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100 Reasons to Love Seattle

By Laura Cassidy, Tiffany Wan, Jessica Voelker, Eric Scigliano, Kathryn Robinson, Judy Naegeli, Caitlin King, Matthew Halverson, James Ross Gardner, Laura Dannen, and Christopher Werner

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82–86: Our Happy Hours Have Evolved Beyond the Bar

Used to be happy hour meant a $5 martini and some salted nuts, maybe a little light banter with Pete from accounts payable while you waited out the after-work traffic. But it was only so long before other local businesses began competing with cocktails for those much-coveted weekday bucks. Only unwanted hair gets ripped off—for a discount, natch—at the two locations of The Wax Bar (thewaxbarseattle.com), at Derby Salon in Roosevelt (derbysalon.com), and at downtown’s Urban Yoga Spa (urbanyogaspa.com). Last spring, Bottega Italiana (bottegaitaliana.com) in Pike Place Market intro’ed a weekday espresso discount to pep up afternoon sales. At high-end restaurant Palace Kitchen (tomdouglas.com), meanwhile, special happy hour menus serve up thematic flights of bites, like a $7 trio of lamb snacks. Complimentary pistachios are available at the bar.

16. Old Buildings Are the New New Thing

As the managing director of real estate development firm Eagle Rock Ventures (eaglerockventures.com), Scott Shapiro takes dated properties and makes them pretty, fun, and pretty functional by, as he says, putting a “new building in old skin.” Take his latest, a joint venture with Liz Dunn of Dunn and Hobbes (thank her for the gorgeous Osteria La Spiga and Plum Bistro) to rehab the Melrose Market, home to artisanal butcher Rain Shadow Meats, speakeasy-style bar Still Liquor, and Sonic Boom Records. Anchoring the shops and restaurants is a barnlike marketplace flanked by raw brick, a wall of sliding windows, and a sky-high wood-planked ceiling supported by hefty industrial beams. The process is more complicated than building from scratch, but, Shapiro points out, “you can’t recreate new spaces like this today.”

15. We’ll Take Your Young and Desperate

Only the United States takes in orphans and other refugee youths separated from their parents. Only four states have more than a single agency equipped to receive them—and one of those is Washington. Lutheran Community Services (lcsnw.org) in Seattle and Catholic Community Services (ccsww.org) in Tacoma both began receiving refugee children in 1980, when thousands fled Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia without their parents. Since then they’ve received “the lost boys” (and girls) of Sudan and uprooted youngsters from Central America, Cuba, Haiti, Bhutan, and East Africa. These days, it’s youths from Congo and Burma who, without the Lutheran program, might be lost as well. Once again, Seattle’s there, at least for a lucky few.

44. We Root for a Draft Dodger

Let’s set aside the possibility that by passing up a fat pro contract to don the UW purple and gold for his senior season Jake Locker is (at best) a devil-may-care masochist or (at worst) straight-up insane. Instead, let’s focus on the fact that the run-and-gun QB’s fiscally risky decision was a message to Dawg fans—and the rest of the Pac-10, for that matter—that these aren’t Tyrone’s Huskies anymore. When NFL draft gurus like Mel Kiper predict you’d be the fifth player chosen after your junior year, you don’t stick around out of a Boy Scout–like desire to see things through. You do it because you think—no, expect—you’ll win.

61. We Can Watch Performances on Our Laptops

In January, edgy, contemporary arts nonprofit On the Boards (ontheboards.org) started testing next-gen performance with ontheboards.tv, a website that streams and sells high-definition videos of shows staged at its 100 Roy Street theater. Viewing costs less than the price of a ticket ($5 for a 48-hour rental, $15 to download and own), and the film’s quality is surprisingly sharp, thanks to the multiple HD cameras and the mad editing skills of local production company Thinklab. The service is small on selection—seven shows will be available this year, eight in 2011—but big on talent. We’d gladly watch Young Jean Lee’s The Shipment again, live or on a 12-inch screen.

100. We Love to Learn, Even at Midnight

Yes, we’ve already given Michael Hebb a pat on the back (no. 33). But Night School (nightnightnight.com), the series of nocturnal “classes” he curates for the Sorrento Hotel, is so quintessentially Seattle, it deserves another: It’s broadening intellectual horizons with a gonzo lust for life.

Whether it’s a liquored-up history class about, um, liquor, or an experiment in mashing up classical and pop music, each class is a study in learning and letting loose at the same time. And at the head of the class is the Midnight Symposium, which puts “students” face to face with a visiting intellectual (such as Pulitzer-winning historian Gary Wills) to chat over drinks and a hearty stew. We’ve never been more excited to hear the words “School’s in session.”

Thanks for reading!

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Published: July 2010

 

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By What about Marvin Williams or Rodney Stuckey? on Jun 29, 2010 at 2:52PM

Regarding 51–55. We Don’t Need a Team to Kill It in the NBA

Helloooooo! How about 2 local guys who are actual in the NBA currently? You totally didn’t mention Marvin Williams from Bremerton, WA (Bremerton High School) and Rodney Stuckey from Kent, WA (Kentwood High School)

By Not anywhere near my top 100 either... on Jun 28, 2010 at 3:41PM

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By Saigon on Jun 23, 2010 at 10:50AM

The only thing missing from “22–31. We Know Sandwiches” is Honey Hole! I agree with all other selections (and a few are now on my to try list!).

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Andrew at Mistral Kitchen is a genius.

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By CMJ 206 on Jul 06, 2010 at 5:45PM

Love 7-13 but you forgot the Seattle also has the best overall economy in the nation as of May 12, 2010 per econ strength rankings by Policom Corp., best overall place to start a new business (Jan. 2009, later than a year but…), and as a plus, although off the map, Mt Vernon just got the 5th best place in the country to retire (yeah, I know).

By Whitney Ricketts on Jul 22, 2010 at 1:14PM

I think it’s appallingly inappropriate to refer to Michael’s daughters as “bailed-on daughter #1” and “bailed-on daughter #2” — both privately and publicly, but certainly in writing, on the internet, where they can find that if they search their father’s name.

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“A Beecher’s cheese-topped, molasses-infused vegan barbecue sandwich from Maximus/Minimus”

Um, “cheese-topped” =/= vegan.

By H. I. Road on Jul 01, 2010 at 1:44PM

I wanted to add how fun this piece was, and instead I see bizarre comments from what must be very upstanding people—the kind who attack in anonymous comment form. Really? Stay classy (and passive aggressive), Seattle.

By H.I. Road is MY real name...! on Jul 01, 2010 at 6:53PM

Come on! It wouldn’t be a proper Michael Hebb article if there weren’t some Michael Hebb bashing in the comments! It’s as predictable as fireworks on the 4th.

I’m with ‘Not In My Top 100!’ – I know more than a few fine Seattleites who have been burned, not paid, bailed on, cheated or just plain nauseated by Michael Hebb.

By More Michael Hebb on Jul 24, 2010 at 12:41PM

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By Wendy Purnell on Jul 15, 2010 at 2:47PM

Oops! I forgot to add that I’ve loved the (now) chef of one of the bailed-on PDX restaurants for 20 years, and have a lot of friends on the PDX bar-restaurant-arts scene.

By Wendy Purnell on Jul 15, 2010 at 2:37PM

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Love those 613s! Grace under pressure! Go team!

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