I wish my name was Caroline. Apparently, that’s what it takes to get a song written about you.
Project Red’s Portalis transports their audience through space, time, and dimension. Running on Feb. 13 and 14, Project Red’s annual charity fashion show, Portalis offers a dazzling display of fashion, dance, and music, all for a good cause.
Despite its recent closure, Kingston WritersFest (KWF) may soon find its sequel.
If your high school prom sucked, you can make up for it at Slow Dance 2025.
Pop Culture Jeopardy! is ushering in a different form of intelligence.
Valentine’s Day is a whole day dedicated to celebrating feelings of love and affection for those around you.
When devoid of students, Kingston isn’t the lonely purgatory some people think it is.
Literature is a powerful way to experience enriching stories and reflections. These books written by Black authors will bring you closer to your 2025 Goodreads reading goal.
It seems like the generation that’s the most sexually liberated doesn’t actually want to get it on.
Swimming in Circles didn’t just live up to expectations, it blew them out of the water.
In a unique combination of sports and pop culture, Kendrick Lamar’s Super Bowl halftime performance touched on themes of Black culture and American identity.
The Muleteer dazzles but stumbles in its storytelling, leaving its queer and historical themes frustratingly underdeveloped.
Intentionality, adaptability and motivation are at the heart of the team behind Swimming in Circles.
Hollywood’s idea of diversity often means a single Black character with no depth, no story, and no purpose.
Thirteen years ago, Otoniya Juliane Okot Bitek submitted the first draft of her debut novel for publication. Now, the highly anticipated We, the Kindling is finally here.
A prominent anti-slavery educator and publicist, Mary Ann Shadd Cary, wasn’t afraid to critique established institutions, and neither is Kristin Moriah, striving to uplift 19th-century abolitionist thinkers.
February marks Black History Month—a reminder that Black musicians and their talent are a key pillar of music history, and the industry, all year round.
She’s an undercover cop, he’s the head of an underground drug ring. The unlikely pairing promises many twists and turns.
For those who are into documentaries and history, then this event is for you. On Feb. 9, the Black Studies program is hosting a screening of Soundtrack to A Coup D’Etat at The Screening Room at 1 p.m.
Love it or hate it, Valentine’s Day is fast approaching, bringing with it overpriced flowers, awkward dinner dates, and the annual debate over whether a situationship deserves a gift—the answer is a big fat NO.