Seattle Conditions

Hourly Forecast

11am

59°

26%

12pm

59°

41%

1pm

59°

49%

2pm

59°

74%

3pm

60°

80%

4pm

60°

83%

5pm

59°

97%

6pm

59°

92%

7pm

59°

96%

8pm

58°

92%

9pm

57°

87%

10pm

57°

80%

11pm

58°

88%

12am

57°

95%

1am

57°

95%

2am

57°

88%

3am

57°

87%

4am

55°

72%

5am

55°

75%

6am

55°

65%

7am

54°

55%

8am

54°

48%

9am

55°

22%

10am

56°

29%

7-Day Forecast

Today

62°

97%

Tonight

53°

96%

Tuesday

62°

65%

Tuesday Night

50°

49%

Wednesday

64°

16%

Wednesday Night

51°

Thursday

68°

Thursday Night

51°

Friday

71°

Friday Night

54°

Saturday

76°

Saturday Night

58°

Sunday

83°

Sunday Night

61°

Sunrise 5:10am · Sunset 9:06pm
Tides: Next: High 7.2 ft at 11:17 AM
AQI 38 — Good
No quakes M4.5+ in last 24h

Seattle Sports

34-32

1st in AL West

LOSS Mariners 4 at Tigers 5 Yesterday
NEXT At Orioles Today · 3:35 PM
3-9

8th in Western Conference Division

LOSS Storm 68 at Lynx 88 Sat, Jun 6
NEXT At Aces Today · 7:00 PM
4-2-5

10th in NWSL

LOSS Seattle 1 at Washington 2 Sat, May 30
NEXT At North Carolina Sat, Jul 4 · 3:30 PM

Latest News

Updated 2 minutes ago
International Examiner 25 days

Yaminee Patel’s solo show explores South Asian diaspora identity with art works forged from  rice, lentils, and beans

Yaminee Patel’s debut solo show, “Rice, Roots, and the Road to Cultural Exploration” at Common Objects in Belltown is a full sensory experience. I was lucky to have visited the gallery on Friday morning before the opening. When I arrived, I was met with a perfume of rice smell —  a warm embrace. I was […] The post Yaminee Patel’s solo show explores South Asian diaspora identity with art works forged from  rice, lentils, and beans appeared first on International Examiner.

International Examiner 25 days

“Long Take”: newly translated book of essays by Akira Kurosawa offers a personal view of the film legend

Hilarious comments from the sets during film production, private thoughts about great movie directors around the world, opinions about the Japanese movie-going public, and a daughter’s view of daily life with the movie legend, Akira Kurosawa.  These are found in “Long Take,” a translation of the original book of essays by film director Akira Kurosawa, […] The post “Long Take”: newly translated book of essays by Akira Kurosawa offers a personal view of the film legend appeared first on International Examiner.

International Examiner 25 days

Surveillance cameras were installed in the CID last spring, here’s how community members feel about them one year later

On the corner of 10th Avenue South and South Jackson Street, a surveillance camera watches over the street near Cory Potts’ Center for Bicycle Repair shop. His shop, he said, once belonged to a Japanese florist who disappeared during World War II with Executive Order 9066 — taken, like over 100,000 others, by a government that […] The post Surveillance cameras were installed in the CID last spring, here’s how community members feel about them one year later appeared first on International Examiner.

International Examiner 26 days

With a pitch-black humor, Pakistani novelist Mohammed Hanif lays bare the crushing power of religion and the authoritarian state 

Pakistani writer Mohammed Hanif is known for his subversive, darkly humorous novels that critique Pakistani politics. His first novel A Case of Exploding Mangoes, was long-listed for the Booker and focused on General Zia u-Haq’s death in a plane crash widely believed to be an assassination. In Rebel English Academy, he takes us into the early years […] The post With a pitch-black humor, Pakistani novelist Mohammed Hanif lays bare the crushing power of religion and the authoritarian state  appeared first on International Examiner.

