Latest Stories
Most recently published stories in Critique.
U.S. military to automatically register eligible men for draft by year’s end
Ring the death knell for individual freedom if the draft is at all implemented again. While the Selective Service has not announced or indicated that the draft will start, a lottery system may be put in place based on birthdays just like the Vietnam War era.
By Skyler Saundersabout an hour ago in Critique
Streamer Culture Isn’t Dying, It’s Burning Through Itself
Streaming is beautiful. It affords users to create content and build followings and fortune in the process. While it seems as if the platforms are burning themselves out through overexposure and complications with artists and builders, the reality is that figures like Akademiks and Cai Cenat have developed a stage for themselves to excel.
By Skyler Saundersabout 2 hours ago in Critique
High Net Worth, Low Self- Estem
The Glitter of Wealth and the Poverty of the Insatiable Ego In a world where attention is the new global currency, Gianluca Vacchi is the guy who decided to print so much of his own money that he triggered a hyperinflation of nonsense. We all know him. The Italian heir, a man who looks like someone took a classical Roman sculpture and covered it in graffiti from the most expensive tattoo parlor in Milan. He first burst into our collective consciousness over a decade ago, dancing on the deck of a yacht in a pair of tiny trunks, with a significantly younger beauty serving as a scenic backdrop.
By Feliks Karićabout 4 hours ago in Critique
When Your Voice Gets Mistaken for a Machine
A strange kind of violence happens when an AI detector looks at a piece of writing and decides the writer didn’t write it. The accusation doesn’t come from a person who misread your tone or misunderstood your intent. It comes from a machine that never learned what a human voice feels like. The machine doesn’t hesitate. It doesn’t doubt. It simply stamps your work with a label that says not yours and moves on. You’re left standing there, trying to defend something you created with your own hands.
By Julie O'Hara - Author, Poet and Spiritual Warriorabout 8 hours ago in Critique
How Universities Are Quietly Killing Black Student Life Without Saying DEI
Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) is a choke hold which throttles the best minds on university campuses. It doesn’t say you’ve earned it based on merit alone but through hair texture, skin color, eye color, or other nonessentials.
By Skyler Saundersa day ago in Critique
SPACE IS FAKE? Internet Swears NASA Is Faking Space Missions After "No Shadow" Toy Glitch And Rocket Speed Comparison Goes Viral
People will claim with all of their being that among other absurdities, a man rose from the dead and ascended into a fantasy land. But science and rational calculations are always questioned without regard.
By Skyler Saundersa day ago in Critique
I Know Exactly How You Die Review: A Great Idea Brought to Life
I Know Exactly How You Die is directed by Alexandra Speith, written by Mike Corey, and stars Stephanie Hogan, Katie Wieland, and Rushabh Patel. This horror film has been available on Prime Video since April 7.
By Ninfa Galeanoa day ago in Critique
Halle Bailey calls out Hollywood’s ‘unfair’ standards for Black films: ‘It shouldn’t be like that’
Hollywood burn, burn Hollywood has been an anthem for those in the industry and amongst audiences alike for decades. Halle Bailey is on the forefront in making history with a rom-com You, Me & Tuscany. This is a film produced, written, and directed by blacks. It will serve as a bellwether for future projects. If it succeeds, more black stories with original plots and storylines will be brought to the attention of gatekeepers.
By Skyler Saunders2 days ago in Critique
The Addams Family - TV Series
As a kid, The Addams Family was a favourite of mine, not as obvious as The Munsters but delightfully subversive. As an adult I bought the DVD and was not impressed with the picture quality, but five minutes into the first episode that didn't matter. Astin, Jones & Co Perfection.
By Mike Singleton 💜 Mikeydred 2 days ago in Critique
Living Scripts: When Cinema Becomes Therapy...
Cinema has always functioned as a mirror, but in certain films it becomes something far more unsettling: a stage where life is not merely reflected but reconstructed, rehearsed, and, in some cases, corrected. Joachim Trier’s *Sentimental Value* (2025) and Hirokazu Kore-eda’s *The Truth* (2019) belong to this rare category. Both films explore the same disturbing possibility—that art is not only an expression of life, but a substitute for it. More precisely, they reveal how artists, unable to communicate directly with those closest to them, begin to stage their own lives as a form of apology. In doing so, they transform cinema into a form of psychodrama, where the past is reenacted in the hope that it might finally be understood.
By Peter Ayolov3 days ago in Critique
Delete all my music’: Kehlani makes it clear ICE agents aren’t welcome in her fanbase
Dear Kehlani, Hey, beautiful. You’ve got a point. F*ck ICE. That whole organization performed some of the most heinous acts against American citizens and those yearning for citizenship. What you have stood on is your word to properly address the ugliness of ICE.
By Skyler Saunders3 days ago in Critique











