Vol. 18, No. 34
Bigfoot Bandits
A Bigfoot is lost, then found. Plus, fighting school reform and a “first” for Spokane cyclists.
By Heidi Groover and Daniel Walters
Leaves in a Jet Plane
Algae, trash, seeds and wood pulp could fuel the future of commercial and military aviation - literally.
By Nicholas Deshais
Out With the Old
WSU has only one idea left for the Jensen-Byrd building: to get rid of it.
By Heidi Groover
Vaccine Haters
More people opt out of vaccination in Washington than in any other state - the numbers are even higher in Spokane.
By Daniel Walters
Sinking Standards
Anthony Weiner — like all cads and cheaters — should resign.
By George Nethercutt
Anderson's Coup
Do increased ratings for Anderson Cooper mean we're returning to real news?
By Ted S. McGregor Jr.
Downstream
How one man's epic voyage down the Columbia 200 years ago changed who we are today.
By Jack Nisbet
Queen's Court
An organization led by drag queens takes center stage for the area's gay community.
By Jordy Byrd and Tiffany Harms
'The Greater Journey,' David McCullough
Americans' opinions of Paris have influenced the vision we have for ourselves.
Don't Hold It In
Tired of being bullied by heartless bureaucrats? For all your pent-up tensions, Urinetown provides soothing relief.
By Michael Bowen
Speed Freak
If Jeshua Anderson becomes an Olympian, the Inland Northwest's new favorite sport might be track.
By Howie Stalwick
Chicken From Scratch
When the roosters get tough, the tough make coq au vin.
By Ari Levaux
No More 'Macaroni'
Coeur d'Alene's Tito Macaroni's grows up. Plus, hard red wheat at a Twin Lakes golf course.
By Carrie Scozzaro
Foo Fighters: Back and Forth
Inside the guitars and the growls.
By Joseph Haeger
Woody Loves Paris
He loves nostalgia, too, so it’s good that his latest rom com samples the Roaring Twenties.
By Cole Smithey
Falling Skies
Falling Skies has a big, fun premise— it just needs big, fun characters.
(Fake) Memory Lane
Opening this week: the Spielberg (and Abrams) version of the childhood you never had.
By Luke Baumgarten
Ring Up the Dead
No need to 'bring out your dead' — not when the dead are already walking among you.
By Ed Symkus
L.A. Noire
The new game from Rockstar lacks the variety that makes its other games so fun.
By Marty Demarest
'Codes and Keys,' Death Cab for Cutie
For once, Death Cab ceases to be pitch-perfect.
By Seth Sommerfeld
Sweet Relief
On their new album, local indie band Mon Chéri is comfortable in its own skin.
By Leah Sottile
'Ukulele Songs,' Eddie Vedder
Yes, you read that right.
By Azaria Podplesky
The Count of Country
After 14 albums and a Grammy, Steve Earle is changing his process entirely.
By L. Kent Wolgamott
Self-Made Band
Point Juncture, WA is practicing the sound — and lifestyle — of a bygone era: the ’90s.
By Julia Mullen Gordon
June
Earl tries his hand at paddling, biking and dribbling and checks out Kiss, Langhorne Slim and sake.
By Joel Smith, Kevin Taylor, Nicholas Deshais and Jordan Satterfield
July
Earl camps out at the Gorge, kayaks Lake Pend Oreille, hammers the downhills, and more.
By Jordan Satterfield, Tiffany Harms, Joseph Haeger, Daniel Walters and E.J. Iannelli
August
Earl rides a hog, tries a tri, geeks out at SpoCon and more.
By E.J. Iannelli, Kaitlin Gillespie, Jordy Byrd, Mary Stover, Blair Tellers and Luke Baumgarten
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Browse all Film Times
As Hayden-based bookstore It's a Love Story celebrates its first anniversary, the owners are creating a community of romantics
By Colton Rasanen
Spokane Children’s Theatre thinks outside the box for its 78th season finale: Mary Poppins
By E.J. Iannelli
Spokane's Best Food Trucks
By Inlander Staff
Spokane Summer Concert Calendar 2025
Sneak Peek Preview
Entree Food Newsletter
Weekend Countdown