Eric Lavallee: Name me three of your favorite “2017 discoveries”.
Vivian Bang: The Third Industrial Revolution – Office of Jeremy Rifkin
Naomi Klein’s : No Is Not Enough / to resisting Trump’s Shock Politics
Alfonsina y el Mar: Song by Mercedes Sosa about an Argentine radical poet from 1920-1930’s who killed herself by the sea …
Radical Women: Latin American Art 1960-1985 art show at the Hammer Museum. Blew my mind about the dense feminist heritage
Lavallee: On paper, Sophia appears to be an amalgamation of progressive discourses on how the artist can no longer be subjugated by cultural, identity and art community politics.…...
Vivian Bang: The Third Industrial Revolution – Office of Jeremy Rifkin
Naomi Klein’s : No Is Not Enough / to resisting Trump’s Shock Politics
Alfonsina y el Mar: Song by Mercedes Sosa about an Argentine radical poet from 1920-1930’s who killed herself by the sea …
Radical Women: Latin American Art 1960-1985 art show at the Hammer Museum. Blew my mind about the dense feminist heritage
Lavallee: On paper, Sophia appears to be an amalgamation of progressive discourses on how the artist can no longer be subjugated by cultural, identity and art community politics.…...
- 9/21/2018
- by Eric Lavallée
- IONCINEMA.com
I'm happy to announce two new additions to our cultural coverage: the launch of HuffPost TV and the re-launch of HuffPost's Book Club.
HuffPost TV is also somewhat of a re-launch -- the site was formerly known as AOL TV. In its new incarnation, HuffPost TV will have many of the same features you've come to know: exclusive interviews and clips, reviews and recaps, the stories behind the scenes of your favorite shows, and TV listings. But now, we're adding HuffPost's powerful blog and community platforms to the mix, giving you an even more comprehensive -- and much more social -- look at everything happening in the world of TV, both onscreen and off.
With series like Mad Men, Breaking Bad, Modern Family, and Game of Thrones, television has definitely entered a new Golden Age -- and with it has come viewer demand for TV coverage that matches the scope...
HuffPost TV is also somewhat of a re-launch -- the site was formerly known as AOL TV. In its new incarnation, HuffPost TV will have many of the same features you've come to know: exclusive interviews and clips, reviews and recaps, the stories behind the scenes of your favorite shows, and TV listings. But now, we're adding HuffPost's powerful blog and community platforms to the mix, giving you an even more comprehensive -- and much more social -- look at everything happening in the world of TV, both onscreen and off.
With series like Mad Men, Breaking Bad, Modern Family, and Game of Thrones, television has definitely entered a new Golden Age -- and with it has come viewer demand for TV coverage that matches the scope...
- 12/14/2011
- by Arianna Huffington
- Aol TV.
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