Skip to main content
Duran-Duran-jpg-1

Preview: Duran Duran FUTURE PAST Tour at Vivint Arena

By Arts & Culture, Music

The core of the setlists Duran Duran will play in concert on June 3 at Vivint Arena, will be made up of songs the group made famous during the 1980s and 1990s. Those tracks by the band—including classic era members Simon Le Bon (vocals), Nick Rhodes (synths), Roger Taylor (drums) and John Taylor (bass)—provide a crowd-pleasing selection of winners, cuts that’ll be played virtually every time that the Rock & Roll Hall of Famers take the stage. 

These are the bedrocks: “Rio,” “Hungry Like the Wolf,” “Come Undone,” “Ordinary World.” And a whole passel of other tracks that are staples of new wave radio stations and streaming platforms the world over. 

But the group’s also coming off of the success of creating new work, with songs that very much fit into the band’s considerable canon. The band’s 15th album, 2021’s Future Past, is arguably the best, full work by the band in years. And those songs are being spotted into this year’s sets, allowing fans a chance to enjoy the ear candies of youth, as well as songs written and recorded by a band that’s clearly still interested in crafting new material. 

Thinking about balancing new songs and old, Taylor, in a late-May interview, said “There’re songs you’ve just got to do, they’ve got to be there. Then you start thinking about what older songs are fans really going to be delighted to hear, and be surprised. Then you start thinking about how new songs can fit. And we tend to revolve them a little bit. Maybe we do ‘Anniversary’ one night and we do ‘Invisible’ another.”

Those are among the standouts of the album Future Past. For that writing and recording session, the group assembled a dream team of producers and collaborators, including producers Giorgio Moroder and Erol Alkan; plus Graham Coxon of Blur, who added guitar and songwriting, one of several notable guests on the album. Like many an album of the past few years, the work, begun in 2019, was scuttled by Covid for a number of months, before reigniting as in-person restrictions began to loosen. 

Praised by critics and longtime fans of the band as one of their best, overall albums, the wait was rewarded. 

Taylor said that “when we make the decision to go into the studio to start working on a new batch of songs, we tend to almost feel like we’re reinventing the wheel. We always set our sights very high and inevitably you have to let go of certain ideas. I get very excited at the beginning of a writing project because when there’s not a lot to the idea—like, maybe it’s just a groove with some chords and like a melody—I mean, that’s at the point where this thing could be anything. This could become the greatest song ever written. And as the song evolves, someone else hears it differently than me and you kind of have to let go. Each song is kind of a fight in a way. You have to choose your battles. And then as a suite of songs starts to come together, then you’re asking, ‘is there a theme here?’” 

For Future Past, the title gives a decent hint as to what was on the group’s mind at that time.

Taylor suggested that “if there was a theme in the album, I think it was almost looking back to, there was a genesis to all of our careers in music. I would put it down to the punk rock revolution of 1977 in the U.K., where every kid my age decided they wanted to be in a band, whether they could play an instrument or not. We had this incredible… I mean, they called it a youthquake, you know, this incredible movement of kids that just were just jumping up on stage and singing whatever and getting their hair cut and slashing their ties and shirts. This kind of artistic revolution took place. I would say that’s at the core of this album.” 

Taylor added that the group was aware, through its management, that the band’s 40th anniversary was nigh. And though that was secretly known by all parties, suddenly some energy and light was being brought up around that fact. 

The band wanted to create an album that fit within the continuum of past albums, while not sleeping on new sonic potentials. It had to count, to matter.

‘There were like these undercurrents of the anniversary and longevity and, you know, (wondering) ‘what does that mean?’” Taylor said. “So that was probably there.” 

Though Duran Duran are the stars of the concert tour they’re embarking on, the group’s support acts aren’t to be missed. Among them is Chic, the Nile Rodgers-lead group that Taylor views as a spiritual contemporary of the band; Rodgers, himself, worked with the band way back in the mid ’80s as a producer and remixer. 

“I think fans of Duran Duran will know that our story has run parallel with Chic’s since the band’s inception,” Taylor said. “We were very, very influenced by Chic’s music as teenagers. When we finally came to America and met them, we became great friends and started to work together. Niles has been in the studio with us for some of our greatest moments and we love touring with them. They’re a super-tight band; it’s not like you’re going to see another band like them again. They’re everything you loved about the disco/funk era of music. We also have Bastille with us, who are a relatively-new band from Britain. They have more Spotify followers than we do! So I’m looking forward to having them on the bill with us, too.”

In a bio sent out by the group’s publicists, a lot of time and attention is paid to Duran Duran’s relentless incorporation of the newest toys and techniques into their career, be it in the studio or on the stage. They’ve been innovators all along the way, probably not getting enough credit for that role. For this tour, Taylor’s psyched about the blend of human and technical elements that’ll add to their thoroughly-contemporary live show. 

He said that the show will be “stunning. We always say this, but visually it’s one of the best shows we’ve ever put together. I mean we’ve reached a degree of integration with the visual and the music like we’ve never done before. This show has evolved out of the shows we did last year. Rather than having to build a completely new show from scratch, we’ve taken elements of what we developed last year and made it better. It’s a very dramatic show, it’s a very sexy show. For me, it’s cerebral but also poptastic, you know?” 

