Introducing Crybaby’s first film review series, “I swear it’s not that bad,” where our writers argue for their favorite bad movie… First up, our editor-in-chief Remi Riordan defends Netflix’s “The Kissing Booth.”
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The Trials and Tribulations of an Expired Weave
Writer Kimberlean Donis pens an honest and heart wrenching piece about her reality of being a Black woman in the midst of pandemic, as well as every day.
Read MoreLauren Greenfield and Materialist Preoccupations: An Interview Excerpt
Writer Simone Rembert spoke with photographer and filmmaker Lauren Greenfield about her work, “Tiger King,” Instagram, and what projects she’s working on at the moment. This is an excerpt, as the full conversation will be published in Crybaby’s next print issue.
Read MoreThe Stars Aligned, or Whatever You Want to Say
Writer Simone Rembert interviews Holmes Holmes, a Chicago-based comedian, about her comedy, coping with quarantine, phone therapy and kissing one’s little arm.
Read MoreQuarantine Q&A with the Crybaby Team
The Crybaby Team is stuck inside with so much to do! We did a little Q&A about how we’ve been spending quarantine… what we’ve been watching, reading, crafting, and of course, baking. We hope you get some great recommendations and tips!!
Read More“Fetch the Bolt Cutters” is the Perfect Album for Isolation
“Fetch the Bolt Cutters” is anything but conventional and in its embrace of the avant-garde, it simultaneously seems to mourn the normalcy we are leaving behind while striding pluckily into the new one.
Read MoreTrend Forecasting and The Recycling of Style
Writer Sara Radin writes about the recycling of trends, style nostalgia, and Depop. Accompanying photo story by Hana Mendel.
Read MorePopaholics in the time of pandemics
Writer Lily Goldberg writes about skin picking, pimple popping, and Reddit in the time of the Covid-19 pandemic.
Read MoreOn the Dichotomy of Good and Evil: A Review of “Corpus Christi”
St. Augustine of Hippo, a Catholic theologian and philosopher, once said, “If there was no good in what is evil, then the evil simply could not be.”
Read MoreA Sort of Love Story: Emma and Harriet in “Emma.”
“Emma.” is a love story and truly there are many weaved into the plot, yet the most consistent and forgiving and intimate is the one between Emma and Harriet.
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