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  • Axios Seattle

    The Space Needle didn't collapse — but a prank suggested otherwise

    By Megan Burbank,

    2024-04-03
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3NCEUJ_0sEEk8uq00

    From an April Fools' Day prank that went a little too far to the (real) original Starbucks, springtime is a trove of Seattle history.

    Here's a look back , sourced from state history encyclopedia HistoryLink and local newspaper and TV news archives.


    April 1, 1989: For April Fools' Day, KING 5 sketch comedy show "Almost Live" "reported" that the Space Needle had collapsed . It was a joke, but many viewers took it seriously.

    • Calls from concerned citizens flooded the Space Needle, the Seattle Police Department and KING 5's phone lines.
    • "A lot of people wanted us fired," the comedy show's host John Keister recalled during a KING 5 appearance on the prank's 20th anniversary .
    • In 1999, "Almost Live" ended its run of hyperlocal comedy sketches, including classics like "The Ballard Driving Academy," "Seattle Drivers in Snow" and "Pike or Pine."
    • But the show lives on in every Seattleite's confusion over whether that one really good Thai place is on Pike or Pine — and on Aug. 31, the show will be memorialized in an exhibit at the Museum of History and Industry .

    April 2, 1900: In his push for the Democratic presidential nomination, "The Boy Orator of the Platte" William Jennings Bryan arrived in Seattle , where he railed against imperialism and the gold standard.

    • "As he stepped from the train he came face to face with a crowd conservatively estimated at between 10,000 and 12,000," the Seattle Post-Intelligencer reported from the scene.
    • Bryan's message appealed to some, but he lost the presidency to William McKinley (and Vice President Theodore Roosevelt).

    March 30, 1971: The first Starbucks in Seattle opened, but it didn't sell espresso — just beans — with free coffee by the cup to attract customers.

    • Visitors often mistake the Pike Place Starbucks for the original, but the bean-slinging actually began at 2000 Western Avenue, in a building that no longer exists.

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