Utah
9 of the most notable things famous people have said about Utah
Estimated learn time: 6-7 minutes
Annually, tens of millions of individuals go to Utah. Many come to go to the nationwide parks. Others are right here for occasions or enterprise or non secular conferences. For many years in January celebrities, film stars and well-known figures of every kind have come to attend the Sundance Movie Pageant.
With this steady publicity to Utah, many high-profile and well-known folks have voiced their opinions on the state. Even earlier than Sundance was an occasion athletes, authors and notable figures have made remarks about Utah. Listed below are a couple of of probably the most notable quotes celebrities have mentioned concerning the Beehive State.
Karl Malone
The mailman at all times delivers—whether or not he is within the paint coming off a decide and roll or within the press convention afterward. The Utah Jazz huge man was recognized throughout his lengthy profession for quirky and unapologetic feedback to the media. Malone gifted NBA followers a plethora of “Malone-isms,” often in his trademark third individual standpoint, Whitney O’Bannon wrote for Deseret Information.
On the situation of his franchise, Malone mentioned, “Lotta folks do not know the place Utah is, however it’s in Salt Lake,” claims azquotes.com. File that one beneath “Karl gotta say what Karl gotta say.”
Elon Musk
Enterprise magnate, Tesla CEO, and the topic of perpetual tabloid fodder Elon Musk talked about Utah when speaking about different energy on the AGU environmental conference in 2015.
Musk: “You could possibly take a nook of Utah and Nevada and energy the whole United States with solar energy.” #AGU15
— Lauren Morello (@lmorello_dc) December 15, 2015
Within the video, he says, “You could possibly energy the whole United States with about 150 to 200 sq. kilometers of photo voltaic panels. Your complete United States. Take a nook of Utah… not a lot occurring there, I have been there.” Utahns and outdoor lovers beg to vary (primarily based on the 5 nationwide parks positioned in Utah).
Ty Burrell
The “Trendy Household” star and real-life father and husband loves Utah a lot, he moved his entire household right here. In line with a Folks article, he and his spouse and two daughters lived right here in between taking pictures his hit sitcom. The truth is, he owns a couple of totally different eateries and a bar within the Salt Lake and Park Metropolis areas.
The jovial actor instructed Folks, “I cherished it from the primary time I acquired right here. It is a very unassuming place, it is a very humble place.”
Mark Twain
America’s eminent nineteenth century creator and humorist did not have many good issues to say about Utah. Twain (born Samuel Langhorne Clemens) traveled west along with his brother hoping for a rollicking journey seeing Native People and wild animals within the tough nation.
He wrote about his journey in a travelog—admittedly, years later after he had forgotten a lot of his journey—revealed as “Roughing It.” In line with a Deseret Information article, it included many unflattering descriptions of Mormon girls in addition to his disappointing assembly with Brigham Younger. The mountains, nevertheless, enchanted him.
“…We arrived on the summit of Huge Mountain, 15 miles from Salt Lake Metropolis, the place all of the world was glorified with the setting solar, and probably the most stupendous panorama of mountain peaks but encountered burst on our sight. We seemed out upon this chic spectacle from beneath the arch of an excellent rainbow!”
Publish Malone
The lyrics of Publish Malone’s smash hit “Wow.” say, “In every single place I’m going/Catch me on the block like I am Mutombo/750 Lambo within the Utah snow.” Hope that Lambo has snow tires! Locals now declare the face-tattooed millennial rapper as a bona fide Utahn, a KSL Radio article says. After doing a present close to the Nice Salt Lake, the musician fell in love with the realm and acquired a virtually 13,000 sq. foot retreat in Cottonwood Heights to calm down and benefit from the freedom Utah gives.
“It is free nation on the market,” he instructed Rolling Stone. “Like, you should buy suppressors in Utah. You are able to do open carry. Stroll into the grocery retailer with a handgun in your hip.”
Dirk Nowitzki
Apparently the Dunking Deutschman is not a fan of Utah—or of American geography. (Maybe he took the identical class as Karl Malone?)
“Utah is a foul metropolis,” Nowitzki instructed a reporter in 2001.
To be honest, Nowitzki later defined that there was extra to the notorious quote, an ESPN article clarifies. The Dallas Mavericks performed the Utah Jazz within the first spherical of the NBA playoffs, and their coach determined to fly the workforce dwelling in between the primary and second video games.