Unlike a number of bands of its generation, Duran Duran are not calling this a farewell tour and there is new music in the works. So this year’s tour is a part of the overall career path, not a finale. And for Taylor, it’s being seen as the band working at a peak level of satisfaction.

“This is a privilege,” he said. “There’s a deeper level of pride, I think, In what we’re doing today.”

Get your tickets to the Vivint Arena show this weekend here!


IMG_5095

Preview: 15th Annual Ogden Music Festival

By Arts & Culture, Music

The Ogden Friends of Acoustic Music (OFOAM) will usher in the summer we’ve been waiting for with its 15th annual Ogden Music Festival on June 2-4, 2023.  Due to flooding at Fort Buenaventura, the organizers quickly scrambled to get a more suitable location for this year’s event. The new location at 600 N Depot Drive – what they are calling “Fort BDO” –offers all the same festival activities including on-site camping.

OFOAM’s signature event starts the season on a high note, whether it’s high-lonesome bluegrass or a hot fiddle lick. Friends and fans of acoustic music will love this year’s lineup of nationally touring acts and local favorites featuring award-winning bluegrass, folk, soul, country, and conjunto tejano artists.

Lineup:

Dan Tyminski Band

Thee Sacred Souls

Danielle Ponder

John Craigie

Della Mae

Miko Marks & The Resurrectors

Los Texmaniacs feat. La Marisoul

Chatham Rabbits

National Park Radio

Kate MacLeod

The West Road

Pompe ‘N’ Honey

Pixie & The Partygrass Boys.

A cadre of artists, called the “tweeners,” will fill in between acts and keep the music flowing. Check out www.ofoam.org for a full list of performers. Spoiler alert: Talia Keys will play a short “tweener” set between John Craigie and Danielle Ponder on Friday.

OFOAM has really outdone itself with this year’s stellar line up of great artists. John Craigie and Miko Marks are my “must see” acts. Craigie just sold out back-to-back nights at The State Room earlier this year and I’m ready for a repeat performance. Cragie is a great folk singer, colorful story-teller, and stand up comic (Think John Prine meets Tommy Smothers). Miko Marks offers an exciting blend of Nashville and Memphis sounds to create dynamic country-soul. The two cities (and genres) may be 200 miles apart, but Marks narrows the gap.

With plenty of melodic flavor for everyone, the OFOAM team built a lineup of Grammy-winning nationally touring acts, up and coming new artists, and local performers. Kudos to them for quickly finding an alternate site when the main venue became unsuitable.

What: Ogden Music Festival

Where: Fort BDO–600 N Depot Drive, Ogden

When: June 2-4, 2023

Tickets and info: www.ofoam.org


Austen-Diamond

Busker Fest Returns to Salt Lake City

By Arts & Culture

Calling all performing arts patrons, thrill seekers and curious looky-loos—the Salt Lake City Busker Fest returns to downtown May 26 and 27th. The free event is a whimsical celebration of the time-honored tradition of busking, and invites both traveling and local buskers to share their talents. This year, the festival will be moved North to Block 70 surrounding Eccles Theater. Jugglers, aerialists and musicians will be posted up along Main Street and Regent Street between 100 and 200 south, their talents are plenty and their hats are empty, so bring some cash or be prepared to venmo. 

The vaudeville art has been a popular form of entertainment since the early 20th century, and has since evolved into what we now recognize as busking. Unlike ticketed performances, buskers must capture and maintain the attention of a constantly rotating audience. Marcus Willson, a stunt performer and comedian who will be performing at this year’s festival, says the challenge is what he adores most. “When you’re at a comedy club or venue, the audience has paid to be there, so they will sit in the chair and watch you no matter what,” he says. “If you’re on the street, you have to do something entertaining enough to make people stop. You have to build the crowd up.” 

If you’ve ever been a part of that clamoring crowd, you’ve felt how exciting it can be. Everyone appreciating the same extraordinary act, and collectively deciding it is more than worthy of their attention. And if you haven’t, this weekend’s Busker Fest is the perfect opportunity. 

This year’s list of acts includes a collection of local favorites and traveling performers including: 

  • A Rose Moment, a living statue hailing from Boulder, CO. 
  • Marcus, Funny Man Who Does Tricks is from West Jordan and impresses crowds with his hilarious juggling stunt show. 
  • Traveling in from Las Vegas, Pick My Pose is an ‘interactive statue’ who invites onlookers to arrange him in any position they’d like and he’ll stay put. Seriously, this guy has some major muscle control.  
  • Satya Hoops is the world’s first and only buskers that performs with a hula hoop on fire while spinning inside a cyr wheel. Basically, she’s a human gyroscope. 
  • Vavavoom Vaudeville Cabaret is a burlesque troupe hailing from Salt Lake City
  • A one man show specializing in dangerous stunts, juggling and comedy, Brent Fiasco Sideshow from Arizona will have the entire crowd holding their breath. 

You’ll find even more performers throughout downtown, as well as a 21+ busker bar behind Eccles where Fisher Brewing and Beehive Distilling will be serving up boozy refreshments. The festival will not feature any food trucks, so attendees should plan to support surrounding local restaurants instead. Most of all, relax and enjoy the shows. Happy busking! 

