Seattle, WA
Chelsea Gray Top Points vs. Seattle Storm
Chelsea Gray Top Points vs. Seattle Storm, 06/08/2026
Video Transcript
Getting some good looks, Seattle.
Just haven’t been able to drop them from outside.
It’s 40% from the floor.
Gray down low.
Bullying High to mid.
Yeah, I think it’s pretty exciting the first few times you get to go up against your idol.
Advertisement
And they are right here.
She’s gonna try and steal the ball from her right now.
Gray for three, is able to get it to drop.
to the game, she mentioned that sometimes they have the same instincts.
They cut to the same spots, and that’s gonna take time to learn each other.
As Gray falls away.
Eight to shoot.
Gray, able to get it to drop.
Now in double figures
Seattle, WA
Safety forces say they’re ready for World Cup in one week
SEATTLE — With the first World Cup match in Seattle just one week from today, a coalition of federal, state, county, and local agencies says final security preparations are in place to keep fans and visitors safe during matches, festivals, and watch parties.
Officials described the effort as an unprecedented undertaking that has been years in the making, with intensified planning over the last two years. They said Seattle has handled major events before, including a Super Bowl parade and MLB’s All-Star Week, but the World Cup’s scale and duration present a new challenge.
RELATED | Seattle mayor explains decision to turn on CCTV cameras for World Cup: ‘Credible threat’
“We’re here to discuss the most complex, the largest sporting event not only in this nation’s history but in the history of the world,” said U.S. Secret Service Special Agent in Charge Trent Heinrichs, who is serving as the federal coordinator for the World Cup in Seattle.
Heinrichs said fans should expect heightened screening and security measures around venues and events.
“They’re going to see magnetometers, they’re going to see canines, they’re going to see explosive ordnance detection, there’s going to be robust air security. We’re going to have temporary flight restrictions in place,” Heinrichs said.
He said the Secret Service’s role includes supporting state and local partners in addition to protecting heads of state and government who may attend games.
“We haven’t dealt with anything of this size, but the collaboration gives me comfort,” said King County Sheriff’s Office Undersheriff Jeff Flohr.
The security footprint spans multiple agencies, including the Coast Guard, which will patrol waterways and escort ferries on match days, and FEMA, which has allocated $19 million to defend against unauthorized and dangerous drones.
“We’ve trained and rehearsed a range of scenarios, and we have identified staging areas in the event that we need to have life-saving teams come into this area,” said the FEMA Region 10 Response Division director during a news briefing on the Seattle Waterfront.
SEE ALSO | City leaders say Seattle ready for World Cup, despite concerns with surveillance, drones
FBI Assistant Special Agent in Charge in Seattle asks anyone who observes unsafe or improper use of a drone to please report it to the FBI tip line at 1-800-CALL-FBI or tips.fbi.gov.
The Seattle Police Department will run incident command and control throughout the event.
“There’s going to be a very strong police presence at both the stadium area as well as all of our fan celebration sites,” said SPD Capt. Dan Nelson.
Nelson said officers will be easy to spot in special neon green shirts and will be supported by officers from 11 different police departments. He also addressed the decision to activate CCTV cameras during the World Cup, a reversal by Seattle’s mayor Katie Wilson after she learned of “general but credible threats” to safety and security.
“We always support Mayor Wilson’s decision. I think it is a good idea. You know, major events have a lot of associated dangers with them because, unfortunately, we do have bad actors in the community who are looking to use large-scale crowd gatherings to further their own cause,” Nelson said.
Officials said the World Cup will affect more than just ticket holders.
On the six match days at Seattle Stadium, planners expect up to 65,000 people inside the stadium and another 30,000 outside at fan festivals and watch parties.
The King County Sheriff’s Office and Seattle police urged the public to manage expectations and plan for congestion, including street closures around the stadium on game days. Law enforcement and local and state leaders are encouraging fans, visitors, downtown residents, and workers to use transit and, if possible, work from home.
Extra bus routes and additional light-rail runs have been added, along with a free waterfront shuttle. The King County Sheriff’s Office said it will use two helicopters to patrol and will place deputies on light rail and Sound Transit trains, along with a heavy police presence in the area.
Officials also emphasized two key requests for the public: report suspicious activity and have fun.
Seattle, WA
Public Art Plays the Long Game for the World Cup in Seattle
On a stretch of sidewalk in downtown Seattle this summer, you might notice a small vinyl marker shaped like a drop of water. Scan it with your phone, and the street will begin to shift—plants might bloom across the pavement, animals crawl or slither, water cascades, and stories unfold. Follow the next marker, and the next, and you’re moving through a different kind of FIFA World Cup experience—one that turns the city’s streets into a stage for storytelling.
As Seattle prepares to host six matches at Lumen Field, the city is investing not only in infrastructure and fan zones but also in a wide-ranging slate of public art meant to animate streets, neighborhoods, and public spaces. Through programs such as the World Cup 2026 Community Celebrations and a series of downtown activations called We Still Dream a Future, the city has funded free festivals, installations, and performances designed to reflect Seattle’s cultural breadth.
The most visible of those efforts will unfold downtown and in Pioneer Square, where large-scale projects aim to meet visitors where they already are—walking, gathering, and exploring between games. One of the most ambitious is Future Arts Way, a 2.5-mile interactive route linking Seattle Center to King Street Station. Developed by the nonprofit Future Arts, the project uses augmented reality to layer digital storytelling onto physical sites, connecting visitors to local small businesses, Coast Salish histories, and color-splashed artworks along the way.
“This is truly an effort to bring important untold stories that have been living in this land for a very long time … back onto the land using technology,” says Future Arts executive director Yuliya Bruk.
