Plus: Is cryptocurrency a stable bet for the future, a guide to visiting Utah’s ghost towns and it’s OK to be an amateur.
Good morning, Utah Today readers! It’s going to be cold! 🌨️ 5 – 23° in Logan | ❄️ 60% chance 🌨️ 19 – 28° in Salt Lake City | ❄️ 80% chance ⛅ 27 – 42° in St. George ⚠️ ⚠️ High wind warning. My friends frequently criticize me for romanticizing the past — they’re not wrong. For someone who has built an entire career around digital marketing and social media, I spend an awful lot of time watching period dramas, embroidering and praying that all the Big Tech mainframes go down. I often think about how many traditions are being forgotten except for the select few artisans who work to keep these elements of human history alive. For example, I love this video of dressmakers around the world who make traditional wedding dresses. I was particularly inspired by Colin Leonard’s article last week about starting your own traditions. Maybe instead of grumbling about not having many traditions in my life, I need to start a sewing circle or book group! Any takers? Tell me: What are some of the traditions you practice, and what are some bygone traditions you miss? As usual, if you’re looking for stories that have to do with the 2023 Legislative session, look for the bee! 👉🐝 Also on our minds: Is cryptocurrency a stable bet for the future, a guide to visiting Utah’s ghost towns and it’s OK to be an amateur. |
| Her favorite Sundance movie? She’ll give you 37 |
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| | Lee Benson asked Virginia Pearce, the director of the Utah Film Commission, to rank her favorite Sundance Film Festival movies over the years — she couldn’t do it. She couldn’t even keep it to a list of 30. Pearce has a long history with the festival, and she’s a lifelong lover of indie movies. From “Little Miss Sunshine” to “Crip Camp” to “Napoleon Dynamite” and “The Blair Witch Project” and beyond, you’d be hard-pressed to find a film she didn’t see during the festival’s 46-year history. | Adolescents are on their devices as much as nine hours a day scrolling through social media, gaming, online shopping, texting and more, and there is an ever-growing amount of evidence that shows it’s detrimental to a young person’s mental health. Rep. Chris Stewart believes the solution is to make it illegal for social media companies to allow children under the age of 16 onto the platforms. Other cities, states and countries have already adopted legislation to prevent minors from being online too much. What does this look like around the country and world? Learn more here. More in Politics: Utah State Board of Education calls for special vote on school choice bill (KSL) 🐝 The myth of the Latino vote (Deseret Magazine) | FROM OUR SPONSOR UTAH BUSINESS 30 Women to Watch: Submit Your Nomination Now Utah Business magazine is honoring women who are on their way to truly amazing things. These are our state’s next legislators, CEOs, entrepreneurs, authors and arrivistes — and they’re all congregating in Spring 2023. Nominations close Feb. 10. Submit your nomination now. | Family: Why tradition matters, and how to start your own (Deseret News) Health: Opinion: Successful urban planning means accounting for mental health (Deseret News) Economy: Perspective: Cryptocurrency, the U.S. dollar and your wallet (Deseret News) Environment: This winter’s rain and snow won’t be enough to pull the West out of drought (KUER) Should Utah drastically shrink its agricultural water use? (Utah Business) Entertainment: Actor Jeremy Renner broke over 30 bones in snow plough accident (BBC) Police and Courts: Idaho killings suspect followed 3 female victims on Instagram and ‘repeatedly’ messaged one, People reports (CNN) Ideas: Perspective: A lesson in letting go (Deseret News) Opinion: How to be an adult — when you don’t feel like an adult (Deseret News) Perspective: In praise of amateurism (Deseret News) Faith: Not forgotten: Church service and support help Puerto Rico find hope (Church News) Wasatch Front: Fleeing driver shot by Salt Lake officers has since died, police confirm (KSL) 4 arrested in drive-by shooting — including 14-year-old pregnant girl (KSL) Skimming device in Orem store for more than a month (KSL) Central Utah: Report from alert Utah school officials leads to arrest in sex misconduct case (KSL) The West: Navajo Nation rescinds the US’s longest-standing mask mandate (KUER) I went to most of Utah’s ghost towns. Here’s my guide to visiting them (Deseret News) The Nation: Gunman opens fire near California Lunar New Year festival, killing 10 (Deseret News) Sports: Jazz rookies figuring out what success looks like in the NBA (Deseret News) Impressive weekend sweep after coach’s challenge revives Runnin’ Utes’ NCAA Tournament hopes (Deseret News) Next up for struggling BYU — West Coast Conference leader Saint Mary’s (Deseret News) |
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