Enjoy images from Busker Fests of year’s past

Photography by Cali Warner


Aerial view of the cityscape of St George

Drag Show Performers File Lawsuit Against St. George City

By City Watch

On Tuesday, A Southern Utah drag group and The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Utah filed suit against the city of St. George after the city selectively applied a local ordinance to deny an event permit to a family-friendly drag show. 

Mitski Avalōx with The Southern Utah Drag Stars applied for the special events permit, back on March 3, 2023, to host the event Allies & Community Drag Show Festival at J.C. Snow Park. A few weeks later, the city denied the application under the pretenses that Avalōx had violated a St. George City ordinance that prohibits advertising for special events until the city grants a permit. 

How did we get here?

The drag show event poster reading "POSTPONED" across the front, following the permit's denial on the Southern Utah Drag Stars' website.
The “Allies & Community Drag Show Festival” event poster reads “POSTPONED,” following the event’s permit denial, on the Southern Utah Drag Stars’ website.

In the St. George City Council meetings that followed, members of the city council pointed out that they apply this advertising rule selectively, providing exceptions for events like Redstone Highland Games, Brooks’ Block Party and the Spring Tour of St. George. However, at Avalōx’s appeal hearing on April 11, all present City Council members still voted to deny the permit to the drag show except for Councilperson Danielle Larkin. 

At the same hearing, the council also voted down the appeal for another event permit for Indigo Klabanoff’s Taste of Southern Utah Food Festival. Avalōx referred to the food festival’s denial as collateral damage—likely alluding to Councilperson Michele Tanner’s vocal disapproval for a drag show and screening of the HBO series We’re Here during last year’s Pride celebration in St. George. 

The advertising ordinance has not been routinely enforced until recently, in part because it is unrealistic. Permits are typically not issued until the day of or the day before events, making advertising an event practically impossible.

And, after the big blowout between city leaders’ over the drag event last year, some have suggested the sudden enforcement of the ordinance is a way to allow the city to discriminate against drag shows and LGBTQ-centered events. 

The lawsuit against St. George

The lawsuit filed by the ACLU and Southern Utah Drag Stars alleges that the St. George City Council created a scheme allowing officials to selectively grant permits to favored events while denying all others. The ACLU calls St. George’s special events policies discriminatory against drag performances.

“Requiring drag performers to meet unreasonable standards to receive a permit, or denying them these permits without legitimate justification, is censorship,” says Valentina De Fex, Senior Staff Attorney with the ACLU of Utah. “Our lawsuit challenges the attempt by elected officials, who must uphold the rights guaranteed in the U.S. Constitution and Utah State Constitution, to push subjective viewpoints of what they deem appropriate.” 

“Drag is dance, fashion, and music—it is also deeply rooted in political speech—all protected by the First Amendment,” says Emerson Sykes, Senior Staff Attorney with the ACLU Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project. “This is the latest offense in a larger pattern of attacks discriminating against gender-diverse and LGBTQ+ people and their rights in Utah and throughout the country.” As an example, ACLU points a to a recent slew of bills in six states that ban drag under the guide of protecting children from the obscene. 

“The city of St. George is violating the First Amendment rights of Drag Stars and discriminating against them through a façade of permits and ordinances that have never been applied in this manner with any other group or organization,” said Jeremy Creelan, Partner at Jenner & Block. “LGBTQ+ performers are entitled to protections under the First and Fourteenth Amendments, and we are asking the court to protect these fundamental rights and put a stop to this deeply troubling attack on free expression.”

Moratorium on St. George special events and… other changes

In light of the selective enforcement of the advertising ordinance, the City Council put a six-month moratorium on approving special events permits, starting in March, until they could figure out what to do with the ordinance. Since then, they decided to allow for exemptions from the moratorium for recurring and city-sponsored events, so it only applies to new events.

Another bit of funny business has to do with the public comments allowed at St. George City Council Meetings. In early May, St. George City Mayor Michele Randall banned in-person public comments at city council meetings. Some St. George citizens responded with protests, calling the Mayor’s new policy a violation of their First Amendment rights. On the day Southern Utah Drag Stars and the ACLU filed suit against the city, the Mayor announced she’s walking back the public comment ban. 

The Mayor explained her actions in a statement, saying, “the public input has devolved into statements unrelated to City business and at times, has disrupted the regular conduct of the City’s meetings and business. As a result, as Mayor, I put a “pause” on public input at City Council meetings in order to create more efficiency in accomplishing the City’s business.”

And now, the “pause” is over… with some new conditions: 

  1. To comment in-person at City Council meetings, the person must live in St. George and provide their name and address to the city recorder. 
  2. The public can only comment on “City business” but not “any agenda item or pending land use application.”
  3. Only up-to 10 people can speak at any meeting, each with a two-minute time limit.
  4. Commenters must refrain from using “obscene of profane language” and not attack others.
  5. Officials will choose 10 people at random, if more than 10 people want to speak. 
  6. After giving comment, a person will not be able to offer comment at future meetings for three months
  7. People who disrupt meetings with “undue applause, jeering, uninvited comments, or other protests” will be told to leave.

