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Salt Lake Magazine

Salt Lake is your best guide to the Utah lifestyle. From food to fashion, travel and the arts, Salt Lake magazine has something for everyone. Follow us on Instagram, Facebook and Twitter @SLmag.

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Utah Pride Center and Clever Octopus Present: Not Yo’ Mama’s Winter Market

By Community

So, it’s that time of year again. The holidays. What will you do? Support your local economy, or throw your holiday budget at mass retailers who contribute large amounts of greenhouse gas emissions?

Utah Pride Center and Clever Octopus invite Utahns to be #localists this holiday season, by skipping online mass retailers and opting to shop at their second annual Not Yo’ Mama’s Winter Market instead.

This market, although usually in-person, will be virtual to accommodate the need to limit exposure due to COVID-19. The market will open November 9 and close December 18, allowing for more time to browse the selection, unlike the traditional, in-person two-day event.

According to this study, spending just 10% more at local businesses would keep approximately $1.3 billion in the Utah economy each year. By shopping at the Not Yo’ Mama’s Winter Market, you will be supporting a network of local artists who have also been hit by store closures, and send your family one-of-a-kind holiday gifts, without sacrificing quality.

Clever Octopus Creative Reuse Center is a retail shop that sells quality materials and art and craft supplies that would otherwise be destined for the landfill. As Utah’s only creative reuse center, Clever Octopus supports shopping local as a means of promoting environmental awareness and sustainability in business and favors artists and businesses that are dedicated to minimizing and reimagining how they produce waste.

Vendors who sell quirky, stunning, bold, fanciful or otherwise unique products are encouraged to apply to be included in the market. In the market application, vendors include a donation to be included in Utah Pride Center’s silent auction at a later date. Proceeds from the auction fund the work the Pride Center does to uplift, educate, and provide affirming programming and resources to LGBTQ+ youth and adults. For more information visit http://www.cleveroctopus.org/winter-market.

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Real Housewives ‘Hashtag blessed’ or hot mess? Twitter Reacts.

By Arts & Culture

It’s official. The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City happened. And it’s happening for an entire season on BravoTV. The newest installment in the Real Housewives franchise premiered Wednesday night and began trending on Twitter almost immediately. Less than an hour after the debut end, #RHOSLC was the No. 1 trending topic in the United States. So, yeah, it looks like this is going to be a thing.

Variety called the show a “promising addition” to Bravo’s most successful franchise,
which is pretty high praise for a show where one of the biggest drama points of the first episode was a tiff over one woman saying another castmate smelled like “hospital.” It’s so bad, even the poorest of writers wouldn’t make this up.

Yet, according to the Twittersphere, it works. “Imagine you just leave the hospital dealing with family drama and your homegirl tells you, “hey so you smell like a hospital” #RHOSLC”

 “This debut premiere feels like a third or even fourth season premiere. Bravo @Andy, bravo #RHOSLC.”

 “This show is already a messsss! I can’t stop watching. Omg. It’s living up to the hype. Weary face #RHOSLC”

There was shade was aplenty. A. Plenty. Some reactions were witty and snarky; others were disgusted with the oblivious and vapid dialogue about race and privilege in a state with a sticky-at-best history on diversity. Here are some of the highlights? Lowlights? You decide.

“What we’ve seen so far #RHOSLC: Mormons are racists, a Rihanna name drop, a gay son,
someone granddaddy bed-hopping … 20 minutes in, it’s already more entertaining than the
entire new season of #RHOC. Kudos ladies.”

 “Between Mary marrying her step-granddaddy and Whitney cheating with this man who is 18 yrs older than her…the casting on this show was a choice. A MESSY ONE! #RHOSLC”

 “So Utah is so white they think she’s black #RHOSLC”

 “So mormons are against drinking, having sex, swearing, but they’re okay with racism… Alright #RHOSLC”

 “Jen said Mormons didn’t accept Black people until recently, and Heather said loving Black
men doesn’t go in line with being a good Mormon woman. I know the community is writing
Bravo as we speak. #RHOSL #RHOSLC”

 “Did she just admit that Mormon people don’t like black folk? #RHOSLC”

Settle in, Utah. This is going to be… something.