A neighborhood reporter confirmed up on the airport and requested Nowitzki why the workforce wasn’t staying in Salt Lake Metropolis, and the younger Nowitzki—recent out of Germany and with restricted English expertise—fumbled and got here up with that reply. Jazz followers by no means forgot that disrespect and made Nowitzki pay for it each time he performed in Utah!
The Seashore Boys
“Down in Utah/The fellows and I dig a metropolis known as Salt Lake/It is acquired the grooviest children/That is why we by no means get uninterested in Salt Lake.” The Seashore Boys wrote the ode to town in 1965 which included nods to Lagoon, the winter snowboarding, and the cutest women within the Western States.
The truth is, the Seashore Boys’ hit “Enjoyable, Enjoyable, Enjoyable” is impressed by a Utah lady! In line with a KSL article, the girl’s father owned a radio station throughout the band’s peak of fame. She instructed her father she was going to the library—sure, in his T-Chook—and as an alternative went to a hamburger stand on 3300 South and about 2700 East. When her father caught her, she was complaining concerning the incident to employees the following morning on the radio station. The Seashore Boys had been friends on the radio present that day, heard concerning the teen’s journey, and wrote a music about it. What an ode to Utah!
Katherine Heigl
What would any sort of Utah listing be with out together with Katherine Heigl? The Gray’s Anatomy star moved to Utah in 2010 looking for a much less fast-paced way of life.
“We had huge desires of increasing our household, shifting to the mountains and having a quieter life,” she instructed Good Housekeeping. “Utah is spectacularly lovely, the individuals are fantastic and sort, it is a simple commute from L.A.— and there is not any visitors!”
Heigl went on to gush concerning the way of life in Utah the place “children might be children” and describes life on her Oakley ranch together with her husband, kids, and a myriad of canine, cats, chickens, and horses.
Robert Redford
Actor and conservationist Robert Redford was the unique movie star to make residing in Utah cool. The Provo Canyon surroundings captivated the younger film hunk whereas on a bike trip from California to Colorado in faculty, Judith Thurman writes for Architectural Digest. He then fell in love with a neighborhood Provo woman and lived a country way of life in between film shoots along with his younger household on the 2 acres he purchased for $500 in 1963. That land developed into the world-renowned Sundance Resort when he finally added onto the acreage.
“I might see growth beginning to descend on the state of Utah. I believed I had higher purchase extra land to guard it,” Redford instructed TIME in 2015. “I believed that might in all probability be my legacy, to guard land.”
Redford not too long ago joined with Utah Open Lands to place 300 acres of pristine wildlife lands into everlasting safety, along with the 1,875 acres of Sundance resort he positioned into an easement years in the past.
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Utah
Utah family creates 'Giving Gallery' to spread joy of art
COTTONWOOD HEIGHTS, Utah — You might have heard of little libraries in neighborhoods, but have you heard of Giving Galleries?
A family in Cottonwood Heights is using their love for art to bring joy to those around them.
On the corner of Promenade and Camino is Abigail Bradshaw.
“I’m standing next to an art gallery, my art gallery. That’s my house,” she proudly said.
Abigail is showing her tiny art gallery filled with pieces made by her family and others who want to contribute. This home used to be her great-grandmother’s.
“She was an artist, and so, I wanted to continue that legacy,” said Katie Bradshaw, Abigail’s mom. They found a box, painted it, propped it up, and filled it with tiny art. Anyone can just look at the art, pick up something they like, or put their own piece inside.
Miles Jacobsen is a friend who saw what the Bradshaws were doing and added his artwork to the box.
For people who want to make their own masterpieces, there is also a box of free art supplies in the gallery box. You can come by to pick up paint, paintbrushes, and tiny canvasses to create your own art, which you can drop off at the “giving gallery” to bring joy to someone else.
“I feel really glad that people come and get some art and put it in there,” said Abigail.
Filling the box is something Katie does with her kids.
“I hope that they can carry this with them, that they continue sharing art, no matter where they are,” she said.
Spreading joy to everyone who walks by, and letting the cycle continue.
“I want them to feel happy and glad that they got some, so they could return some back here,” added Abigail.
Utah
Amid traffic, Utah walked to Leafs’ arena pregame
TORONTO — The Utah Hockey Club said players were forced to walk to their game against the Maple Leafs after their bus got stuck in Toronto traffic Sunday night.