There is another way to offer public comment on city business. Comments can be written and hand-delivered or mailed to the city recorder at 175 E. 200 North, St. George, UT 84770, or emailed at public-comment@sgcity.org. Residents may also submit comments on the city website at sgcity.org/contact/submitpubliccomment.


Moab-Dog-UOT-e1555513794831

Three Easy Dog-Friendly Hikes in Moab

By Outdoors

Moab isn’t exactly a locals’ secret—not with two of the Big Five National Parks, some of the world’s most famous mountain bike trails and a limitless fleet of off-road rental vehicles. Despite Moab’s ubiquitously-known charms, the area isn’t the easiest place to travel with you dogs. Trails full of jeeps and bikes aren’t particularly friendly for the four legged, and the arid environment can lead to overheating in a hurry. These three easy dog-friendly hikes in Moab all feature water, are easy to access from parking areas and are suitable for families. Despite a few off-camber sections and steep scrambles, I was able to complete each of them with a 13-year old mutt and his shot knees, so your dog will likely be fine.

Grandstaff Canyon to Morning Glory Arch

The hike up Grandstaff Canyon to Morning Glory Arch—it was formerly called Negro Bill Canyon—starts from a parking area 3.6 miles down 128, where the Colorado River has cut a gorgeous canyon. The journey to Morning Glory Arch is just shy of five miles roundtrip, but even if you don’t make it to the end, you’ll be treated to towering sandstone walls, numerous river crossings and more lush, green vegetation than you thought could exist in the desert.

dog hikes in Moab
The shade in Grandstaff Canyon is a welcome sight in the desert.

Total elevation gain is only around 390 feet, but the hike can still feel rather strenuous if it’s hot out. Fortunately, trees lining the creek and overhanging sections of rock provide ample shade throughout the day. Your dog will enjoy swimming in the creek, running through the sand and generally turning into a red-muck covered monster, even if the person who cares for the upholstery in your back seat is less enthusiastic.

At certain times of the year a lot of poison ivy grows in Grandstaff Canyon, so keep your dog on the established trail even though there aren’t specific leash laws on BLM-managed land. Be responsible and remember to pack out all your dog’s waste—there’s a receptacle specifically for that purpose at the trailhead.

Field Office,82 East Dogwood,Moab,, Moab, UT 84532

Mill Creek Trail to Swimming Hole and Falls

dog hikes in Moab
The refreshing swimming hole and waterfall are about a mile up Mill Creek Canyon

The swimming hole and falls along Mill Creek are some of Moab’s more popular destinations, especially during the warmer months, so this hike is best suited for playing hooky midweek. Once you leave the trailhead just past Sand Flats Road, it’s easy to see why it’s such a hot spot. Open expanses quickly narrow into sheer faces of varnished rock as you travel up the creek. Several mandatory creek crossings mean you’re going to get wet feet, so bring some sandals unless you’re willing to endure bare feet or wet shoes.

After about a mile, you’ll reach a small waterfall where there’s a pool deep enough for you to swim alongside your hound. It’s common to see people hiking this trail with towels draped around their necks in anticipation of reaching the oasis.

dog hikes in Moab

To add a little spice to your hike, turn back the way you came from the falls. About 100 yards down the trail on what’s now your right side, take the faint game trail and scramble up the rocks heading north back up past the falls on the ledge above. You can continue up the canyon—which is far less crowded once you pass the falls—before turning around and heading back the way you came.

1339 Powerhouse Ln, Moab, UT 84532

Hunter Canyon Trail

The Hunter Canyon Trail is marginally more difficult to access than the previous two described here, but it only receives a fraction of the traffic, making it a good choice for a hike with a bit more solitude. Access the trailhead by heading out Kane Creek Road from 191 on the south end of town and continue for about two miles after the road narrows and turns to dirt. The trail begins at a parking area for the Spring Creek Campsite.

The trail meanders up a narrow canyon at a mild grade, following the shape of creek, which it crosses repeatedly. The walls are tight enough to provide ample shade on most of the trail, which helps to moderate temperatures during the heat of the day. The vibrant scarlet of Indian paintbrush and blooming prickly pear cacti add to the ambiance.

Don’t be deterred by having to pass two separate lineups of off-road vehicles waiting their turns to tediously grind up rocky trails on the way to the Hunter Canyon. The parking lot only holds around 12 cars, and it’s rarely full. You and your furry companion will enjoy the relative seclusion among such popular recreation areas.

Moab Kane Creek Blvd, Moab, UT 84532


Edison House

Step Inside New Urban Social Club Edison House

By Community

Edison House, a new urban social club, adds vibrance to the energized social scene in downtown Salt Lake west of State Street.

Salt Lake City is going through some big changes, and one of the noticeable shifts is west of State Street. Even mid-week, the sidewalks are bustling and clubs and restaurants have customers lined up. It’s no longer the Salt Lake of a few short years ago.

Photo by Scot Zimmerman

With a subtle presence on Second West, the Edison House offers a friendly destination with plenty of options for enjoying oneself. Above, the large E on the metal panel is the only cue to its identity. The door opens to a host vestibule for checking in and verifying club membership.

