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Artistic, musical, creative, and entertaining topics of art about all things geek.
The Worst Friends in Pop Culture
Friendship is one of the most celebrated themes in storytelling. From animated sitcoms to epic fantasy sagas, audiences are constantly reminded that loyalty, trust, and emotional support are the glue that holds relationships together. The best fictional friendships inspire us because they show characters standing by each other through chaos, heartbreak, and adventure.
By Jenna Deedya day ago in Geeks
The Hidden Philosophy of FAR: Regina Spektor's Most Underrated Album Explained
Most pop albums are about love or heartbreak. Regina Spektor's Far is about something stranger: what it feels like to be human inside systems that quietly turn people into machines.
By ANTICHRIST SUPERSTAR2 days ago in Geeks
Could Silver the Hegdehog be Shadow's Grandson?
Lately, I have been seeing comments on Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube saying that Silver is Shadow the Hedgehog’s son. This could be true because there are some similarities between them. For example, the highlighted area around their eyes. Shadow has it red, while Silver is black.
By stephanie borges8 days ago in Geeks
Bruised Autonomy: A Review of Kathleen Edwards' album FAILER (2002)
Failer, the 2002 debut by Kathleen Edwards, is a record about the psychology of romantic self-sabotage set against highways, motels, parking lots, and barstools. It belongs to the same moral weather system as Raymond Carver and Alice Munro: ordinary people making small decisions that quietly alter the trajectory of their lives. No one here delivers a Nietzschean manifesto. No one collapses in Dostoyevskian hysteria. They just fail--intimately, repeatedly, lucidly.
By ANTICHRIST SUPERSTAR12 days ago in Geeks
Regina Spektor's FAR (album review)
Regina Spektor's 2009 album Far,* her fifth studio effort, arrives like a whimsical comet streaking through the indie-pop cosmos--bright, unpredictable, and leaving trails of introspection in its wake. Produced with the polished touch of multiple heavyweights like Jeff Lynne and Mike Elizondo, Far refines Spektor's signature blend of piano-driven quirkiness, vocal acrobatics, and lyrical depth without sanding off her eccentric edges. It's an album that feels both intimate and expansive, as if Spektor is whispering secrets from a crowded room while gazing at distant stars. Clocking in at just over 45 minutes, it explores the absurdities of existence through a lens that's equal parts playful and profound, inviting listeners to laugh, cry, and ponder the human condition. But beneath the melodic charm lies a rich vein for analysis: from psychological unravelings to sociopolitical undercurrents, Far begs to be dissected like a dream journal scribbled in the margins of a philosophy text.
By ANTICHRIST SUPERSTAR22 days ago in Geeks
Our Lady Peace's CLUMSY (album review)
Our Lady Peace's 1997 sophomore album Clumsy* crashes onto the alt-rock scene like a meteor from the Canadian suburbs--raw, introspective, and laced with the kind of anthemic hooks that defined the post-grunge era. Frontman Raine Maida's lyrics, paired with the band's muscular yet melodic soundscapes (courtesy of guitarist Mike Turner, producer Arnold Lanni, and drummer Jeremy Taggart), transform personal turmoil into universal anthems. Clocking in at around 45 minutes across 11 tracks, Clumsy builds on their debut Naveed by amplifying the emotional stakes: it's less about ethereal mysticism and more about the gritty grind of identity, alienation, and the quiet wars men wage against themselves and society. Released amid the tail end of grunge's heyday, it captures the 90s zeitgeist--think flannel-clad existentialism meets radio-friendly riffs--while probing deeper into the psyche. Entertaining as a head-banging road trip companion, it's thought provoking as a mirror to male vulnerability, making it a staple for anyone who's ever stared at the ceiling at 4 a.m., questioning everything.
By ANTICHRIST SUPERSTAR22 days ago in Geeks






