The ‘Bottoms’ phenomenon: Why the indie film is resonating with audiences in Madison and elsewhere
My friends and I set off on a journey last weekend to see “Bottoms,” directed by Emma Seligman.
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My friends and I set off on a journey last weekend to see “Bottoms,” directed by Emma Seligman.
The Wisconsin Badgers officially announced the hire of Cincinnati head coach Luke Fickell as the new Badgers head coach last November.
I often hear that the best sporting atmosphere in the world is an English Premier League game. Just as often as I hear that, though, I feel it necessary to dispute it. The best sporting atmosphere in the world, I will let any European kind enough to lend me an ear know, is a college sports game. The most electric games I’ve been to in my just over 19 years of life have been college volleyball and softball games. The dedication and passion Americans feel towards their schools creates an inimitable energy that is palpable every time you step into a stadium.
At long last, a film has arrived that answers some of the greatest questions of our time: Who is Barbie? What is she about? Can she really do everything? And most importantly, what ever happened to the Barbie whose hair I cut off and whose face I drew on?
Environmental advocates at UW-Madison worry a 30-year plan to redevelop the university’s West Campus District lacks sustainability initiatives needed to combat the climate crisis.
When legends play Breese Stevens Field, fans flock to the small park directly next door to the stadium to enjoy a night of music, good vibes and companionship.
There is nothing less vogue in today’s higher education stratosphere than the humanities major.
A conundrum emerged across UW System campuses following the release of the Student Views on Freedom of Speech survey conducted in the fall of 2022.
The very title of Monty Little’s exhibition on the second floor of the Chazen Museum of Art — “Premonitions” — eerily retrospects a native identity still unravaged by European colonialism and genocide. The installation’s first half, at least, implicates and convicts the familiar iconography of American history. Monotypes of presidents look less like decorated portraits than a lacerated series of charcoal-smothered caricatures. A long scroll drapes from a wall in the center of the gallery’s first half, its text a continuous stream of ratified treaties between various Indigenous groups and the US government.
Content warning: This story contains information about violent racist remarks.
The University of Wisconsin-Madison’s class of 2023 took to the field Saturday at Camp Randall Stadium for the spring commencement ceremony.
Tens of thousands of people have signed a petition to expel a white University of Wisconsin-Madison student recorded saying racist slurs as student calls for administrative action grow.
Content warning: This story contains information about violent racist remarks and quotes containing profanity.
It was midday on a boring Wednesday in April. I had just sat through a class discussion in Vilas Hall, and I was making plans to get lunch from my favorite State Street spot immediately after. The day was as mundane as it could be.
The Associated Students of Madison's Sustainability Committee executed an Earth Day March on Saturday. Participants included students, government officials and local community members. They marched from Library Mall to the Capitol building.
Assembly Speaker Robin Vos (R-Racine) announced Thursday that Wisconsin Republicans are working on a plan to legalize medical cannabis after multiple legislative sessions without action on marijuana legalization, according to the Associated Press.
April is Sexual Assault Awareness Month, and Jessica Randall, a first-year student at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, has been busy organizing the survivor clothing drive she runs by herself. The effort, which she first organized in high school, is now a regular part of her campus life.
Badger Catholic, a registered student organization (RSO) at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, hosted Catholic speaker and author Kim Zember for a talk about “her personal experience with homosexuality and life with Christ” followed by a Q&A session last Thursday. The event was promoted in an email to all students and met with concerns from some due to Zember’s rhetoric.
As a high school student, sex historian and author, Hallie Lieberman would not skip class to sleep in or watch TV but to browse local sex stores.