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Utah influencer Kim White’s cancer story is retold in new documentary, five years after her death

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Utah influencer Kim White’s cancer story is retold in new documentary, five years after her death


Kim White lived only 32 years, but she knew a movie about her life couldn’t be short.

“When I met with her, she said, ‘I want to do my story big,’” said Dan Davis, the director of “Breaking Into Beautiful,” a documentary about the Utah influencer who shared every step of her six-year battle with cancer on Instagram, up until her death on Feb. 14, 2020.

“I don’t think she knew what that meant, entirely. And I don’t think I knew what that meant, entirely, until I started to dig into her story,” Davis said from the Farmington offices of his production company, Stiry. “Then she started to uncover parts of her story with us, and what that meant was a feature film.”

“Breaking Into Beautiful” made its debut Jan. 3 on the streaming service of the Provo-based distributor Angel Studios, known for promoting family-friendly and faith-based content.

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White was diagnosed with adrenocortical carcinoma, a rare and aggressive cancer, in March 2014 — when the cancer caused a premature end to a pregnancy at 18 weeks. Kim and her husband, Treagan, were planning for a little boy to join them and their daughter, Hensleigh, in their Kaysville home.

(Angel Studios) Kim White is the subject of the documentary “Breaking Into Beautiful,” which chronicles the Kaysville woman’s six-year battle with cancer. The film is available for streaming on Angel Studios’ platform.

When she was diagnosed, Kim was told she would have two or three months to live. The movie shows how she decided to fight back hard, with aggressive treatments — including a liver operation in 2017 that she and her doctor referred to as “the Hail Mary,” as well as four infusions of the anti-cancer drug Keytruda.

White started documenting her cancer fight on Instagram. In the documentary, she says she did it in part because it was easier than sending texts and emails to all of her friends and relatives. At her death, she had gained some 124,000 Instagram followers.

Davis called White “a pioneer” for the way she shared her cancer fight. Before her, he said, “nobody was putting their health journeys on Instagram and social media” that way.

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Davis said his production crew watched hundreds of hours of footage that White and her family shot at practically every stage of her treatment.

“There are just these beautiful and heartbreaking pieces of footage, and photos, that she had,” Davis said. “A lot of it was hard to watch, and hard to see because of how much pain and turmoil and trauma that she had been through. But it was beautiful because it existed.”

(Angel Studios) Kim White hugs her daughter, Hensleigh, in a moment from the documentary “Breaking Into Beautiful,” which chronicles the Kaysville woman’s six-year battle with cancer. The film is available for streaming on Angel Studios’ platform.

Davis had heard about White’s story — an employee pointed him to the Instagram account — but he connected with her through a mutual acquaintance: Dan Reynolds, the frontman for the rock band Imagine Dragons.

Davis’ company had worked with Reynolds on a short film to promote his nonprofit, the Tyler Robinson Foundation. Kim and Treagan White had attended one of the foundation’s galas in Las Vegas in 2019 — about a year before she died. She saw the short film and approached Davis.

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“I always felt like hers was a story that I needed to tell, but I had never met her and never talked to her,” Davis said. “So it was pretty amazing to meet in that fashion, and have her just watch one of our films and then say, ‘I’ve been looking for someone to tell my story.’”

Reynolds was an early champion of White, and performed a solo acoustic concert in July 2014 to raise money to pay her medical bills. In February 2015, White was backstage at Ellen Degeneres’ talk show when Imagine Dragons performed.

Another celebrity who befriended White was Chris Harrison, the former host of ABC’s “The Bachelor” and “The Bachelorette” franchises. White met Harrison on the same trip to Hollywood when she was backstage at Ellen Degeneres’ show. She was a fan of “The Bachelor,” and he made it a point to invite her to that season’s “After the Rose” post-finale show — and got her a front-row seat every time she could attend.

Reynolds and Harrison are seen briefly in Davis’ documentary. Both attended White’s funeral and the “celebration of life” dance held the night before. Harrison is shown speaking on camera briefly outside her funeral.

(Angel Studios) Kim White, right, talks with her husband, Treagan White, in a moment from the documentary “Breaking Into Beautiful,” which chronicles the Kaysville woman’s six-year battle with cancer. The film is available for streaming on Angel Studios’ platform.

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Davis conducted the movie’s main interview with Kim White in October 2019. A few hours later, she was rushed to the emergency room because a tumor was closing off the airway to her lungs.

“It was a little scary, to be honest,” Davis said of that interview. “She was coughing a lot, and we were really worried about her. … She decided, ‘I’m getting up, I’m getting ready, I’m going to do this.’ … As a documentarian, you want those raw moments, but you don’t want to have anything that scary.”

Davis said getting the movie finished hit many hurdles. The lockdowns from the COVID-19 pandemic began just a month after White’s death. Also, many of her Instagram posts featured popular songs, and getting the music licenses took time. (One song in the film, “Disappear,” was recorded by musician Aja Volkman, Reynolds’ now-ex-wife, who wrote the song specifically for White.)

