Essay
It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown
It's that time again for one of my favorite Halloween specials "It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown". The one where the gang goes out trick-or-treating in their Halloween costumes from witches to ghosts and comparing what each of them got. I always felt sorry for Charlie get rocks every year. How did the 'adults' know which one was Charlie. Linus and Sally are in the pumpkin patch waiting for this entity and for what. The gang minus Linus and Sally head to an old house for a party and Snoopy after a trek across years shows up ready to party.
By Mark Graham3 months ago in Critique
Church of Nigeria Vs Bishop Sarah Mullally: The deep rooted misogyny the church refuses to name
When the Church of Nigeria announced it was cutting ties with the church of England following the appointment of Bishop Sarah Mullally as the new Archbishop of Canterbury, the headlines focused on "doctrinal disagreement." But let's be honest, what we are witnessing is not is not just theology in dispute. It is the old spirit of patriarchy and misogyny, still deeply entrenched within the Anglican Communion, wearing the robe of righteousness.
By Gift Adene3 months ago in Critique
From History to Hype: The Decline of Noble Watchmaking
A few years ago, the world of watchmaking was an arena reserved for a class of individuals who, instead of pursuing transient fashions, dedicated themselves to going beyond time itself. Each watch was a laborious piece of art, a testifier to a history, a heritage and a tradition. Swiss, German, or Japanese brands, they were part of a line of continuity that brought innovations, no doubt but ever mindful of the lofty watchmaking spirit: striving for excellence, for precision and respect for century-old know-how.
By Baptiste Monnet3 months ago in Critique
Waiting for Godot
If you like modern theater, you may very well like this version of "Waiting For Godot" at The Hudson Theatre. Like "A Dolls House" at the same theater, Jamie Lloyd put "Godot" in the modern. Like Ibsen's "Doll House", Lloyd takes Beckett's play and brings it into today's times... no visible tree, only a large cone-like set (Soutra Gilmour). The set to me signify s endless time.
By Robert M Massimi. ( Broadway Bob).3 months ago in Critique
Finally Sat Down to Watch Midsommar (2019)
Ari Aster's 2019 film Midsommar represents an ambitious and polarizing entry in contemporary horror cinema. Following his acclaimed debut *Hereditary*, Aster crafts a folk horror experience that deliberately inverts the genre's visual conventions while exploring the dissolution of a toxic relationship against the backdrop of a Swedish pagan festival. The result is a film that is simultaneously beautiful and disturbing, meditative and visceral, earning both ardent admirers and vocal detractors.
By Parsley Rose 3 months ago in Critique
The Criousity of The Finch App
An intro When I needed something to help me count and credit the days during the worst depression episodes of my life (so roughly my late twenties early thirties); Finch App was that daily boost of care. I found real succeess monitoring my Mental Health.
By Parsley Rose 3 months ago in Critique
From Liberation Heroes to Economic Failures: Africa’s Leadership Pandemic. AI-Generated.
The story of Africa in the second half of the twentieth century is often told as a story of triumph. It was the age of liberation, when nations long subjugated under colonial rule stood up to reclaim their sovereignty. Flags were raised, anthems were composed, and borders once marked by foreign empires now belonged, at least in theory, to the people of Africa. Leaders like Kwame Nkrumah, Julius Nyerere, Jomo Kenyatta, Patrice Lumumba, and later Nelson Mandela embodied the spirit of that age. They were not mere politicians; they were symbols of freedom, carriers of the collective dream that Africans could govern themselves with dignity and purpose.
By Knowledge & truth4 months ago in Critique
The Quiet Revolution of Abbott Elementary
In an era where television comedy often relies on cynicism and cringe humor, ABC's "Abbott Elementary" stands as a refreshing anomaly—a workplace mockumentary that chooses hope over despair, community over competition, and genuine heart over manufactured sentiment. Created by and starring Quinta Brunson, the series has quietly revolutionized how we think about both educational television and the mockumentary format itself.
By Parsley Rose 4 months ago in Critique
The Candy Dish
How do we keep our candy dishes full at Halloween time or really anytime? My favorite candy to keep it full is usually gum drops or fruit slices and maybe even at times those fun size candy bars or some say miniatures. I know that is not too popular with the trick or treaters who look for the houses that offer those full-size bars, but I think it is better than offering a sack full of coupons and boxes of raisins that I used to receive the last few years that I went trick or treating while growing back then.
By Mark Graham4 months ago in Critique










