The Heart of a Campfire

Remembering generations of sleeping under the stars in California

Like my father before me, I taught my son to build a campfire the old-fashioned way: with balled-up paper under kindling, under twigs, under larger sticks, all fastidiously layered beneath three logs wigwammed in the center. It was a thing of beauty. We stood back in proud appreciation of our handiwork before striking a match in a solemn generational ceremony.

Jul 31, 2025 Dave Williams

Inside California’s Return-to-Office Battle

Five years after getting WFH orders, workers are rebelling against resuming cubicle life

Earlier this spring, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed an executive order mandating that most of California’s 224,000 full-time state workers should return to working in the office four days per week starting July 1. The executive order has stirred passionate debate, with local businesses in favor of the change and organizations representing state employees adamantly opposed.

Jul 28, 2025 Sasha Abramsky

How to Go From ‘WTF?’ to ‘I Got This’

Real talk for life’s impromptu adventures

Life has a flair for the dramatic. It loves to throw us unexpected turns — a relationship hiccup that feels seismic, a health scare that rattles your foundation, a sudden financial shift that throws your budget into chaos. And while our initial reaction might be shock, confusion or even anger, the real strength emerges in how we navigate the aftermath.

Jul 25, 2025 Joaquin E. Razo

Are Art Spaces Becoming the New Third Places?

As traditional cafes and restaurants vanish, art spaces step up as hubs for culture, connection and creativity

Originally theorized by Ray Oldenburg, a third place is meant to be a social anchor between home and work. Typically these communal places are bookstores, salons, coffeeshops, pubs and restaurants. But across Sacramento, art spaces like Demo, Panama Pottery and Forma are filling the social gap left by shuttered cafes and bars.

Jul 22, 2025 Melissa LuVisi