Is Seattle a target for nuclear attack? Our region is home to global companies like Amazon and Microsoft - and it's home to large cache of nuclear weapons and military assets. Deborah Wang
Stories from a changing Seattle Laureate Claudia Castro Luna calls up tales of The Emerald City John O'Brien
'A Marvelous Life' Holds Stan Lee High As The Man Who Made Superheroes Matter Danny Fingeroth spends some time unpacking Lee's long-running dispute with Jack Kirby and others over ownership, but mainly offers strong insights into the forces that drove Lee and Marvel to success. Adam Frank
Intiman Theatre is on the way to another reinvention The show will go on at Seattle’s Intiman Theatre. That wasn’t a foregone conclusion in September, when the nonprofit theater’s board of directors announced, citing an impending $7,000 budget shortfall, that it advised closing the company for good. Marcie Sillman
Take a fresh look at frozen seafood and prepare to be surprised If you ask American consumers whether fresh seafood or previously frozen tastes better, you are bound to get "fresh" as the answer. But blind taste tests conducted by Oregon State University found that fish caught and quickly frozen at sea rated as good or better than supposedly "fresh" fish bought at the supermarket. Tom Banse
The Hit Movie 'Parasite' Puts Basement Structures In Structural Inequality In the South Korean film, architecture is a symbol of class conflict. Director Bong Joon-ho knows that mansions are all over — but a certain humble subterranean apartment is particular to Seoul. Neda Ulaby
PHOTOS: An altar for Seattle's immigrant workers Dia de los Muertos brings single, mostly male workers together at Casa Latina. Together they build an altar to remember and celebrate their friends and co-workers who died alone in the U.S. Esmy Jimenez
Why Edward Norton Moved 'Motherless Brooklyn' To The New York Of Robert Moses The actor stars in — and directs, and wrote the screenplay for — his adaptation of Jonathan Lethem's detective novel. But he moved it to the 1950s to mine a dark side of NYC history. Mary Louise Kelly
You May Have To Wait To Borrow A New E-Book From The Library Macmillan Publishers Ltd. will begin restricting sales of new e-books to libraries to one per library system for the first eight weeks after publication. Libraries are fighting back. Lynn Neary
Marcie Sillman's weekend culture picks, November 1-3 We’ve survived Halloween (although no doubt some of us are still suffering sugar hangovers). KUOW’s Arts and Culture reporter Marcie Sillman has some recommendations for activities to entertain yourselves before the Thanksgiving/Chanukah/Christmas/New Year’s holiday onslaught begins. Marcie Sillman