
Smizing & America’s Next Top Model: From Performance to Practice
Tyra told us to “smile with our eyes.” But what happens when a pose becomes a practice? Explore the uncanny power of smizing.
Tyra told us to “smile with our eyes.” But what happens when a pose becomes a practice? Explore the uncanny power of smizing.
They Live is not the story of an anti-capitalist’s awakening—it’s the story of Nada’s psychotic break and descent into a new ideological trap.
When your elevator fails, so does ideology. In that rupture and failure, we may be able to find something better: human connection.
From VAR in football to digital surveillance in daily life, tactics evolve under constant watch. But when control tightens, people adapt.
Family Guy’s makeout scene shows how desire is shaped by language and repression. Lacanian psychoanalysis explains why attraction shifts.
Jon Taffer isn’t just saving bars—he’s forcing owners to confront their failures, encounter the Real, and restructure their Symbolic world.
Morrissey’s The National Front Disco explores how identity, belonging, and social rituals pull people into extremism—without moralizing.
Morrissey’s nationalism isn’t what you think. From Cocaine Socialism to The National Front Disco, explore the battle for British identity.
Morrissey’s Jacky’s Only Happy frames nationalism as performance—rooted in loss, and the desperate search for identity through spectacle.
Morrissey’s I Wish You Lonely exposes how nationalism mythologizes sacrifice to sustain itself while those in power remain untouched.