The heart of the route is a major installation at Third Avenue and Pine Street. Titled Other Earth 2026, it combines large-scale vinyl, augmented reality experiences, and hand-painted murals to present hypnotic artwork inspired by perspectives that have traditionally been “othered.” Drawing on Coast Salish ecological knowledge, Afrofuturist design, and ethnobotanical research, the installation imagines a downtown landscape where water, plant life, and ancestral histories resurface through both physical and digital layers.
“We want visitors and residents to see a city that feels alive with possibility—where art, culture, and community are not just on display, but are happening all around them.”—Kate Fernandez, Downtown Activations Supervisor
Elsewhere along the route, visitors encounter smaller launch points—QR-coded markers that unlock location-specific artworks and narratives. The experience can be as brief or as immersive as one chooses, whether pausing at a single stop or walking the full path through Belltown, downtown, and Pioneer Square.
“Our goal is to put things out there that leave a lasting memory and leave someone changed,” Bruk says.
Future Arts Way is just one piece of a broader downtown effort. Earlier this year, the Unity Loop mural project unveiled two gargantuan-scale works to the city’s urban core. The blue-green waves of United Currents by Seattle artist Leo Shallat now grace a wall at Spring Street and Fifth Avenue, while two young figures in grayscale leap 17 stories at 1306 Western Avenue in the United by Nature mural by Greek artist INO. Produced by Street Art for Mankind, the works are designed to reflect themes of counterculture, human rights, and civic unity, positioning Seattle as both a creative capital and a welcoming global city.
Meanwhile, just outside Lumen Field, the 9-foot-tall Vital Spirit sculpture by Gerard Tsutakawa adds another focal point. The undulating bronze (one side jagged, one side gentle) represents “the coming together of the peoples of the world,” according to Tsutakawa. It’s designed to welcome visitors while reflecting the energy and movement of the surrounding stadium district.
“We want visitors and residents to see a city that feels alive with possibility—where art, culture, and community are not just on display, but are happening all around them,” says the city’s Downtown Activations supervisor, Kate Fernandez. “Whether it’s a large-scale installation, a live performance, or a spontaneous dance workshop, the goal is for visitors to feel that they’ve stepped into a shared civic experience—one that is imaginative, welcoming, and deeply human.”
Seeing double. A 17-story mural near Pike Place Market, United by Nature, by Greek artist INO, is part of Seattle’s public art Unity Loop, created in celebration of the 2026 FIFA World Cup.
MURAL BY INO, CURATED BY STREET ART FOR MANKIND
That same ethos carries into the many smaller, more intimate projects funded through the city’s We Still Dream a Future initiative. In Chinatown–International District, for example, writer and artist Taha Ebrahimi (author of Street Trees of Seattle) and Vanishing Seattle founder Cynthia Brothers are leading a series of free walking tours from June to September that weave together neighborhood history and urban forestry. Participants will learn about migration, displacement, and resilience through both first-person stories and the living landscape of notable trees, including what might be the largest loquat tree in the state.
“At its root, community is developed in person, locally,” Ebrahimi says. “As our city continues to grow and attract new people, we want to ensure a future that celebrates the people and places that came before us.”
That balance—between global attention and local meaning—runs through many of
the projects tied to the World Cup. While the event is expected to attract hundreds of thousands of visitors to Seattle, much of the art has been designed with a longer horizon in mind.
For Bruk, that future-facing perspective is essential. “We wanted to make sure Seattle showed up in the world’s eye as being grounded in technology that really uplifts cultural stories,” she says, “and that our community is left with something that we feel proud of afterward.”
If these efforts succeed, the legacy of the World Cup may not just be measured in attendance or revenue, but in something less tangible—how the city chose to tell its own story while the whole world was watching.
Seattle, WA
COUNTDOWN: With Arts-in-Nature Festival approaching, DNDA celebrates grant
(WSB photo)
Shannon Woodard, interim executive director of DNDA, visited Mechanics Bank in The Junction this week to accept a $7,500 grant that’ll help support the housing/art/community nonprofit’s work. One big event ahead: The Arts-in-Nature Festival returns on Saturday, June 27, 10 am-8 pm, at Camp Long (5200 35th SW). Admission will be free, and you’ll be able to wander the park to enjoy music, movement, and storytelling performances, as well as immersive art installations in the park’s rustic cabins. Accepting the grant, Woodard told Mechanics Bank’s Andrew Tento (pictured above with her) and Bob Livingston that though her role as interim executive director is new, she’s been on the DNDA board since 2015, and has worked in the housing sector, setting her up for leadership in DNDA’s housing work, too. “As well as providing affordable housing, we prove community,” Woodard noted – and that’s what the June 27 festival will be about, too.
-
Los Angeles, Ca3 minutes agoIn-N-Out Burger opens new flagship location on Las Vegas Strip
-
Detroit, MI25 minutes agoMan arrested for concealing gun in baby stroller
-
San Francisco, CA33 minutes agoFatal stabbing leads to fines at SF hospital
-
Dallas, TX40 minutes agoAdditional Mosquito Samples in Dallas, Carrollton Test Positive for West Nile Virus
-
Miami, FL43 minutes agoA Greg Dulcich breakout – The Splash Zone 6/9/26
-
Boston, MA48 minutes agoOfficials investigating death of child in South End – Boston News, Weather, Sports | WHDH 7News
-
Denver, CO55 minutes agoDenver Parks and Recreation begins work to rebuild historic bandshell destroyed in fire
-
San Diego, CA1 hour agoReds still looking for answers as losing streak hits 5 in San Diego