One question that “Breaking Into Beautiful” explores is why, out of thousands of stories of cancer diagnoses and fights, Kim White’s battle resonated with so many people. Davis said the answer is White herself.

“Kim just had these kind eyes, welcoming eyes,” Davis said. “She was a fierce, competitive, driven person, and you just could see that, even through her social media.”

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With her cancer diagnosis, Davis said, “people want to know what that’s like, because they have loved ones or friends or acquaintances that are going through a cancer battle, but they have no idea, really, what it’s like. And Kim told you exactly what it was like … and she didn’t hold anything back.”





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Utah QB Devon Dampier confirms he will play in Las Vegas Bowl vs. Nebraska

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Utah QB Devon Dampier confirms he will play in Las Vegas Bowl vs. Nebraska


The weeks following the college football regular season provide players plenty of time to weigh their NFL draft options against their desire to compete in a bowl game.

In Utah’s case, offensive tackles Spencer Fano and Caleb Lomu, as well as defensive end Logan Fano, decided it was in their best interests to forego the Utes’ Las Vegas Bowl matchup against Nebraska and declare for the 2026 NFL Draft instead.

Utah quarterback Devon Dampier, meanwhile, was looking forward to one last ride with his 2025 teammates before calling it a season.

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“I chose to finish out this season with my team,” Dampier said during a media availability session Thursday. “I’m gonna play in the game. But some people, it’s a lot higher stakes; got a couple first rounders and things like that.”

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‘We know those guys love us. They let it be known every day since they’ve been here, so we still support those guys and they support us.”

Utah head coach Kyle Whittingham presumed Thursday that the Fano brothers and Lomu would be the only bowl game opt-outs on Utah’s side, along with a few walk-ons. Some Utes who announced their transfer portal intentions continued to practice with the team as well.

Dampier confirmed his availability for the Las Vegas Bowl after a historic regular season under center, becoming the first Utes signal-caller to throw for over 2,000 yards and rush for over 600 yards in a single season since Alex Smith accomplished the feat in 2004. Dampier had 2,180 passing yards, a career-high 22 passing touchdowns and only five interceptions after throwing 12 picks last season. He also had 687 rushing yards and seven touchdowns going into Utah’s postseason game.

While his intentions for Dec. 31 were made clear, Dampier’s status for next season remained somewhat cloudy. He did hint at making an announcement alongside fellow quarterback Byrd Ficklin, though it was postponed after Ficklin’s return to the Utes was leaked Dec. 11.

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“Y’all going to see,” Dampier said when asked if he was coming back for the 2026 campaign. “It’s great. I’m very happy to be here.”

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“[Ficklin and I] were trying to do something special, but his [return] got a little leaked out before we could get to it. But it’s coming.”

Dampier said during a radio show appearance earlier in December that he was “big on staying” and had “no intentions to leave” the Utes. He also said over the airwaves that he anticipates being named a captain for the 2026 squad, and that he does play a role in recruiting.

Dampier discussed Kyle Whittingham’s impending departure from the program and the future outlook with Morgan Scalley set to take over during his media availability session.

On Kyle Whittingham’s decision to step down as head coach

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“That’s a legend. I got a lot of respect for him. I think he’s transformed this program. He’s made it perfect for [Morgan] Scalley to step in. I’m still excited to still be at Ute.”

On Morgan Scalley taking over as head coach

“I’m very confident in Scalley. When I came here on my visit, that was someone I talked to. He let me know the rundown for when his time comes. He had his full belief in me and in my talent, so I’m perfectly fine where I’m at.”

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On sending Whittingham off with a win

“It means a lot to me. I could try to speak for everybody on the team, but for me, especially, that’s a coach that believed in me to come in here after being at New Mexico, and just had a full trust in me, in the offense, to do what we do. And that’s just huge respect from him, and just what he’s done for this program. This is one only programs in college football where you know what Utes do, you know how they play and you know the mentality. So for him to leave that up, I got to finish well for him.”

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On whether the program is in better hands than it would be if an outsider was hired

“Most definitely. I think just what’s already set here, what’s known here; Scalley has been under Whitt. I think Whitt’s done a great job of allowing him to demonstrate what a good head coach looks like and I know Scalley is gonna step into it and do what he does.”

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Where did the Red Wings go wrong in loss to Utah? 5 thoughts

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Where did the Red Wings go wrong in loss to Utah? 5 thoughts


DETROIT — Just as the Detroit Red Wings looked like they were getting into a groove, they hit a stumbling block Wednesday in a 4-1 loss to the Utah Mammoth.

It’s only one game for a team that still sits atop the Atlantic Division, and none of the Red Wings players or coaches were going to panic in the aftermath. But a night after head coach Todd McLellan cautioned, “You can’t give it back,” after a strong run of recent play, a three-goal loss on home ice wasn’t the follow-up anyone was looking for.

Here’s what went wrong and some other thoughts from Wednesday night.

