Northwest and the Yucatán.

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News Today 3:00 PM

Harrell Concedes the Mayor’s Race, and Wilson Takes Her Victory Lap

Bruce Harrell Says “One Seattle” One Last Time

Bruce Harrell conceded the mayoral race to Katie Wilson this afternoon. And he finally said her name in public.

In a packed room full of aides, campaign staff, city council members, and supporters, Harrell announced that he’d already congratulated Katie Wilson on her win, and offered his administration’s support in the transition. He put on his best face.

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EverOut Today 1:41 PM

Ticket Alert: J.I.D, Train, and More Seattle Events Going On Sale This Week

Plus, Jack Johnson and More Event Updates for November 13

Ready for another round of tour announcements? Atlanta rapper and singer J.I.D brings his God Does Like Paradise Tour to the Paramount Theatre in a couple of short months. Train celebrates their hit album Drops of Jupiter with the 25 Years in the Atmosphere Tour next summer. Plus, soft rock singer-songwriter Jack Johnson embarks on his SURFILMUSIC Tour, which shares a name with his forthcoming documentary, in 2026. Read on for details on those and other events going on sale.

ON SALE FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14

MUSIC

AYYBO
The Showbox (Apr 25, 2026)

Benee
The Crocodile (Mar 3, 2026)

Black Label Society
Paramount Theatre (Mar 16, 2026)

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News Today 12:08 PM

Are We Watching the Death of Centerism in American Politics?

The Return of Affordability in Urban and National Politics

What to make of these recent political developments? Seattle has clearly shifted back to the progressive camp. The centrists are sinking, one after the other. Mayor Bruce Harrell is the latest to go under. It is mathematically impossible for him to catch up, and he is expected to concede today.

The remaining members of a center that swelled in the 2023 election (Rob Saka, Robert Kettle, Joy Hollingsworth, Maritza Rivera) are likely to reassess the “public safety” mania  that got them elected and essentially came down to reducing a structurally induced housing crisis and stagnant wages to those who fell through the paper-thin bottom floor of an otherwise very rich city. The centrist Dan Strauss? Never really existed. He was just a dream. Expect him to wake up one of these fine mornings as the progressive he, to save his political career, put to sleep in 2023.

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Katie Wilson Is Our Next Mayor: After more than a week of edging, we can finally call the mayor’s race, and it’s good news people. In the ballot drop yesterday, Wilson was up by 1,976 votes. It’s tight, but it’s mathematically impossible for Harrell to catch up. Katie Wilson will be Seattle’s next mayor. Shortly after the ballots dropped, Bruce Harrell announced that he planned to address the city at noon today. He’ll probably concede.

So What’s Next? Contrary to the narrative Harrell wanted us to believe, Katie Wilson does have a job right now, and someone now has to replace her as the head of the Transit Riders Union. Then it’s transition time. Come January, we’re going to have a whole new government: two new City Council members, a new Council President, a new City Attorney, and a new mayor. We’ll still have some conservatives in the City Council—Bob Kettle, Rob Saka, Maritza Rivera, and Debora Juarez are still comfy in their seats, for now—but our new elected officials represent a real progressive caucus. Councilmember Alexis Mercedes Rinck, who has been a progressive caucus of one for the last year, told The Stranger that she’s excited to help get the newbies up to speed. She has so many spreadsheets to show them, she says.

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News Today 8:27 AM

Starbucks Union Announces Nationwide Strike

Pickets Start in University District, Queen Anne This Morning

Starbucks Workers United (SBWU) kicked off a nationwide strike after six months of trying to negotiate a fair contract with the company. To hit the company where it hurts, the union chose Red Cup Day, a major holiday promotional event and one of the biggest sales days of the year.

“The company has forced us into this fight,” said SBWU spokesperson Michelle Eisen at an online press conference.

More than 1,000 union baristas at 65 stores across 40 cities are striking. In Seattle, workers will picket outside stores in the U-District (4147 University Way NE) and on Queen Anne (1144 Elliott Ave. W) this morning.

At 4 p.m., they’ll rally outside the closed Starbucks Reserve Roastery on Capitol Hill. Eisen said the union is prepared to make this the “largest, longest strike in company history.” Despite warning management of the strike last week, the union said it has not heard from the company.

Workers are asking for higher wages, more hours, better staffing, and an end to the company’s unfair labor practices, hundreds of which remain unresolved.  

Pittsburgh barista Dachi Spoltore said CEO Brian Niccol made $96 million in his first four months on the job. This summer, the company spent $81 million on a “glitzy” management conference in Las Vegas. His workers struggle to get enough hours to qualify for the benefits Starbucks brags about.

“The math just isn’t adding up,” Spoltore said.

Lynne Fox, president of Workers United, has negotiated hundreds of contracts in her career, but has never seen “an employer act with such reckless disregard” of labor laws. The company makes billions, but offers workers little, she said. 

