top of page

Culture, Identity & Society
This entails a blog surrounding Ethics, life, and society.


Smith College, Title IX, and the Question Nobody Is Asking Loudly Enough
The Trump administration opened a civil rights investigation into a private women's college for admitting trans women. Legal experts are baffled. The implications go far beyond one campus.
Triston Grant
May 152 min read


Unsubtle: Film and TV in the Age of Mobile Devices
Streaming was supposed to give us more. More stories, more voices, more risk. What it gave us instead was an industry that decided its audience couldn't be trusted. In the era of mobile devices and fractured attention, the way people consume media has shifted fundamentally, and the writing of film and TV has followed. Stories feel flat. Characters explain themselves out loud rather than through the quiet work of performance. Subtlety, it seems, has been declared a liability.
Brandy Sumner
May 112 min read


You Don’t Drink Coffee. You Adjust to Capitalism.
You Were Never Supposed to Feel This Tired There is a kind of exhaustion that feels less like a bad night and more like a pattern. You wake up tired, move through the day tired, and instead of asking why, you correct it. The correction is almost automatic. Coffee. What is striking is not that coffee works, but that we rarely question why we need it to work at all. The fatigue is treated as normal. The solution is treated as routine. That is where the story begins. Capitalism
Triston Grant
May 84 min read


Markiplier
Markiplier in an interview in NYC. The Beginning of His Journey On March 6, 2012, a college dropout from the University of Cincinnati named Mark Edward Fischbach launched his first YouTube channel. The channel name "Markiplier" is a portmanteau of Mark and multiplier. He originally planned to upload comedy sketches and action videos, but it was his lifelong love of gaming that drove his growth. His first breakout series was "Amnesia: The Dark Descent," which earned him roughl
Simai Kang
May 72 min read


The Giant Leap: Why the Moon Landing Still Matters Decades Later
In the summer of 1969, the Earth felt like a very small place. While the world below was tangled in political unrest and social change, three men were sitting on top of a controlled explosion, waiting to be hurled into the dark. When the Apollo 11 mission successfully touched down on the lunar surface, it did more than win a race. It proved that the limits of human achievement are only as small as our imagination and our willingness to take massive risks. A Decade of Desperat
Marianna Pou
May 63 min read


Why the New Generation Is Struggling to Find Work
A Different Job Market Than Before For many young people today, finding a job is not as simple as it was for previous generations. In the past, a high school or college graduate could step relatively quickly into a stable position. The path into the workforce was worn and familiar. That path no longer exists in the same form. The job market is more competitive, more credentialed, and far less forgiving of people who are just getting started. Entry-level jobs routinely require
Marianna Pou
Apr 283 min read


Good News to Brighten Your Day
It can feel, at times, like there is no escape from it. You open the news and the first thing you encounter is a disaster, a tragedy, or a crisis unfolding somewhere in the world. That feeling is not a personal failure or an overreaction. It reflects something real about how information reaches us: bad news travels faster, earns more clicks, and commands more attention. But that is not the whole story. The same week that brought coverage of an attempted school shooting in Okl
Kat Gran
Apr 273 min read


The Origin of Anime
Demon Slayer Infinity Castle Anime has become a dominant form of global cinema in the twenty-first century. For many Western audiences, the term is still relatively new. Anime is a form of animation originated in Japan, characterized by distinctive colorful styles, complex narratives, and thematic depth that sets it apart from Western animation. The earliest anime can be traced to 1917, when Japan was heavily influenced by Western animation techniques. The industry did not ga
Simai Kang
Apr 242 min read


Why Modern Relationships Feel Disposable
"It's not you, it's me." In 2026, these words still carry weight. The year is marked by terms like "love bombing," "ghosting," and "options culture," now normalized across dating apps and social media. Someone always seems better. There is always something wrong with her, him, them, or you. But this wasn't always the case. Where did this cultural shift come from? The roots trace back to hook-up culture, amplified by social media trends, celebrity influence, and the digitizati
Nyk Klymenko
Apr 222 min read


Astrology Girls Might Be onto Something...
The term “Astrology Girls” has become a fixture of online discourse over the past few years. It refers, usually with a smirk, to teenage and college-age women who organize their lives around spirituality: collecting crystals, consulting horoscope decks, and making decisions guided by the twelve zodiacal signs. January birthdays are Capricorn or Aquarius. February, Aquarius or Pisces. And so on around the calendar. The label implies that these women are irrational. The reality
Kat Gran
Apr 162 min read