The team posted a video on social media of team members walking to Scotiabank Arena, with player Maveric Lamoureux saying the bus was “not moving at all.”
Several city streets had been closed during the day for an annual Santa Claus parade.
The Maple Leafs earned their fourth consecutive win by defeating Utah 3-2.
The viral incident prompted Ontario Premier Doug Ford to call the congestion “embarrassing” and “unacceptable,” highlighting his government’s plan to address the city’s gridlock through bike lane legislation.
It wasn’t the first time a Toronto visitor had to ditch their vehicle to make it to an event on time.
In June, former One Direction band member Niall Horan had to walk through traffic to get to his concert at Scotiabank Arena.
Utah
Utah Highway Patrol responds to your suggestions on making Utah roads safer
SALT LAKE CITY — FOX 13 News is Driven to Change and that includes bringing you reports on important topics like road rage, construction, and wrong-way drivers. During our coverage, we continually ask for any questions or concerns you may have along Utah’s roadways.
The feedback has gotten an enormous response, so FOX 13 sat down with Lieutenant Cameron Roden on Good Day Utah to help address input we have been getting, from the perspective of Utah Highway Patrol.
Speeding in Utah, there’s so much of it, and then you can sometimes say that that leads to tailgating, which may lead to road rage incidents. What are you seeing out there in terms of speed and what can we do to lessen the effects of that?
Lt. Cameron Roden: Speed is our number one thing that we see. That’s our number one traffic stop that we make, and we know that it leads to the majority of crashes in the state of Utah. So we definitely put an emphasis on speed and it does lead to other things. Not just crashes. It leads to road rage and other things .So, as far as what changes can we make, we need to start with ourselves, and really say, ‘Hey, do I have a problem?’ You know, we just need to start with ourselves and not think that it’s something else’s problem. If we slow our speeds ourselves, and then it’ll start to to catch on and people will do that speed limit. So, but the legislature has definitely taken some steps to help us address, especially the the speeds that are those excessive speeds where we have that one zero five law now that addresses those speeds and increases fines and and hopefully discourages people from those extreme speeds.
Some of our viewers talked about maybe capping some of the speed limits for truck drivers. Is that something that’s even feasible?
You know, that would be something that would have to go through that, that legislative process to see whether we that would be something that would help. But ultimately, if we we start with ourselves, hopefully that will make that change and reduce crashes and fatalities.
There are things being done to try and intervene and stop wrong-way drivers before they happen. But some of our viewers propose things like spikes. What are your thoughts on implementing something like that?
We’ve had over the last several years, a rash of wrong-way drivers, and it’ll come in onesie twos, and then we’ll go for a period of time without that. And so, but this spike over the last couple of years has caused us to to create a task force to look at wrongly driving what things can be done. And so getting all these stakeholders together between UDOT and Highway Safety, looking at what technologies and things that could be implemented, and and things like, wrong way detection cameras. Those are some things that are being actually used in the state of Utah right now to help us spot those and and advance signage, getting people to realize they’re going the wrong way and turn around. The the spike strips have actually been talked about in our task force a little bit. And if something like that would even be, it is that technology available right now. And as what we could actually implement in the state of Utah, there’s nothing that really fits the bill right now because of our environment. We have our snow plows. We have snow and things like that. Something like that really wouldn’t be practical right now.
Probably the most talked about topic that we’ve received was distracted driving, texting while driving. You went out, I saw on the UHP social media page, that you guys just driving and you look to your right and left and you can find someone texting. What kind of enforcement do we have against distracted driving specifically on your phone?
This is something that we like you said, we see it every day. We go out to crashes,and and we may suspect that a driver may be distracted. And so, it’s something that’s definitely under-reported. It’s it’s a bigger problem than than the numbers really show.And so not only do we address it during our normal patrols.Our officers are seeing it, and addressing it while they’re out there.But we’ll also do targeted patrols where the highway safety office actually gives out additional funds for that targeted enforcement, where we’ll get an unmarked vehicle. We go out driving down the roads where we try to spot these vehicles and and get them stopped because those are those are a big danger on our roadways where our attention and our focus needs to be on driving.
If you have ideas or suggestions for how to make Utah’s roadways safer click here to be taken to our Driven to Change form. There you can share your ideas or suggestions.
DRIVEN TO CHANGE
Share your ideas on how to make Utah’s roads safer
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