Articles

  • 2 months ago | abc4.com | Jillian Smukler |Trevor Myers

    SALT LAKE CITY (ABC4) — A local business, created by brothers to honor their late mother through cooking, is bringing soul food to the Salt Lake Valley and the Beehive State’s biggest sports teams. The Boss Brothers told ABC4.com that their mother taught them how to cook at a young age, inspiring their love of food. After their mother died in 2016, the brothers opened their catering business to cook in her honor. They said her dying wish was for them to remain close.

  • 2 months ago | yahoo.com | Jillian Smukler

    SALT LAKE CITY (ABC4) — A local business, created by brothers to honor their late mother through cooking, is bringing soul food to the Salt Lake Valley and the Beehive State’s biggest sports teams. The Boss Brothers told ABC4.com that their mother taught them how to cook at a young age, inspiring their love of food. After their mother died in 2016, the brothers opened their catering business to cook in her honor. They said her dying wish was for them to remain close.

  • 2 months ago | yahoo.com | Jillian Smukler

    SALT LAKE CITY (ABC4) — A local business, created by brothers to honor their late mother through cooking, is bringing soul food to the Salt Lake Valley and the Beehive State’s biggest sports teams. The Boss Brothers told ABC4.com that their mother taught them how to cook at a young age, inspiring their love of food. After their mother died in 2016, the brothers opened their catering business to cook in her honor. They said her dying wish was for them to remain close.

  • Oct 31, 2024 | abc4.com | Jillian Smukler

    SALT LAKE CITY (ABC4) — Amalia Romero’s life changed in August when she woke up in a panic, immediately asking her sister to drive her to urgent care. At the time, the doctor told the 21-year-old to take some ibuprofen and Claritin, but less than 12 hours later she started hallucinating. Her mother Natalia Romero said she went from a healthy, active woman to being extremely paranoid and hearing voices in her head.

  • Oct 23, 2024 | abc4.com | Derick Fox |Jillian Smukler

    SALT LAKE CITY (ABC4) — On Tuesday night, a sheet of ice covered the ground of the Delta Center for the Utah Hockey Club to welcome the Ottawa Senators. Less than 24 hours later, the Utah Jazz are expected to take the court to open its 2024-25 season. So how does the crew thaw out the arena in time for basketball to take over hockey? The secret is they don’t. Mark Powell, the Senior Vice President of Events at the Delta Center, told ABC4 that the ice will stay where it is for the rest of the season.

Try JournoFinder For Free

Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.

Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →

Coverage map

X (formerly Twitter)

Followers
1K
Tweets
3K
DMs Open
Yes
Jillian Smukler
Jillian Smukler @jilliansmukler
7 May 25

The wait is finally over! 13 months & 850k fan votes later, Utah's NHL team is officially the Utah Mammoth #TusksUp

Utah Mammoth
Utah Mammoth @utahhockeyclub

A new Ice Age dawns. Introducing Utah Mammoth. #TusksUp https://t.co/B2yuoflDRt

Jillian Smukler
Jillian Smukler @jilliansmukler
2 Feb 25

RT @ABC: JUST IN: Punxsutawney Phil woke up on Sunday and saw his shadow, meaning we are destined for six more weeks of winter, according t…

Jillian Smukler
Jillian Smukler @jilliansmukler
28 Jan 25

Breaking update: Ogden police just confirmed one of the teenagers who fell into a pond while ice fishing yesterday, has died. The 15-year-old passed away & the 14-year-old is in the hospital recovering. We’re following the latest developments on @abc4utah this morning.