Matthew Wade got the call the Monday before Thanksgiving: The film he had been
working on since 2016 had been accepted as a breakout premiere at Slamdance Film
Festival, one
For years, United Vision for Idaho Executive Director Adrienne Evans has been a
regular at Boise rallies pressing for minimum wage increases, environmental
regulation and other progressive issues. For the
When Boise Weekly first sat down with Kahlua in 2013 at a downtown coffee shop,
she was already one of the longest-performing exotic dancers in the State of
Idaho. More
It’s a make-or-break moment for Boise GreenBike, as the bike-share program moves
forward with a massive expansion of its services despite parting ways with its
title sponsors.
Matt Darcy said he was 14 years old when Trayvon Martin, a young black man
walking through a Florida neighborhood, was shot and killed in 2012. It was a
defining
It’s the too-common fate of take-out to get a little dinged in transit, but a
wave of disappointment still washed over me as I placed the slightly crumpled
white box
For the last eight years, John Reusser has been the public face of the Idaho
Suicide Prevention Hotline, a program under the umbrella of Jannus. Its founder,
he helped connect
Pama Roemer stood in the grassy courtyard of the 25-unit Ridenbaugh Place
Apartment complex in South Boise. She has lived at the complex for the last five
years, and in
If the Boise Weekly Fiction 101 Contest were a human being, that person would be
old enough to join the military and vote. Just like a real person, it has
It wasn’t a public hearing; there wasn’t a chairman of a committee in the
Lincoln Auditorium at the Idaho State Capitol on June 27 when a presentation in
favor of high schools keeping their Native symbols and mascots was derailed by a
small contingent of Boiseans.
It’s the largest cash literary prize for an English-language book, and author
Emily Ruskovich’s debut novel, Idaho, just won it. It’s the DUBLIN Literary
Award, and the Idaho-raised writer is
The Boise Farmers Market has become an indispensable resource for local foodies
— so much so that starting in April, it will take up spring and summer residence
at a
A Saturday morning light drizzle didn’t keep thousands of people from the Idaho
Statehouse Saturday, all gathered for the third annual Womxn’s March on Idaho to
celebrate and