Book Review of Notes on a Beermat by Nicholas Pashley
By
J.A. Forrester
and
·
February 18, 2026
Nicholas Pashley's "Notes on a Beermat" is a critique of modern pubs and how they have fallen from their traditional role within communities.
A Lifetime with The Lord of the Rings
By
Wesley Braid
and
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February 17, 2026
Wesley Braid recently watched his (second) favourite trilogy of all time in the theatres and breaks down the once in a life time experience.
Maybe They Have to Poop
Maybe They Have to Poop
By
Daniel Morris
and
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May 9, 2023
Following a chance incident during a snowstorm, Daniel Morris contemplates how we ascribe intent to others and suggests a new way to extend the benefit of the doubt.
Yes, Your "Book Boyfriend" Is A Piece Of Shit
Yes, Your "Book Boyfriend" Is A Piece Of Shit
By
Abbigale Kernya
and
·
May 5, 2023
The romanticized abuse by male characters in modern-day literature is, to say the least, icky (Colleen Hoover, I am looking directly at you). Without coming across as another pretentious English major who doesn’t know how to stop acting like they’re better than everyone else, I do wholeheartedly believe that we as a collective society need to start thinking more critically about what we consume and more importantly, how we promote it.
Healing Masculinity: HBO’s The Last of Us and Male Trauma
Healing Masculinity: HBO’s The Last of Us and Male Trauma
By
Julián Rubio
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·
March 22, 2023
If you’ve been on social media lately, or have just been following gaming and Pedro Pascal since 2013, then you’ve definitely heard of HBO’s The Last of Us by Neil Druckmann and Craig Mazin — or, what is arguably the best video game adaptation up to date. The Last of Us, starring Pedro Pascal and Bella Ramsay, follows the journey of Joel and Ellie — a stone-hearted smuggler and the girl he’s smuggling — as they travel across Apocalypse America facing mushroom monsters, raiders, and trauma along the way.
This Isn’t a You Problem
This Isn’t a You Problem
By
Madison Mäe Adsetts
and
·
February 17, 2026
From campuses to cities to screens, modern life is built for efficiency, not belonging. Let me connect the dots.
S.H.A.R.E. the Health
S.H.A.R.E. the Health
By
Keanna Brown
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February 13, 2026
While the film only lasted thirteen minutes, S.H.A.R.E. led me to re-evaluate my own feminist ways.
Who Told You to Think Like That?
Who Told You to Think Like That?
By
Madison Mäe Adsetts
and
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January 5, 2026
How institutions script our voices, silence our instincts, and shape the questions we’re allowed to ask.
Screen & Souls
Screen & Souls
By
Madison Mäe Adsetts
and
·
November 11, 2025
A plea for wonder in a world that has mistaken data for divinity.
The Death of the Filler Episode
The Death of the Filler Episode
By
Indigo Moran
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October 16, 2025
The disappearance of dead-end plots is symptomatic of a new age of TV writing.
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