During initial bargaining talks, the union offered Starbucks a “menu” of bargaining options. Starbucks rejected them all, and told the public about a 65 percent pay increase the union never asked for. The company came up with that number by adding all the proposals into one sum, she said. 

“[Starbucks] has no problem spending the money—they’re just not investing it in the right place,” Eisen said. “The investment needs to go to the workers who run these stores every day, whose labor brings in this revenue, the ones who create the relationships with the customers that keeps them coming back.”

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Somewhere, Bruce Harrell is slamming a table. Katie Wilson is up by 1,976 votes and 0.72 percent of the vote. It’s tight, but we’re outside of recount territory, and it’s mathematically impossible for Harrell to catch up. Katie Wilson will be Seattle’s next mayor. 

Wilson has not declared victory yet—on Wednesday night, when her win was all but certain, her team told The Stranger that they’re doing the graceful thing and waiting for Harrell to concede. The Mayor’s office announced that he would be addressing the city at noon on Thursday, so we should expect Wilson to do her victory lap then. 

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Music Yesterday 3:25 PM

The Beat Goes On

Heart’s Ann and Nancy Wilson Reflect on Five Decades of Enduring Magic 

Heart’s spell is enduring. I’ve been under it since I was 10, the tomboy middle sister of three who played the drums, practiced karate, and took music recommendations from my dad. I don’t recall the first time I heard hits like “Barracuda” or “Crazy on You,” but they were always there for me to angrily lip-sync in the mirror when I felt disenfranchised by adults. I worshipped them the way that I saw boys my age worship Led Zeppelin and AC/DC—two bands I never liked. I didn’t prefer Heart because I identified with their femaleness, I preferred Heart because their songs were better.

In Heart’s music, you feel what they feel; they don’t have to say it explicitly. Ann’s lyrics are poetic, Nancy’s guitar solos are nuanced; both are masters of subtlety and power. The way the Wilson sisters communicated through their instruments was something I knew well with my own sisters—a magical connection that can only be described as sorcery.

I was excited for the chance to chat with the Wilson sisters about forthcoming projects, their own teenage music idols, and their Thanksgiving plans. Oh, and smoking weed (a real full-circle moment considering that I rolled my first joint on an LP copy of Dreamboat Annie).

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I, Anonymous Yesterday 12:00 PM

Pickle Dick

You decided that your need for more pickleball courts meant it was okay for you to vandalize an entire basketball court at Lakeridge Park with colored duct tape. Despite the TWO pickleball courts that are already there, you taped down two more “courts” onto the adjacent basketball court. Your egregious white collar vandalism lasted, what, a week? A month? You surely have returned, and know that the top part of the colored duct tape separated shortly after you put it down. It is coming up and blowing all over the park, and what remains is a dirty, sticky mess.

That thin plastic top layer is strewn all about the area in pieces big and small, creating an unsightly mess and a potential wildlife safety issue. There is more to come as the rest degrades as well. The sticky, unsightly remains of the duct tape and its fibers will have to be removed from the court with solvent, if they can even be removed at all.

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Katie Wilson Is Likely Our Next Mayor: ICYMI, Wilson’s lead grew in yesterday afternoon’s ballot drop—she’s up 1,346 votes with 1,355 ballots left uncounted. Remember, if a candidate wins by less than half a percent or less than 2,000 votes, there will be an automatic machine recount. She hasn’t declared victory, and Bruce Harrell hasn’t conceded, but our week-long rollercoaster could come to an end after this afternoon’s ballot drop. In the meantime, make sure your ballot counted! 

Speaking of Emotional Rollercoasters: The House is expected to vote today on the funding bill that would end the government shutdown. Are we fucked re: healthcare costs? Probably! But Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries said that Dems will “seek to amend the bill reopening the federal government to also address expiring Affordable Care Act subsidies.” K. The vote is expected to begin around 5 p.m. EST. Will any local bars be showing it? We should be together at a time like this.

Washington Dems Are Pissed… Mostly: Murray, Jayapal, Cantwell, DelBene, Smith—most local Democrats have made it clear that they’re going to vote against this bill. One hasn’t, though: US Rep. Marie Gluesenkamp Perez, who is up for re-election next year. Gluesenkamp Perez hasn’t said one way or the other as of last night, according to the Seattle Times. Here’s how to contact her office: (360) 695-6292, Instagram, Threads, online contact form.

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News Yesterday 8:00 AM

Seattleites at Budget Hearing Want Housing

Advocates Say the Budget Lacks Appropriate Funds

Katie Wilson is likely Seattle’s next mayor, but for now, we still have a Bruce Harrell administration and a Sara Nelson-led City Council, and these folks are making big budget moves. 

On Thursday, more than 200 people took a break from election-induced nail-biting to speak at the last City Council budget hearing, pleading for a slice of next year’s proposed $8.9 billion budget. While speakers requested funding for everything from food access to community revitalization, the majority of the public commenters were concerned about housing and homelessness.

