Experiencing the Last Day of Classes for the first time
By Eva Hong | June 5, 2018By the time LDOC actually came, spring was in full ripeness.
By the time LDOC actually came, spring was in full ripeness.
Beach House have already carved out their spot in music history. For over a decade, the duo of Victoria Legrand and Alex Scally has served as a guiding light for dream pop, paving the way for a genre that has permeated rock far more than it’s given credit for.
My vision of the '80s, a decade that began and ended years before my life did, begins and ends with “Age of Consent.”
Honestly, I’m not sure where I even got the idea to sporadically sample more than 65 lunch and dinner entrées off the everyday menus of 10 of the Brodhead Center’s 13 vendors (and battle food poisoning twice along the way), but all that matters is the idea came, and I pursued it until it became a reality.
While the repeated stylistic left turns of artists like Radiohead and Kendrick Lamar are exciting, a long and gradual artistic maturation can be just as satisfying.
“Isle of Dogs” creates an assemblage of cultural allusions and references that would resonate not only with Japan culture nerds in America but with a nostalgic generation of Japanese adults.
If you had told me last spring that I'd be going to Carolina Cup this year, I'd have thought it was some lame April Fools’ joke.
Though fun and lighthearted, “Queer Eye” isn’t doing much for homosexual representation in 2018.
Steven Spielberg’s latest doesn’t stand strong enough without its references to engage most audience members.
Only a cast as talented as the troupe assembled in “The Death of Stalin” could have made the film’s devious subjects sources of comedy.
There are some films that almost everyone agrees are unsuitable for children.
Looking back at the Chronicle archives, many advertisements from past decades are surprising — ranging from being goofy to wholly discriminatory.
The Smiths’ third and suitably named studio album underlines a group at the pinnacle of its career.
College can be a very ugly place when it comes to fashion.
“One Day at a Time,” Netflix’s first original family sitcom, premiered on the streaming platform last year with little to no fanfare.
Sorority Noise is a band that, more than most, embraces the personal.
The midterms have been taken, the rivalry game has been played and the weather has taken a turn for the better — spring break is nearly here.
We had shivered in the cold. We had been awakened by the siren at 3 a.m. And the day had finally come.
Netflix is cashing in on the success of “Stranger Things” with its new original series, “Everything Sucks!,” a tale of teenage love, angst and friendship set in the mid-1990s.