The Hatch Art Gallery’s first exhibition of the year, Reveal/Reform, opened on September 26 and showcases students' artwork centred around social justice movements.
Search the Archive
- All
- News
- Culture
- Features
- Opinion
- Humour
- Science
- Sports
- Photo
- Guide
- Videos
- All magazines
- Magazine: Resolve
- Magazine: Seg Fault
- Magazine: Memory Leak
- Magazine: Redefine
- Magazine: System Failure
- Magazine: Ways Forward
- Magazine: Goes Around
- Magazine: Comes Around
- Magazine: Reclaim
- Magazine: Self
- All Spoofs
- Spoof: Mid Appétit
- Spoof: explain!
- Spoof: Girlbossmopolitan
- Spoof: NICE Magazine
- Spoof: The Main Maller
- Spoof: 2019 Spoof: Who?byssey
- Spoof: 2018 Spoof: Oh-No
- Spoof: 2017 Spoof: Breitbarf
When Andrew Tate got arrested in Romania last year, we hoped we would never have to see his face again.
A camera shakily meanders amidst the chaos of 15 minutes to the curtain going up. Anxiety and excitement are suspended in the air. The feeling is synonymous with only one kind of moment in theatre — it is opening night.
The past few years seem to have yielded a renaissance of handicraft hobbies amongst teens and young adults.
When the smell of rain starts to hang in the air and the leaves crunch under my shoes, I turn into a completely different person. With a cup of hot chocolate in hand and an episode of Gilmore Girls on my laptop screen, I hunker down and hide from the colder weather.
Fourth-year biology student and UBC Running Club president Ryan Bajaj was initially “one of the slowest” members of his high school cross-country team. It only pushed him to train harder, so he stuck with cross-country and has continued running in university.
When Thomas Beckman was a child, he always stayed to watch the credit scenes in movies simply because he was immersed in the music.
Kawika Guillermo’s name was chosen by his mother. It’s Hawaiian; a localization of the Hebrew David, and it meant a lot to her, the daughter of an Ilocano preacher who’d immigrated to Hawai’i.
The arrival of a new school year brings forth a feeling much too familiar to UBC students: The stress and anxiety associated with locating an affordable place to live in the Vancouver rental market.
“Madness in the Masses” is the theme for this year’s ARTIVISM, an annual visual and performing arts festival that centres around topics in social justice and amplifies the voices of marginalized artists.
After three years of closures, renovations and negotiations, Get Thrifty is finally back and better than ever.
A collection of vignettes, Performing Memories recounts seven instances in Park’s childhood when they sought to uncover others’ secrets — peeking inside pianos, jewelry boxes, side tables — then ultimately arrived at a point where they uncovered a secret of their own.
If you see Jack Goes to Therapy, prepare to laugh until your stomach hurts, question your own dating life and even shed a few tears.
Ever wondered what goblin foreplay looks like? Goblin:Macbeth, now playing at Bard on the Beach, has answers — in between all the murder, of course.
UBC MFA alumnus Spenser Smith invites readers to reflect on British Columbia's toxic drug supply crisis in his new poetry book A Brief Relief from Hunger.