1. There was no doubt what McLellan thought the biggest issue was against the Mammoth.

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“For me, the difference was obvious,” he said. “It was play around our net.”

And that was a theme on all four goals Detroit allowed. On the first, Simon Edvinsson drifted just off of Clayton Keller in the slot, giving him enough room to put home a big rebound off Cam Talbot. On the second, Ben Chiarot didn’t tie up Jack McBain on the back post. The third was a bit different, as no one really lost their man, but when Moritz Seider went to clear a trickling puck headed for a goal line, he ended up bouncing it off Talbot’s pad and right to Dylan Guenther for an easy goal. And on the fourth, Nate Danielson was a step or two off his check in the slot for a one-timer.

“It’s like sitting at your desk at school,” McLellan said. “You’re sitting there, but big deal. Are you doing any work? We’re in position. Do the work. Do the job. Get it done.”

McLellan also noted that Edvinsson and Danielson threw their heads back after the first and fourth goals, indicating they knew immediately what had gone wrong.

2. Though those goals against were ultimately the difference in the final score, Detroit also created far too little danger of its own against the Mammoth, especially at five-on-five.

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Detroit’s top players, in particular, had uncharacteristic nights, with their first line (Larkin, Lucas Raymond and Emmitt Finnie) and the top defense pair (Seider and Edvinsson) all ending the night at minus-2, and with five-on-five expected goals shares below 25 percent, according to Natural Stat Trick.

Finnie got the Red Wings’ lone goal on a third-period power-play blast that briefly gave Detroit life, but there just weren’t enough serious chances in the second or third periods to really threaten Utah.

Although Detroit’s power play eventually scored in the third, a pair of second-period opportunities on the man advantage went by uneventfully when the score was still 1-0. The Red Wings didn’t record a shot on goal in the first of those two chances, and the top unit managed just one shot on goal in the second as well.

“We had looks, we had zone time, we just didn’t get it done,” Larkin said. “Didn’t get pucks through. Credit to them, they had a tight diamond, and I’m sure Todd will tell you both on their penalty kill and five-on-five, they probably won the net play tonight, and that was probably the story of the game.”

Certainly, the lack of any five-on-five offense is a more damning proposition than a 1-for-4 night on the power play. But situationally, in a one-goal game, those were big missed chances to swing momentum. Utah scored just 22 seconds after killing off the second penalty to make it 2-0, and that ultimately proved to be the game-winning goal.

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Still, with just one even-strength goal in the last two games, the Red Wings are going to need more there, and that includes their top players, who have really carried them offensively to this point.

3. Wednesday’s loss dropped the Red Wings to 1-5 in the second half of back-to-backs this season.

It’s a small sample, but that stands out, even with the inherent challenge of playing on consecutive nights. It didn’t seem to slow Utah too much Wednesday, for example.

Larkin acknowledged the Red Wings will have to be better in those situations, particularly with more on the horizon. Detroit will play three more sets of back-to-backs in the next two weeks, with a home-and-home against the Washington Capitals this weekend, tilts against the Carolina Hurricanes and Toronto Maple Leafs the following weekend, and then the Winnipeg Jets and Pittsburgh Penguins at New Year’s.

I asked McLellan if there was anything he could put his finger on with the back-to-backs, and he pointed out that Detroit hadn’t scored first in any of those losses. That is true, and it’s probably a symptom and a cause.

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Not scoring early has been a theme all season, though. Detroit has just 19 first-period goals in 35 games, which ranks 30th in the league, while giving up 28. The goals against number isn’t so bad — it’s still roughly league average — but it still translates to coming out of the first in a hole too often.

Cam Talbot hasn’t quite hit the same highs as earlier this season in recent games. (Rick Osentoski / Imagn Images)

4. Just as John Gibson seems to have found a bit of a rhythm for the Red Wings, Cam Talbot — who was Detroit’s rock in net early this season — has slipped into a bit of a funk. Not many of Wednesday’s goals were on him, but the rebound he gave up on the first goal (stemming from a low-percentage shot from along the boards) and then the trickling puck that led the third are atypical of where he was to start the season.

McLellan said he thinks the Red Wings have played better in front of Gibson of late, a reversal from early in the season, but that he’d “have a conversation (with Talbot) real quick, just let him know that we believe in him, because we do.”

5. After Tuesday night’s game, I noted Detroit had a tougher portion of the schedule coming up, with the back-to-back games against Washington and hosting a good Dallas Stars team to lead into Christmas.

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Co-worker Dom Luszczyszyn pointed out to me that it’s actually more dramatic in the big picture. His model projects the Red Wings with the league’s toughest remaining schedule coming into Wednesday, and Detroit’s remaining opponents also have the second-highest collective win percentage.

That’s just one more reason that banking every point possible matters right now, especially from Eastern Conference foes they’ll be competing with for a playoff spot.



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Utah organization urges harm reduction after executive order on fentanyl

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Utah organization urges harm reduction after executive order on fentanyl


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