For more RHOSLC, click here.

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Meredith Marks

By Arts & Culture

Meredith Marks is a celebrity jewelry designer with a store on Main Street in Park City. Jewish and married for over 25 years, Meredith and her husband Seth have hit a rough patch and with their kids in college, she is faced with being an empty nester for the first time in her life. An ice queen with a knack for partying, Meredith is often out on the social circle alongside Jen and Lisa, who love to buy her jewelry – even the rings off her fingers. Meredith appears to have it all but when rumors begin to swirl, she must decide if she wants to turn to her girlfriends for support or suffer in silence.

Instagram: Meredith Marks

 

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Heather Gay

By Arts & Culture

A devout Mormon from birth, Heather Gay was married to Mormon royalty for 11 years, but has distanced herself from the church after her divorce.  A self-proclaimed ‘good Mormon gone bad,’ she now considers herself “Mormon-ish” as she plays by her own rules. A devoted mother to three daughters, she owns a burgeoning Med-Spa business, Beauty Lab and Laser where the ladies often frequent. As she embarks on the next chapter of her life, Heather is on a journey of self-discovery as she finds her voice and looks for love again.

Instagram: Heather Gay

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Whitney Rose

By Arts & Culture

A descendant of “Mormon Royalty,” Whitney Rose has been trying her best to navigate life outside of the religion for over a decade. She left the church after she fell madly in love with her boss, Justin, and the two had an affair. Within weeks, they both left their spouses to be with each other and got married when Whitney found out she was pregnant.  Married for 10 years, they have two children – Bobbi and Brooks – and she owns a skincare line called Iris and Beau. Now, she is faced with parenting her father who is dealing with his own struggles and depends on her for everything.  And just when it seems like society is finally beginning to accept her 10-year-marriage, scandalous rumors about her progressive relationship start to swirl.

INSTAGRAM: Whitney Rose

Follow our Real Highwives of Salt Lake City coverage with exclusive interviews, images and takes hot and cold here.

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Jen Shah

By Arts & Culture

As a Tongan and Hawaiian growing up in Salt Lake City, Jen Shah felt like she often stuck out in her traditionally white, Mormon world. When she learned about the historical mistreatment of black people in the Mormon religion, she converted from Mormonism to Islam. A mom of two with her husband, Sharrieff, Jen is the queen of her house and her businesses as the CEO of three marketing companies. Always decked out in designer brands, Jen loves to host parties and spares no expense – it’s important to her that everyone knows she is the best host in Utah. With an extravagant personality and sharp tongue, she can go from 0 to 100 very quickly, but usually comes back with apologies and love. But it’s not always fun and games for Jen with this group of women when she quickly finds herself at the center of the drama.

Instagram: Jen Shah

Follow our Real Highwives of Salt Lake City coverage with exclusive interviews, images and takes hot and cold here.

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Mary Cosby

By Arts & Culture

With a penchant for God, couture and only the finest champagne, Mary Cosby is a Pentecostal First Lady who inherited her family’s empire of churches, restaurants and more. The caveat in her taking over the family business was that she marry her late grandmother’s second husband, Robert Cosby Sr. They have since been married for 20 years and have one teenage son together.  Small but mighty and always dressed to the nines, her unconventional past has made her guarded and she quickly finds herself on shaky ground with some of the ladies.

Follow her on Instagram at Mary Cosby.

Follow our Real Highwives of Salt Lake City coverage with exclusive interviews, images and takes hot and cold here.

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Lisa Barlow

By Arts & Culture

Born in New York, Lisa Barlow has been living in Utah for over 20 years. As the owner of LUXE marketing company and various businesses including VIDA tequila, she considers herself “Mormon 2.0” as she is not one to adhere to all of the traditional and strict Mormon rules.  Lisa attended BYU with Heather and has been best friends with Meredith for years. Married to her husband John with two children, she seemingly has it all but struggles with her quest for perfection when her unrealistic standards start impacting her friendships.

INSTAGRAM: Lisa Barlow

Follow our Real Highwives of Salt Lake City coverage with exclusive interviews, images and takes hot and cold here.

