Modisett: omg senior year
Gabriel Modisett ’25 takes a moment to reflect on how far he has come at Dartmouth.
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Gabriel Modisett ’25 takes a moment to reflect on how far he has come at Dartmouth.
This week, Eloise Langan ’27 voices the musings of an all-too-familiar character.
Following a very unexpected twist of events, my friends and I found ourselves at Chappell Roan’s last European concert for the Midwest Princess Tour on Sept. 23, during our time on the Berlin Foreign Study Program. Held at the Velodrom arena, the show replaced an earlier concert she had to cancel and drew a crowd of around 12,000 people — her largest audience outside of a festival to date. The atmosphere was a celebration of her creative vision. Many in the audience dressed like Roan herself, fully embracing the bold, vibrant fashion from her music videos. One person wore a pink cowboy outfit complete with glitter boots, while another sported an angel costume with a heart-patterned skirt and heart-shaped makeup accents. The attention to detail in their looks made the entire experience feel like a living, breathing extension of Roan’s art.
In this cartoon series, Gaia Yun '25 reviews the political scene concerning climate change using a popular Noah Kahan song.
The age of cable television is essentially over. Youtube, Netflix, Hulu and Apple TV feature more content than we could ever consume, and many of the most beloved shows of our time — such as “Suits,” “Bridgerton” and “Squid Game” — are released on these on-demand streaming platforms. Media entertainment, it seems, is a never-ending source of instant gratification.
As the chirping of cicadas hushes to the soft crunch of fallen leaves, the changing sounds of the Upper Valley signal that fall has arrived. This shift from summer to fall begs the question: Does the music playing from our headphones change as drastically as the music of the natural world?
Colleen Hoover’s “It Ends With Us” became a bestseller after going viral on BookTok — a book-focused subcommunity on TikTok — during the COVID-19 pandemic. It spent 140 weeks on the New York Times Best Seller list and sold 8 million copies. Thus, it was hardly surprising that fans were ecstatic when director Justin Baldoni optioned the film adaptation in July 2019. Starring Baldoni as Ryle and Blake Lively as Lily Bloom, the movie premiered on Aug. 9 and exceeded $100 million at the global box office in its first week.
Sabrina Carpenter is back with her sixth studio album, “Short n’ Sweet,” released on Aug. 23 by Island Records. The album keeps things interesting with a delightful mix of pop, country, rock, disco and R&B, and if you’re not careful, it might just catch you off guard with its sharp sarcasm and acidic humor.
Climb the steps of Robinson Hall up to the third floor, and you’ll find the Web Dartmouth College Radio station, more commonly known as WebDCR. The College’s freeform, online station is run by and for students, with broadcasts featuring anything from a curated playlist of “banjo bangers” to a “laugh-out-loud” comedy talk show, according to the station’s website.
Before their off terms, Dartmouth students of all majors scramble to secure internships. By and large, pre-med students look for research or shadowing positions, government majors seek out policy-related internships and economics majors scrounge for opportunities in finance.
Connor Norris ’25 casts a light on a misunderstood individual.
This article is featured in the 2024 Freshman special issue.
This article is featured in the 2024 Freshman special issue.
This article is featured in the 2024 Freshman special issue.
On Aug. 11, Kabir Mehra ’26 released a three-song indie record called “The B Songs” under the name Day Drooler. Mehra is the lead vocalist for a band of the same name, which features drummer Grant Foley ’25, bassist Ian Glick ’26, saxophonist Nathan McAllister ’25 and guitarist Jackson Yassin ’26. Together with his band, which formed this summer, he plans on expanding his EP into an 11-song album. The Dartmouth sat down with Mehra to discuss his music-making process for “The B Songs” and his aspirations for future full-length projects.
In this week’s cartoon, Thadryan Sweeney GR depicts two robots facing the binary of winning and losing.
On Aug. 6, Still North Books & Bar hosted Upper Valley-based cartoonist and author Emma Hunsinger for a reading of “How It All Ends,” her debut graphic novel published the same day. The Eisner Award-nominated cartoonist received an MFA from the Center for Cartoon Studies in Hartford, Vt., and has had her cartoons featured in The New Yorker.
“Twisters,” a stand-alone sequel to the 1996 blockbuster “Twister,” raises the question, Can sequels recreate the magic of a classic?