Arthur is making our Twitch livestream debut on April 1st, 2021, at 8:00pm with our First Annual Fundraiser and Telethon! Over the upcoming days, we are aiming to hit our 2021 fundraising goal of $10,000.
Your money goes to: •Good paying jobs for content creators •Year-round operation •New tech for content production •The freedom to remain independent
In the first instalment of her column "Portrait of a Dumpster on Fire," Louanne Morin takes on the delicious disaster that is Tatsuki Fujimoto's "Fire Punch."
Basia Bulat is in the midst of a Fall tour promoting her 2022 album The Garden. Co-Editor Sebastian Johnston-Lindsay caught up with her before her show on October 1st at Market Hall to talk about the tour and the experience of recording re-imagined versions of her songs during the pandemic.
Trent instructor and artist-activist Derek Newman-Stille hosted a panel presentation on disability arts at the Peterborough Public Library on May 27th alongside local artists.
Local artist Brooklin Stormie speaks to Arthur about her newfound love of Peterborough, reconnecting with her inner child, and her new children's graphic novel "Astronautical!"
In this slightly delayed upload, we speak with Stephen Stohn, Chancellor of Trent University, producer of Degrassi, and co-founder of Arthur. We speak to him about his then-recently released album, as well as spirituality, Arthur's founding, and the Beatles.
Trent professor Aaron Kreuter returned to Take Cover Books on May 1st to launch his novel "Lake Burntshore," a coming-of-age satire about a Jewish summer camp in the Muskokas.
As election traditions go, karol orzechowski's is slightly unconventional. The local musician, who performs as "garbageface," hosts screenings on the night of major elections in which he scores the results with a live noise show. Evan catches up with karol to talk about this off-beat tradition, and the politics with which it intersects.
In the first volume of her pseudo-eponymous film column, Evangeline Robins recounts an anecdotal instance of the butterfly effect in action, all owing to a chance encounter and the legacy of one slasher movie.
Journalist David King writes a love letter to Billy-Ray Belcourt's new book A Minor Chorus. Belcourt explores themes of Indigeneity, sexuality, and intergenerational trauma.