Photo by Scot Zimmerman

To the left of the vestibule, a grand space opens with a variety of seating and meeting spaces and a full bar and a spacious restaurant. The Edison House is a new building specifically designed for its variety of social spaces built by Okland Construction, designed by HKS Architects, and with interiors by Avenue Interior Design. 

Photo by Scot Zimmerman

A canopy calls out the central bar’s presence in the open plan.

Photo by Scot Zimmerman

The large space is marked by several more private nooks; one is this private dining room.

Photo by Scot Zimmerman

If you take the right-hand door off the host vestibule, it’s a healthy turn because it opens to the fitness center and lockers.

Photo by Scot Zimmerman

Central to the second floor is a casual bar for meeting, mingling, and watching games. 

Photo by Scot Zimmerman

Down the hall to the north is the Speakeasy with a stage for performances and its own bar.

Photo by Scot Zimmerman

Adjacent to the Speakeasy is a retro piano bar with soft velvet furnishings and wall coverings. 

Photo by Scot Zimmerman

Staying on the second level and moving south of the central bar is a spacious pool room with music memorabilia. Adjacent is an aerobic fitness room. 

Photo by Scot Zimmerman

A rooftop bar, pool, sky lounge, and banquet/ballroom occupy the top level. Glass doors fold back to unite the space. It a wonderful place to watch the sun set over Great Salt Lake, and with the open views to the sky, you can appreciate the changing colors of the clouds.  

Putting myself in the place of someone possibly new to Salt Lake or maybe newly a resident of downtown, it seems like an easy place to make new friends and spend some delightful evenings. 


Read more stories like this and all of our Community coverage. And while you’re here, subscribe and get six issues of Salt Lake magazine, your curated guide to the best of life in Utah.

y1

How to Explore Yosemite’s Waterfalls This Spring

By Adventures, Travel

You can practically hear Peter Coyote narrating the Ken Burns’ documentary. It is America’s Third National Park but, thanks to John Muir’s powerful voice from the wilderness and his famed invitation to President Roosevelt in 1903 to camp with him in Yosemite, it was the park that inspired Roosevelt’s fight to preserve Yosemite and lay the groundwork to create the National Park Program. Muir’s lifelong mission to protect Yosemite captured the national imagination and once you visit, you’ll see why. Why go now: Waterfalls. Giant waterfalls. Yosemite’s famous falls are gushing in the spring and although the park is jaw-dropping year-round, the waterfalls are, well, majestic. But wait a sec: Yes. There will be crowds. And, while the park has instituted a reservation system that eases bottlenecks, bring patience and plan ahead. 

1. Basecamp Option No. 1

Tenaya at Yosemite is just 3 miles from the South Entrance (less busy) and is a destination in itself. Beautiful grounds laced with hiking and biking trails feature a full-service lodge, restaurants, bar, pool and spa. But you’ll want to book one of the Explorer Cabins, a group of private two-bedroom tiny homes, in a quiet wooded glade along the creek below the main lodge. Explore the trails with guided hiking tours or rent a mountain bike and get directions to the hidden waterfall. Tenaya also offers guided tour packages from Yosemite 360, with insightful guides who will give you a good orientation tour of the massive park. visittenaya.com

Tenaya at Yosemite’s Explorer Cabins offer private quarters amid the forest. Photo courtesy of Tenaya

2. Basecamp Option No. 2

The town of Mariposa is 50 miles from the western (busier) entrance to Yosemite. The southernmost Gold Rush town, founded in 1849 by John C. Fremont has maintained its historical charm with former saloons and rooming houses converted into boutique hotels and upscale cocktail bars. In the historic charm, department try the River Rock Inn (an addition to a home built in 1891) or the Yosemite Plaisance B&B with private rooms and entrances (and meals by chef-owner Hélène Halcrow). For a budget-friendly option, try the newly renovated Mariposa Lodge, a charming motel-style property. For more lodging and dining, choices visit yosemite.com

Hiking and mountain biking trails with on-site bike rentals and guided tours at Tenaya. Photo courtesy of Tenaya

3. The Mighty Yosemite Valley

The big show, as it were, is Yosemite Valley surrounded by massive granite cliffs laced with thundering waterfalls showering rainbow mists from high above. This is inevitably the most crowded area of the park but here’s a trick. Pack your bathing suit and a towel and locate a picnic area along the Merced River, which abounds with wading and swimming holes accessed from rocky (sandals are helpful) put-in beaches off the picnic areas.  

4. Mariposa Grove (of Giant Sequoias)

Mariposa Grove of giant sequoias is a star (and often missed) attraction of Yosemite National Park. Photo courtesy of Adobe Stock

Wow. Often missed by visitors champing at the bit to get to the Valley, the Mariposa Grove area is an example of how easy it is in a national park to ditch the crowds by hiking a mile or so off the beaten path. Make time to take the 7-mile Mariposa Grove Trail to Wawona Point which will take you out of the crowded shuttle area into a series of groves to the base of the Giant Sequoias and a final payoff with the view from Wawona Point. Add on the Guardian’s Trail Loop for even more neck-craning wonder. These trees are BIG!   