International Examiner 26 days

Mastering the masalas: traditional and innovative Indian recipes for the American kitchen

Accessible, humor-filled, and well-illustrated, Heartland Masala is an Indian cookbook that teaches about ingredients and methods. It has been written by a mother-and-son duo.  Mother Jyoti, a medical professional, has taught cooking in Kansas for many years. “Be brave,” she says. “Cook Boldly!”  Her son, Auyon, a musician and foodie, has joined her in creating a light-hearted book—warm, […] The post Mastering the masalas: traditional and innovative Indian recipes for the American kitchen appeared first on International Examiner.

International Examiner 26 days

Book featuring selected case files from the Chinese Exclusion Act lacks a real historical analysis

Chinese in Washington: The Legacy of the Chinese Exclusion centers on a collection of the Chinese Exclusion Act case files at the National Archives in Seattle. The files comprise information from forms, interrogations, and correspondence of Chinese who went through U.S. Customs as they entered, re-entered or departed from the Ports of Seattle, Port Townsend, and Sumas, Washington; Portal, North Dakota; and Portland, Oregon.  This book selects 56 files—out of some 50 thousand—of Chinese from various […] The post Book featuring selected case files from the Chinese Exclusion Act lacks a real historical analysis appeared first on International Examiner.

International Examiner 26 days

Keeping traditions alive at the 23rd annual White Center Cambodian New Year Street Festival

Under warm, sunny skies hundreds gathered in celebration of Cambodian New Year in the heart of White Center, Washington on April 25, 2026.  Families celebrated with freshly cooked Cambodian new years dishes, a blessing ceremony by local Cambodian Buddhist monks, traditional dance performances, and soul-cleansing baby powder and water splashes that sent roars of laughs […] The post Keeping traditions alive at the 23rd annual White Center Cambodian New Year Street Festival appeared first on International Examiner.

International Examiner 27 days

Finding care that feels like family 

Growing up in a multigenerational household in Hong Kong, I watched my mother and aunt rearrange our three-bedroom apartment around my grandparents as they aged. Handrails went into the shower. Adjustable beds replaced the old ones. Eight of us shared that space—crowded, complicated, and never once in question. In Chinese, we have a word for […] The post Finding care that feels like family  appeared first on International Examiner.

International Examiner 27 days

May is Hepatitis awareness month!

By Mohammed Abdulkadir, MA, MPH, Hepatitis B Coalition of Washington Each May, during Hepatitis Awareness Month, we are reminded that some of the most serious public health threats are also the least talked about. Hepatitis B is one of them—and Hepatitis D, also known as Hepatitis Delta, is a lesserknown but far more dangerous virus […] The post May is Hepatitis awareness month! appeared first on International Examiner.

International Examiner 27 days

Why Alysa Liu feels like exactly what we need right now

Alysa Liu’s popularity isn’t just about skating. It’s about what people need right now.  There’s a lot going on in the world. Wars overseas, immigration raids, and, well, let’s face it, we’re more divided as a nation than we’ve been in a long time. So it’s no surprise that Alysa Liu’s joy and authenticity feel like something the world has been missing.  Every so often, an athlete comes along […] The post Why Alysa Liu feels like exactly what we need right now appeared first on International Examiner.

International Examiner 27 days

Here’s what you need to know about the new investments coming to the CID

Two major investments are headed towards Chinatown International District (CID) and Pioneer Square.    First, on March 25, Engrossed Substitute House Bill 1408 was signed into law by Governor Bob Ferguson, allocating 30% of retail sales tax from stadiums to sustain Historic South Downtown (HSD) until 2037.    HSD is a government entity created in 2007 to […] The post Here’s what you need to know about the new investments coming to the CID appeared first on International Examiner.

International Examiner 28 days

In “Year of the Cat,” a filmmaker searches for his father 50 years after the Fall of Saigon

Tony Nguyen first screened with the Seattle Asian American Film Festival (SAAFF) in 2016 with his short personal documentary film, “Giap’s Last Day at the Ironing Board Factory” (2015). It is a tender portrayal of Tony and his relationship with his mother, Giap Thi Nguyen, who escaped Saigon while pregnant with him and no father in the picture. She […] The post In “Year of the Cat,” a filmmaker searches for his father 50 years after the Fall of Saigon appeared first on International Examiner.

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