Arts

  • Arts Briefs

    Sigrid Dahle // Indigenous activism in modernity // Bram Keast artist talk // One Queer City // ArtsJunktion workshop // Letters for Pallister 

  • Critipeg: Brooklyn Nine-Nine

    “Moo Moo”
    New episodes airing in 2021 on Citytv

  • Batto Noel

    A comic by Hely Schumann 

  • Theatre must live on

    PTE kicks off new season with free viewing

  • Young dynamo

    Origin Stories: Madison Thomas

  • Arts Briefs

    Pallister protests get creative // Snitch line heating up // Home Alone, drive-in style // Restaurants and retail further curtailed // Spirit of the Grassroots People // Neah Kelly artist talk 

  • Critipeg: FM Youth

    Streaming on Reelhouse

  • Critipeg: Cemetery Boys

    Aiden Thomas, 320 pages, Macmillan Publishers, September 2020

  • The Zodiac as snacks

    An illustration by Talia Steele

  • Horoscopes

    It's Scorpio season!

  • Angels, demons and vagina witchcraft

    Vocalist speaks on debut album and lyrical meanings

  • Truly making magic

    Origin Stories: Tracey Nepinak 

  • Arts Briefs

    Children’s Special Allowance // CRAFTED 2020 // Jazz Film Festival // Restaurants struggling with Code Red // Towards a Queer Prairie Aesthetic // Solidarity Winnipeg

  • Critipeg: Black Narcissus (1947)

    Available on Apple TV and Criterion Channel

  • Softening their strides

    Dancers and educators re-envision equitable connection

  • OK, Boomer

    An illustration by Charlie Morin.

  • Horoscopes

    Those born with the Scorpion as their rising, sun or moon sign have a mysterious, intuitive, and power-wielding dynamic in the core of their personality, an echo of the shadowy Autumn season. The primary Scorpio strengths can be found in their devoted, determined, and observant natures. They are hard workers, often artistic, and deeply committed to study and research. You can count on the Scorpion to see whatever they have committed to through to the end.

  • Late-night shows are like university students

    For now, late-night reflects the mounting pressure put on comedians to be philosophers, political activists and teachers, able to somehow grapple (comedically) with the floundering American democracy.

  • Martha Street, COVID-style

    Like many arts organizations, Martha Street Studio has had to adapt to this new pandemic world.

  • Streaming IRL horror

    It’s the spooky season, which means many people are filling their streaming queues with horror movies. But it can be tiring to revisit the same slasher films and ghost stories every year, especially when the news is scarier than anything David Cronenberg or Jordan Peele could conjure. 

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