5. The Little, Medium, Big and Really Big Hikes

Every national park has the hike, in Yosemite, it is the Vernal Fall and Nevada Fall Trails, also known as the “Mist Trail.” And it comes in easy, medium and hard stops. The easy stop is to the footbridge below Vernal Falls but don’t stop there. Climb the giant staircase and walk through the eponymous mist to the top of Vernal Falls. Keep going and you’ll get to the top of Nevada Falls. For the really hardcore you can make the 10- to 12-hour hike to the famed “cable route” to the summit of Half Dome. To actually climb the cable route and summit, you have to luck out with the daily lottery for permits but the hike to the cables is adventure enough!  

Leaving so soon? 

There’s so much to do in the park but don’t miss these deep dives into the history of the area. 2 More Cool Things:

The Mariposa Museum & History Center

A massive and eclectic collection of artifacts and exhibits interpreting Native American, Spanish Settlement, California Gold Rush, Yosemite and Mariposa County History.
mariposamuseum.com

The Yosemite Climbing Museum

Yosemite was where modern climbing was invented. From the famed Camp 4 camping area in Yosemite Valley, a group of rebellious climbers made the first accents of the giant granite walls thought previously unassailable, including Half Dome. Founder Ken Yager was a young climber during some of the most daring portions of this rich history and has dedicated his life to celebrating and honoring “the Dirtbags of Camp 4” with a museum in Mariposa dedicated to their history making accomplishments.
yosemiteclimbing.org 

Yosemite’s tunnel view.

Getting there

Fresno International Yosemite Airport is a quick flight from SLC and a 65-mile drive to Yosemite’s South Entrance. 


Group_Edit

Everyone is Playing Dungeons & Dragons

By Arts & Culture

At a layton junior high school, on an average Friday afternoon, tables filled with students playing Dungeons & Dragons fill up two classrooms and spill out into the hallway and across a second-story landing. Students perch in their chairs, scour their lists of spells and items and call out in dismay or triumph, as the various Dungeon Masters do their best to react to the often maddening exploits of each respective adventuring party. It truly is a sight to behold. A beautiful, nerdy sight.  

Last school year, teacher Cameron Pingree started a gaming club at North Davis Preparatory Academy (NDPA) in Layton, inviting students to come learn how to play Dungeons & Dragons. A handful of students signed up and played D&D almost every Friday for the whole year. This school year, Pingree and the club’s other teachers set about recruiting for the club, going class to class, handing out permission slips to interested students. 

“We printed about 50 permission slips, thinking that would be more than enough,” says Pingree. 

It wasn’t. By the third class, they were out of permission slips. In the end, 140 students handed in signed permission slips to join the gaming club. NDPA’s 6-9 grades combined have a few more than 350 students. More than one-third of the junior high is playing D&D almost every Friday after school…not many after-school clubs can boast that kind of attendance. 

The tabletop roleplaying game first came into existence in the 1970s, before these students’ parents were born, and now, what is arguably the most famous tabletop roleplaying game is experiencing a renaissance. Wizards of the Coast, which owns D&D, says that in 2020, an estimated 50 million people were playing the game, making it more popular than ever. And, Utah is partially to thank for that. According to a 2023 search-data analysis, Utah plays more D&D than any other state in the nation. For decades, the perception was that Dungeons & Dragons is a niche pastime reserved for a socially awkward and sunlight-averse subset of humanity. It also took a turn as a tool for the devil to corrupt the souls of innocent youngsters during the Satanic Panic. So how did this game become the chief hobby of a diverse and discerning group of middle school kids? Maybe you have to play the game to understand, or see it through
the eyes of the kids who love it.

The Dungeon Master

Will, 8th Grade

The Character: As the Dungeon Master, Will (above) has built a place of portals for his players to explore. When they enter a portal, a dice roll will determine their fate and take them to the world of an existing animated TV series. But things do not always go to plan… 

The Player: Will started playing D&D three years ago and can’t possibly be forced to choose his favorite part—after all, in D&D, you can do anything (if the dice be kind).

Erieve – Sorceress

Isabella, 8th Grade

The Character: Erieve (below) casts spells to help her adventuring companions in combat, but sometimes she’ll leave an opponent dangling out of reach of the melee fighters with her use of the Levitate spell. (What else do you expect from an Air Genasi?) 

The Player: Isabella, like many of her peers, first heard of D&D from the Netflix show Stranger Things. When she isn’t playing D&D, Isabella enjoys playing soccer. 

Like that of any recently slain monster or NPC in-game, the body of D&D work has been picked over and relieved of anything valuable time and time again. While not every D&D adaptation has been successful at bringing new players to the game (take the 1983 animated series or the 2000 live-action movie, for instance), some of the magic of D&D has been milked and bottled and sold by a handful of popular media adaptations that have helped fuel the growth of the game. 