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Real Housewives of SLC Premiere Party

By Arts & Culture

It’s a strange time to launch anything, much less the SLC iteration of The Real Housewives franchise, which requires its reality to be the opposite of socially distant—socially up in each others’ faces is more the brand. Lucky us, however, the producers of Real Housewives Salt Lake City got their filming in under the COVID wire and there are venomous droplets aplenty waiting for us in the new season, which Bravo launches this week, on Nov. 11. The VIP premiere party, however, was a sign of the times. We’ve covered lots of celebrity press gaggles and by far this was the strangest. Forget the red carpet, the en-logoed step-and-repeat and a scrum of photogs fighting for flash time. Fabulous was not possible. Instead, The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City had a drive-in theater (built for the occasion) in the parking lot kitty-corner from the silent Vivint Smart Home Arena.  

The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City premieres on Bravo on Nov. 11 at 8 p.m. MDT. We’ll be watching. Follow along with us on Instagram and at saltlakemagazine.com all season.

Bravo’s newest housewives traded in glitz for asphalt and press lines for interviews from the front seats of their Range Rovers (and an Escalade and Jaguar.) And if it sounds weird, it was. But there was a certain, charming, the show-must-go-on feel to the night. The stars in cars pulled front and center in front of the giant screens and Team Shah showed up en masse, with two black Escalades filled with housewife Jen Shah’s entourage armed with sirens and bullhorns to cut through the moody weather and bring a bit of flair to the social distance.

But, for the four of the show’s stars who turned out for the event—Jen Shah, Lisa Barlow, Heather Gay and Whitney Rose—the drive-in premiere launched what they hope will become the next big thing for Bravo’s most popular franchise.

“I was made for this,” Whitney Rose, who owns the Iris and Beau skincare line boasted. But so what is thisIf you’re new to the Real Housewives universe, here’s the breakdown: 

Affluent women across the country—often promoting their businesses or to recapture former celebrity—open their homes to reality TV cameras and all the drama that comes with their fabulous lives. Producers were going for a Peyton Place meets Desperate Housewives vibe when they kicked off the series in Orange County 14 years ago. 

“Viewers have been riveted by the fictionalized versions of such lifestyles on television,” said then-Bravo president Lauren Zalaznick. “Now, here is a series that depicts real-life ‘desperate’ housewives with an authentic look at their compelling day-to-day drama.”

The show was an instant hit and, in the years since, launched franchises in New York, Beverly Hills, Atlanta, New Jersey, Miami, Potomac, Dallas, Washington, D.C. and, now, Salt Lake City, plus 13 international installments and 19 spin-offs. It’s a thing, inspiring dozens of parody shows and countless Housewife-fan social accounts and podcasts.

The success has come with criticism, too, including an October 2019 New York Times story pointing out how the casts seem to be segregated by skin color. Atlanta and Potomac have almost entirely Black stars, while the others are primarily white save for one or two women. Enter Salt Lake City. 

Utah is hardly recognized as a beacon of diversity, but our installment brings some representation to the franchise not seen in other iterations: two women of color; two Jewish big-city imports; and ancestors of Mormon pioneers. It’s a subtle but noticeable and necessary move for a series that has largely found success in racially homogeneous casts

So, that’s a little bit of history. You’re ready to pour a glass of bubbly (or as the housewives would say, “champs”) and dive in for the primetime premiere on Wednesday.

Salt Lake magazine got a sneak peek—but we won’t spoil that now—at the drive-in premiere and chatted with some of the stars about their hopes for the show and, of course, their taglines. (The taglines are biggies and offer an introduction and first impressions. Good lines are witty and a bit snarky, bad ones make the brain groan.) 

Take Lisa Barlow, who owns the LUXE marketing firms and Vida tequila and used her tagline to promote herself with a zing. “I had to have something to do with tequila,” she said from the back of a luxury, black Escalade. “If you take cheap shots, you’re going to end up with a hangover. That’s why people should drink Vida.”

But it’s not just about her brand, Barlow says. Showcasing Salt Lake on a national scale is the bigger win. “This is so major for our city.”