Caribbean Traditions Stay Alive Across Generations
A Culture Shaped by Many Influences Caribbean traditions continue to shape families and communities across the world. The Caribbean spans many islands and cultures: Cuba, Puerto Rico, the Dominican Republic, Jamaica, Haiti, Trinidad and Tobago, and beyond. Because of this breadth, Caribbean heritage is rich and layered. Over hundreds of years, it absorbed African, Indigenous, European, and Asian influences. Each island carries its own customs, yet many Caribbean traditions sh
Marianna Pou
Apr 142 min read


The Origins of Matcha
Before the Trend In the past year, a wave of trends swept across social media: Labubu plush toys from Hong Kong, pistachio Dubai chocolate, and AI-generated Italian brain rot videos. But no trend proved more durable or more widely adopted than matcha, the bright green powdered tea that migrated from niche local cafes to nearly every major coffee chain in the country. What most people ordering a lavender matcha cold foam frappuccino do not know is that the drink they are holdi
Kat Gran
Apr 92 min read


Is Technology Setting the Next Generation Back?
The Attention Problem Technology is everywhere. It shapes how students learn, communicate, and spend their time. And there is growing evidence that the way this generation uses it is quietly working against them. The issue starts with attention. Students are spending hours cycling through short videos and social media feeds, content designed to deliver constant stimulation. Against that baseline, sitting with a chapter, working through a problem, and staying engaged in class
Marianna Pou
Apr 82 min read


Strong Minds, Better Lives
Mental health is a big part of our overall well-being, even though people do not always talk about it enough. It includes our thoughts, feelings, and emotions. It shapes how we handle stress, how we treat others, and how we see ourselves. Just like our bodies can get sick, our minds can struggle too. That is why it is important to care for both. When It Goes Untreated When someone has good mental health, they are better able to focus, stay motivated, and deal with everyday ch
Marianna Pou
Apr 43 min read


The Search Is On: Find Your Companion for Life
At Tri-County Animal Rescue in Boca Raton, there are many dogs and cats waiting for a second chance at life. Some come all the way from Puerto Rico, rescued from very difficult conditions. They travel far just for the chance to find a safe and loving home. And somewhere in that shelter, your future best friend might already be waiting for you. A No-Kill Commitmen t One of the most important things about Tri-County Animal Rescue is that it is a no-kill shelter. They do not put
Marianna Pou
Apr 32 min read


House Music Is Black.
The History There is a building on West Huron Street in Chicago that most people walk past without a second thought. But between 1977 and 1983, something happened inside it that quietly rewired the entire course of popular music. A Black gay man named Frankie Knuckles held residency at a club called The Warehouse. He played for crowds that were Black, queer, and working class — people the rest of the city had no use for, people who needed somewhere to exist freely. He played
Triston Grant
Apr 14 min read


The History of Gender Expression
Gender fluid individuals have a rich and extensive history that often goes unknown.
Kat Gran
Apr 13 min read


2016 is back. Summer 2026 is all about nostalgia
Everywhere you look, #2016 is trending, and this summer it is not holding back. Fashion is taking a major throwback moment, with some of the most loved styles from 2016 making a fresh return. It feels familiar, but at the same time, everything has a new and updated twist that makes it exciting again. The OG Bathing Suits One of the biggest comebacks is the iconic neoprene bathing suit. Yes, really. Triangl, the brand that had everyone obsessed back in 2016, is bringing back i
Marianna Pou
Mar 242 min read


Is AI Replacing Creativity?
If you have been on the internet or social media in the past year, I’m sure you have noticed an increase in AI-created content. What started as simply sharing AI’s answers to users’ curious questions has now become something much bigger. I first became aware of AI when my friends would ask AI chatbots about their deepest questions about life, the universe, and scientific theories. They found the answers interesting, and using chatbots for a few minutes a week wasn’t hurting a
Kat Gran
Mar 235 min read


Exploring Global Policy Trends: What’s Shaping Our World Today
In today’s fast-changing world, global policy trends shape how nations interact, how rights are protected, and how challenges are addressed. I find it fascinating to watch these shifts unfold. They reveal much about our shared priorities and the tensions we face. From climate action to digital governance, the landscape is complex yet full of potential. Let’s dive into some of the most significant trends shaping global policy right now. Understanding the Current Global Policy
Jeannie Romain
Mar 194 min read
bottom of page