Illustrations by Arianna Jimenez

Many of the students of NDPA’s gaming club had never heard of Dungeons & Dragons until they watched a little show called Stranger Things. In the first season of the Netflix show, the young heroes find their humdrum suburban lives upturned by events, not unlike the adventures in their weekly D&D game. Together as a party, they take down a monster dubbed the Demogorgon, after a Demon Lord from D&D lore. In the most recent season, the BBEG (Big Bad Evil Guy) gets a name from another top-tier D&D baddie—the uber-powerful undead wizard Vecna. During many of their real-life adventures, one main character often implores, “why couldn’t we just play D&D?” The chance to play a game that creates larger-than-life adventures inspired students to join the school club and start D&D games of their own. 

Stranger Things is not the first nor the most recent popular television show to depict the magic of D&D. Some members of an older generation first started playing D&D after an episode of NBC’s Community that aired in 2011 (now hard-to-find thanks to a Drow—dark elf—cosplay that did not age well). In 2015, a crew of talented voice actors created a show called Critical Role and started live-streaming their house D&D game on Youtube and Twitch.tv. Now on their third campaign, the group is live-streaming weekly to an audience of more than one million viewers.

Critical Role also successfully launched a crowdfunding campaign to produce an animated TV series based on its first campaign, The Legend of Vox Machina, which is now in its second season on Prime Video. They have also announced the upcoming animated series adaptation of their second campaign, The Mighty Nein

NDPA teacher Cameron Pingree also points to the pandemic and lockdown for the resurgence of tabletop roleplaying. People who used to play “back in the day” picked up the hobby again in lockdown, supported by ZOOM and online tools like “D&D Beyond” that provide a digital alternative to the old-school pen-and-paper method. “D&D lets people use their imagination, like reading a book,” he says, but with some important distinctions. “Reading about a character is not as fun as being a character.” And, with D&D, unlike reading a book, you don’t do it alone. Virtual D&D sessions over video calls became one way to escape the isolation of lockdown, and, even when the world started to reopen, people kept playing, and word got out. 

That brings us to the Hollywood film adaptation released in March 2023, Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves. The film is not so much a cause of the recent surge in popularity as it is a result. Only time will tell if the movie will push the game to even higher heights of popularity.

Athena Lily – Ranger

Attlee, 8th Grade

The Character: Athena and her wife, Silver, are trying to set things right after killing the boyfriend of their son, Apollo, who, in turn, killed Athena’s beloved god. 

The Player: Attlee’s favorite part of D&D is roleplaying and likewise plans to audition for next year’s drama class. Attlee often cries while caught up in the moment of moving and emotionally charged D&D sessions, DMed by the teacher, “Mr. Cameron.” 

Sidon – Fighter

Drayden, 6th Grade

The Character: A noble from an underwater kingdom, Sidon has come to an academy on the surface world to fight and learn how to be a hero (which involves fighting his roommates in the arena).

The Player: Drayden wanted to play in his older brother’s D&D campaign, but they stayed up too late.. Now he’s played many campaigns and plays other games like Dice Thrones with his family.

It’s the classic opener to a D&D session for a reason. It introduces a brand new world—full of magic and monsters and colorful (read: dangerous) characters—in an otherwise low-stakes environment. Like a new party of adventurers entering a tavern, young D&D players get to gradually test the boundaries of their world. “The players get to act out and experience ‘real’ scenarios as a character, rather than as themselves. It’s almost therapeutic,” says Pingree. As teachers and Dungeon Masters, they are not trying to send students down a specific path when they play, rather, they provide the opportunity and a safe place—a whole new world—for students to explore identities and emotions as a character.

Some would argue that playing D&D can be more than just “almost” therapeutic but actually therapeutic. Dr. Megan Connell is a psychologist who literally wrote the book on the subject, Tabletop Role-Playing Therapy: A Guide for the Clinician Game Master, about how mental health professionals are using tabletop role-playing games, specifically Dungeons & Dragons, to help clients learn and practice therapy skills in a fun and safe environment through role-played situations.

Illustrations by Arianna Jimenez

Through that experience and exploration, Pingree says he has seen students grow and discover themselves. He’s had dozens of emails from parents who are realizing the positive impact playing D&D is having on their students. Pingree says the gaming club also checks off all the boxes for what an administration wants from a school club: it helps build skills in math, teamwork, language arts, socialization, creativity, and so on. So much so, that year two of the gaming club came with a much more substantial budget. And they had some help from the local gaming community. Endzone Hobby Center donated dice and supplies and offered students who visit their store half-off character miniatures. 

When we asked these kids what they liked about D&D, the answers were varied…yet similar. While they all enjoyed playing different aspects of the game—combat, roleplaying, strategizing, setting traps, making friends—almost to a student, the answer to what makes D&D unique was the same: “It can be anything you want it to be. There are no limits, except for your own imagination, and anything is possible in D&D.”

Sailormoon – Cleric

Ruby, 7th Grade

The Character: Sailor Moon is loyal to her friends and heals them when they’re hurt in combat. 

The Player: Ruby started playing D&D with her friends to improve her social skills. She’s also honing her basketball skills to become an asset to the team for next year. 

Ninja Cat – Rogue

Korben, 8th Grade

The Character: He’s a ninja. He’s a cat. Enough said.

The Player: Korben promised himself that if he ever made a sneaky character, that character could only have one name: Ninja Cat. He made good on that promise. He joined the gaming club with his friends and has made new friends because of D&D.