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Food & Drink Yesterday 4:00 AM

November Things to Do: Food

The Best Food & Drink Events Happening This Month 

Want more? Here's everything we recommend this month: Music, Visual Art, Literature, Performance, Film, Food.

Michael W. Twitty with Kristi Brown

Nov 7

Acclaimed culinary historian, speaker, educator, and independent scholar Michael W. Twitty has dedicated his life’s work to studying African American food and folk culture. His 2017 nonfiction book, The Cooking Gene, which delves deep into the African American culinary history of the South, received two James Beard Awards for literary writing and book of the year. He writes, “Our cuisine, with its grits and black-eyed peas, crab cakes, red rice, and endless variations on the staple foods of the region, casts a spell that, if you’re lucky, gets passed down with snapping string beans at the table and chewing cane on the back porch.” His new cookbook, Recipes From the American South, acquaints readers with that rich tradition in the best way possible, via hands-on recipes for dishes like chicken and dumplings, hummingbird cake, and chorizo dirty rice. Twitty will be joined by Communion chef Kristi Brown for a conversation about the book and the roots of Southern cuisine. (Town Hall Seattle, 7:30–9 pm, all ages) JULIANNE BELL

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Music Yesterday 4:00 AM

November Things to Do: Music

The Best Concerts and Dance Nights Happening This Month

Want more? Here's everything we recommend this month: Music, Visual Art, Literature, Performance, Film, Food.

Ginger Root

Nov 4–5

Once upon a time, Ginger Root’s DIY visionary Cameron Lew told Atwood Magazine he hasn’t considered working with an outside producer because each idea he has “moves so fast that I’m afraid if I lose momentum, then the whole song is going to go away.” Lew’s frantic creative energy is apparent in most everything he puts out. Ginger Root’s most recent full-length, 2024’s SHINBANGUMI, was accompanied by a 20-minute mockumentary about a struggling video producer in 1987 Japan who finds the courage to start his own production company. His live show is no exception. Rounded out by a jumpsuit-clad video-effects specialist wielding a newscast-grade camera for live video mixing, a Ginger Root show is a multimedia delight where every aspect is both unexpected and essential. Lew’s quirky Huntington Beach outfit performs as a quartet (gotta count the cameraman), and if you showed up to Japanese Breakfast’s ZooTunes show in September, for which Ginger Root opened, you already get the draw. Musically, Lew and co. zip between bedroom city pop, goofball soul, and jammy, Mattson 2–esque jazz, all buoyed by Lew’s sketch-comedy banter and nasty electro-slide-whistle riffs. (Crocodile, 8 pm, all ages) TODD HAMM

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Visual Art Yesterday 4:00 AM

November Things to Do: Visual Art 

The Best Art Shows and Events Happening This Month 

Want more? Here's everything we recommend this month: Music, Visual Art, Literature, Performance, Film, Food.

Finally We Have Met: Neon Works by Yale Wolf

Nov 6–18

Yale Wolf stands out among his contemporaries not only as a master of neon, but as a master of mise-en-scène, crafting environments where neon plays both centerpiece and supporting role in larger poetic tableaux. His work reveals a knack for pulling meaning from free-form simulacral doodles and fragmented flourishes designed to illuminate and transform the objects around them, as seen earlier this year in Reclaimed, where pops of neon (steering wheel, sunroof, headlights) detailed the ghostly carcass of a rusted-out scrapyard sedan blistered by fire and pummelled by bullets. Ethereal decadence wreathed in decay! In Finally We Have Met, Wolf is bringing mirrors into the equation, including a nearly six-foot reflecting pool ringed with searing pink barbed wire. Let’s just say it: This exhibition will be a selfie paradise. But that’s no doubt by design—a case where Wolf’s mise-en-scène becomes the site of mise-en-abyme. (Hometeam Gallery) AMANDA MANITACH

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Books Yesterday 4:00 AM

November Things to Do: Literature 

The Best Talks and Readings Happening This Month

Want more? Here's everything we recommend this month: Music, Visual Art, Literature, Performance, Film, Food.

Quan Barry

Nov 5

Poet, novelist, and playwright Quan Barry’s 2019 novel We Ride Upon Sticks—which revolves around a girls’ high-school field-hockey team in Massachusetts in 1989, and their foray into witchcraft—is one of the most original, charming, weird, nostalgic, and witty books I’ve ever had the pleasure of reading. So naturally, I have high hopes for her newest release, The Unveiling. The literary horror novel follows Striker, a Black film scout who joins a very white luxury Antarctic cruise in order to photograph potential locations for a splashy Ernest Shackleton biopic. After an ill-fated kayaking excursion, Striker finds herself stranded with a select group of survivors. Gradually, everyone’s “secrets, prejudices, and inner demons” emerge among the frozen, desolate landscape, and Striker begins to lose her grip on reality. It sounds like a combination of The Shining and Get Out with eldritch vibes, and what’s not to love about that? (Elliott Bay Book Company, 7 pm, free, all ages) JULIANNE BELL

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