As the Trump administration begins to implement their deportation plan, organizations across Knoxville are helping immigrant families learn their rights. “We’re helping families get information together and brace for the worst and hope for the best,
The future of Knoxville is looking bright, thanks to the incredible young people working to strengthen our community. In partnership with T-Mobile, Patch is proud to spotlight future leaders like Grayson Rosenblad,
The Knoxville track club held five mile and 10 mile runs in Oak Ridge Saturday morning to kick off their winter high mileage series of races.
Raising Cane's is set to open their second location in Knoxville and will celebrate with giveaways and the chance to win free food for a year.
“Kelsea Ballerini Live” kicked off in Grand Rapids, Michiga n. The 36-city tour will take Ballerini to across the country from Buffalo, New York, to Omaha, Las Vegas and Los Angeles, according to the official schedule. She’ll even perform in Toronto, Canada.
Knoxville is home to the Women's Basketball Hall of Fame, a must-visit for sports fans passing through. Opened in 1999, the 35,000-square-foot Hall is a vibrant space filled with memorabilia, informative and fun displays and, believe it or not, the world's largest basketball, which is 30 feet tall and weighs 10 tons.
Knox County has warming centers and free bus rides during freezing days. For people experiencing homelessness, help is still needed.
This week, President Donald Trump announced he was pardoning more than 1,500 people who were involved in Jan 6. Seven people from East Tennessee received a pardon, including Meteer. “It felt great, it feels like vindication,” said Meteer.
This roundup isn't immune to the sad side of restaurant reporting: closings. In addition to what's new in Knoxville, what happened to the Cookie Plug?
Here are some notes from Wednesday’s AEW Dynamite taping in Knoxville, Tennessee: Crazzy Steve (Crazy Steve) debuted in a dark match Former TNA wrestler Crazzy Steve (spelled “Crazy” on his
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — While the future of the popular social media app, TikTok, is uncertain, one new local business in South Knoxville is seeing success from it. Nathan Kitner recently moved back to Knoxville with a passion for coffee and social media. He started his business, Mia Piccola, as a mobile coffee cart.
One Knoxville retiree received recently a letter telling him he's now a millionaire after inheriting a multimillion-dollar fortune from a unknown distant relative. However, the letter was a fake.