As The People’s Paper & Make A Scene Magazine Celebrate 18 Years, Music in the Park Returns to Wasilla
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Long before the first issue of our publication Make A Scene Magazine went to print, the name already meant something. It was the summer before our inaugural publication, and a spark was lit under the midsummer sun—Music in the Park. We didn’t know then how prophetic that first event would be, or that the phrase Make A Scene would become a platform, a promise, and a publishing tradition still alive eighteen years later.
Now, as The People’s Paper and Make A Scene Magazine celebrate their 18th year in print, we return once again to that park and that stage for another summer of free live music in the heart of Wasilla.
Music in the Park isn’t just an event. It’s a reminder that art belongs in public—that music is meant to be shared in the open air, and that local talent should echo through the streets of the towns that raised them. We’ve partnered with the City of Wasilla for years now to make this event a gift to the community—a celebration of music, family, food, and the kind of connection that only happens when we gather without a screen between us.
This year’s Music in the Park kicks off every Saturday in June from 3–9 PM at Iditapark (Wonderland Park area), and also on Friday, July 4th in conjunction with the annual Mayor’s Picnic, with a lineup stacked with Alaska’s finest musicians, food trucks, vendors, and even some hometown surprises. Visit www.musicintheparkwasilla.com for more information.
But for us here at Make A Scene Media (home of The People’s Paper, Make A Scene Magazine, 95.5 The Pass KNLT-FM, and of course, Music in the Park), it’s more than just a concert series. It’s a living symbol of our story. This event was the soil where Make A Scene first took root. That first stage, that first summer—before there was a magazine, before there was a paper—was where we made our promise to make a scene on behalf of the people.
It’s poetic, really. We’ve come full circle.
Eighteen years ago, we put our first edition in print. We did it without permission, without a blueprint, and without corporate backing—only a belief that people deserved a platform to share their voice. The People’s Paper was born to give that voice permanence. Make A Scene Magazine was born to give it volume. And here we are, nearly two decades later, still amplifying that promise.
So when you come to Music in the Park this summer, you’re not just attending a concert. You’re standing in the very place where this all began. You’re part of the story now. Help us write the next chapter.
Bring your friends, bring your voice – let’s make a scene—again.