Religion, too, plays a big role, with producers going big on the faith angle in the show trailers and early promotion. It works in part because of the religious diversity of the cast. Barlow, who has Jewish ancestry, calls herself Mormon 2.0. Jen Shah, who owns three marketing firms, converted from Mormonism to Islam.  Jewelry designer Meredith Marks is Jewish. Mary Cosby, who inherited her family’s “empire of churches, restaurants and more,” is a Pentecostal pastor (though she prefers “first lady”). And cousins Heather Gay and Whitney Rose come from pioneer stock and “Mormon royalty.”

Gay, who owns Med-spa Beauty Lab, used her tagline (“Just like my pioneer ancestors, I’m trying to blaze a new trail”) as a metaphor for leaving the church after her divorce. She had a back-line just in case the first didn’t make the cut: “I may be dead inside, but I’m still the life of the party.”

Rose, too, left the Mormon faith after the church excommunicated her and now-husband and LifeVantage exec, Justin, for having an extramarital affair. (Spoiler: Their vow renewal features a dress that would never make the cut in a traditional Latter-day Saints ceremony.) 

Ten years later, the drama follows Rose onto the show, prompting her tagline, “This rose isn’t scared to handle a little prick.” Most of the pricks come from Barlow, Rose said from the passenger seat of a white Range Rover. “We’re all the prick, though.”

The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City premieres on Bravo on Nov. 11 at 8 p.m. MDT. We’ll be watching. Follow along with us on Instagram and at saltlakemagazine.com all season.

See all of our A&E coverage here.

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A Day at St. Regis Deer Valley’s Remède Spa

By From Our Partners

I think we can all agree that 2020 has been an incredibly stressful year. Every month seems to bring something new to worry about and the winter season is slowly creeping in, bringing with it shorter days and triggering seasonal depression. There’s been a lot of weight on our shoulders and I for one have been feeling run down.

So I was pleasantly surprised when St. Regis at Deer Valley reached out to me to experience their Remède Spa, which has implemented innovative COVID-friendly ways to keep their guests feeling safe, secure and most importantly, relaxed.

Spa Director, Benjamin Donat

Upon arrival, I spoke with the new Spa Director, Benjamin Donat. “It’s funny,” Benjamin said, “cleanliness has always been a huge priority. But we never wanted to be seen by the guests. Things are different now. We want guest to know how important cleanliness is to St. Regis and the Remède Spa. And guests are happy to see us sanitizing and wiping every surface down.”

I’ll be honest, I was a bit apprehensive about getting a spa treatment. So I asked Benjamin how the spa has been dealing with COVID-19. He explained that St. Regis follows guidelines set forth by the CDC and the World Health Organization and continuously monitor and evolve their solutions to ensure a continued sense of caution and security for guests and associates.

Solutions include consistent mask wearing by all hotel and spa employees, temperature checking, sanitizer is easily accessible throughout the hotel and spa, spa guests must wear a mask during their spa treatments, deep cleaning of all spa rooms and spa amenities and spa services require an appointment that must be booked in advance.

After hearing about all the guidelines Remède Spa is following I was ready for my treatment. I decided to go with the hot poultice massage. (I took up running in the midst of the COVID-19 lockdown and frankly haven’t been doing the correct stretches after my runs, so this treatment was perfect.) The poultice combines herbs wrapped in cloth and a customized oil which is then steamed and used to massage fatigued muscles. The heat of the poultice relieved soreness and penetrated muscles I had been neglecting for quite a while. This treatment completely rebalanced my body. And while I wore a mask the entire treatment, I was so relaxed that I forgot I had it on.

My massage therapist, Angelica, said it best. “We all need to take small moments for ourselves. Away from the news, away from the current worry of the world. We all deserve self care, it just takes making the time for ourselves.” Now more than ever we need to take breaks. Whether that’s treating yourself to an 80 minute massage, or just sitting in a quiet room, make sure you take small moments for yourself to decompress.

Remède Spa is currently offering Utah residents 20% off massages and facial treatments and complimentary enhancements when you book any massage. (Enhancements include Soothing Shae, a hydration treatment; Cold Therapy, a treatment for pain; or a CBD enhancement.)


To learn more about Remède Spa or to book an appoinment, click here.

To find emotional wellness and support services, click here.

For more on health and wellness, click here.