A Dungeons & Dragons Dictionary

Campaign: A series of individual gaming sessions connected by an overarching story or adventure. If a session is a chapter, the campaign is the whole novel. 

Critical: The success or failure of a character’s action often comes down to the roll of a 20-sided die (d20). Rolling a 20 is an automatic success or Critical Success. Rolling a one is an automatic failure or “Crit fail.” 

Dungeon Master (DM): The person who “runs” the game, helps build the world around the players’ characters, inhabits that world with quests and NPCs and makes determinations on rolls and rules.   

Homebrew: An adventure or any feature or mechanic that is not from an official sourcebook but created by the DM
or a third party. 

NPC: A non-player character (as opposed to the characters played by the players), typically controlled by the Dungeon Master

One-Shot: A single, stand-alone gaming session that is typically
not part of a broader campaign. 

Party: Also called an Adventuring Party, this is the group or band to which the players’ characters (or adventurers) belong. 

All Photos by Adam Finkle, Illustrations by Arianna Jimenez


van-ryder

Salt Lake’s Newest Rooftop Bar is Van Ryder 

By Eat & Drink

Salt Lake has been steadily growing into a formidable metropolis, but I always felt there was still one thing missing—a solid rooftop bar. I’m not talking about a two-story patio or a sports bar with a smoking deck, I mean a real rooftop lounge. A polished bartop and luxurious seating, with elevated cocktails and small bites, that’s what I’ve been searching for. My prayers were answered a few months ago when Van Ryder opened in February. And as spritzer season approaches, it couldn’t have arrived at a better time. 

Van Ryder is a rooftop lounge sitting atop the new Westside hotel Le Meridien. With views of the Vivint Center (soon to be the Delta Center again, but did anyone ever stop calling it that anyway?) and the Wasatch Range, it’s a city slicker’s haven. The bar is reservation only, although they do accommodate walk-ins when able. To make it easier on everyone, I suggest making a reservation before popping in. Upon entering the space, the vibes are immaculate. Modern sofas line the room where floor-to-ceiling windows take full advantage of the skyline. The far side of the room opens up completely to seamlessly blend the indoor space with the patio. The overall aesthetic speaks to Utah’s Western roots, and specifically the renowned cowboy Jack Van Ryder. “The bar pays homage to Van Ryder’s legacy by incorporating elements of his Western aesthetic into its decor,” says Elyse Evans, Director of Libations and Service. 

Photo courtesy of Van Ryder

The menu at Van Ryder is equally appealing, featuring shareable bites and signature cocktails that showcase Utah spirits. “We honor the Old West with smooth and bold flavors keeping our menu effortless and letting the spirits in our cocktails tell the story,” Evans explains. With cocktails like The Butch Cassidy, which combines mezcal, Ancho Reyes, mole bitters, Luxardo and lime, it’s clear that Van Ryder is embracing Salt Lake’s advancing bar culture. My personal favorite libation is the Drifter, a modern take on the Old Fashioned featuring cedar-smoked demerara sugar and two whiskeys from High West. You can’t go wrong with any of Van Ryder’s cocktails, or sip on one of the bar’s many NA (non-alcoholic) options while taking in the view. 

While you might hesitate to share your cocktail with friends, the food menu at Van Ryder implores guests to split and enjoy a smattering of dishes. Small bites include everything from short rib sliders to edamame hummus, while the meat of the menu ventures into social fare. The oysters were a star of my visit, which are tempura fried and topped with caviar, deviled eggs and malt vinegar aioli. Other favorites included the ricotta dumplings, tater tot poutine and crispy Brussels sprouts. Be sure to save room for the flatbread, which is sizable and sliced into shareable pieces. Throughout the menu, guests can spot high-quality ingredients sourced sustainably from local purveyors, something Evans says the chefs pride themselves on. 

Photo courtesy of Van Ryder

Like their namesake roughrider, the folks at Van Ryder have a curious spirit and want to create a unique experience for their guests. On the weekends, the bar hosts live DJs that range from 90’s throwback to Motown nights. Launched just this week, Van Ryder is also hosting Sushi Night Thursdays with a special menu featuring raw items like Salmon Carpaccio, tuna tartare and select sushi rolls. The cocktail menu will also shift toward a Japanese influence with unique sake options and whisky pours. Other events patrons can enjoy throughout the summer include trivia night, movie nights and industry nights. And if you want the space all to yourself, Van Ryder is also available for private rental accommodating anything from corporate gathering to private parties.  

There’s just something about sipping a cocktail on a rooftop that feels right, and it’s about time Salt Lake has an upscale spot to do so. Evans confirms the sentiment, “There’s something special about enjoying a drink or meal with friends while taking in a panoramic of the city.” she says. “It offers a sense of escape from the hustle and bustle of daily life, allowing patrons to relax and unwind in a one-of-a-kind setting.” 

Le Meridien Hotel. Photo courtesy of Van Ryder

If You Go

Van Ryder
Inside Le Meridien Salt Lake City Downtown 
131 S. 300 West, SLC 
@vanryderslc


Le Meridien also hosts a French Canadian restaurant on the ground level, Adelaide. You can find our full review here!