2020 has been quite a memorable year, and nothing quite shows the extent of all the crazy news we lived through together like going back through the top stories on your website.
As you can see from the list, many of them seem to relate right back to the biggest story of the year: COVID-19.
Here are the top ten stories you clicked on at staging.kslnewsradio.com in 2020.
When it comes to getting your heart rate up for exercise, nothing works better than a mama mountain lion protecting her cubs. Kyle Burgess recorded video during his Slate Canyon run near Provo, thinking he might capture the little ones. Instead, he caught video of an angry mama cougar doing her best to chase him away from her babies.
Click the link to read more about how it went down — and find out what you should do if you find yourself on the wrong side of Mama Cat.
Picture it: you’re at a ball game, and the sound system goes out during the national anthem. What do you do?
If you’re Trenton Brown, you provide your own music.
“I looked over at the announcer and the music didn’t play and didn’t play and I looked over and he was getting a little frustrated. My wife gave me a little nudge and said ‘Sing’ and I said, ‘All right,’” Brown told CNN.
Check out the full story here and watch the video — he’s got a great voice!
Meteorologists say it really happened back in June. But don’t worry — it wasn’t a sequel to “The Mummy,” just a weird weather quirk. Every year, hot dry air moves over the ocean from the continent of Africa toward the Americas. Sometimes it even dampens the risk of hurricanes — but more frequently, we get cool sunset pics like this one.
Check out the weather phenomenon here.
What would a 2020 wrap-up be without a story about the mysterious monoliths that showed up out of nowhere? First, one appeared in the red rock of southeastern Utah. Then, its slightly less-polished twin showed up in Romania — right about the time the Utah monolith vanished from view.
Pretty soon, Romania’s disappeared but another appeared in California. Then one showed up in Great Britain.
(Don’t get us started about the gingerbread version over the holidays.)
We still don’t really know where they came from, but we appreciated the distraction from some of the less fun headlines of the year.
Alas, not all of our top-clicked stories in 2020 are so lighthearted. Number five on the list goes to the breaking story about protests in downtown Salt Lake City that turned violent in May, resulting in windows broken, a citywide curfew, and a police car flipped on its top and set ablaze.
The protesters initially took to the streets of Salt Lake in response to the death of a Black man in Minnesota while in police custody. It was one of many violent protests inspired by George Floyd’s death across the country.
Here’s our initial reporting from that day.
Volunteers pitched in the next day to help clean up and repair damage.
Number six on our list of most-clicked stories in 2020 came about when Costco announced it would require members to wear masks in its stores.
Back in April, when we were still facing shortages of toilet paper and cleaning wipes, the retailer announced changes including a mask requirement as part of a campaign to keep customers safe and healthy.
The store was one of the first to limit how many customers could be inside their stores at once, though many other outlets, both locally and nationally, followed suit soon afterward.
We learned Utahns are among the nation’s top panic buyers during the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic. Back in mid-March, the same day a COVID diagnosis with the Utah Jazz shut down the NBA, a report came out showing Utahns spent a whopping 261% more for that week at the grocery stores than the same week in 2019.
That was more than enough to make us number one in the nation for panic buying. The next closest state, Maryland, only saw its spending increase by about 124% year-over-year, for comparison.
No wonder it was so hard to find toilet paper for a while here.
The eighth-most clicked story of 2020 on our website shows just how much Utahns care for their neighbors.
In October, we told you about an Orem woman served with an eviction notice over a mental health issue. She shared the notice with us, and you responded with resounding indignation on her behalf.
What surprised us, and many of you, is this: Eviction experts said assuming the details are true, what the apartment complex did is legal. However, they also say it is very rare for landlords to evict tenants for a mental health issue unless there is a significant threat of harm to other tenants.
Many of you closely followed the 2019 disappearance of two Idaho children, 16-year-old Tylee Ryan and her brother, 7-year-old JJ Vallow.
In 2020, shortly after the children’s remains were found on property belonging to their mother’s new husband, Chad Daybell, in Idaho, the COLD podcast team and KSL TV discovered something else: satellite imagery, dating around the time Tylee was last seen, suggested the earth had been disturbed in Daybell’s yard.
Tylee was last seen on Sept. 8, 2019 at Yellowstone National Park with her uncle and brother. The satellite image showed evidence of disturbed ground at Chad Daybell’s property the very next day.
It’s just one part of a very complicated story, but you can learn more about how COLD uncovered it here.
The 10th most-clicked story of our website in 2020 seems to fit a pattern — it’s about your money and COVID-19.
Prices at the grocery store went up a LOT in 2020. While they fell in a lot of areas, like for the rates of hotel rooms or airfare or even car insurance, the exception to the rule was the stuff all of us buy the most: grocery store staples.
As always, analysts say it goes back to supply and demand: coronavirus disrupted the supply chain, but our demand didn’t go down, so as a result, prices went up. In fact, with more of us cooking at home, demand actually rose for kitchen staples.
Check out the story here.
Yes, we know we covered a lot more stories not represented here — but for whatever reason, the clicks took you more often to these ten.
Some honorable mentions include the historic 5.7 magnitude earthquake in Utah in March, right at the beginning of the coronavirus shutdown, and the windstorm that brought hurricane-force gales to the state in September. Don’t both of those things seem like a million years ago?