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Geeks has assembled the top list of all things comic, entertainment, superheroes, and popular culture.
Top 5 Anime To Watch (April 2026). Content Warning. AI-Generated.
We’ve all seen the charts, but the algorithm is lying to you. The most popular anime aren't always the best ones. From supernatural thrillers to the tactical brilliance of Kaiju No. 8’s latest arcs, I’ve dug through the seasonal trash to find the 5 shows that actually deserve a 'Top Story' badge. Here is why these underrated picks are clearing your favorite Shonen.
By Anime Watcherabout 23 hours ago in Geeks
Animal Farm
Animal Farm, written by George Orwell in 1945, is widely regarded as one of the most influential allegorical novels of the 20th century. Though it tells the story of a group of farm animals overthrowing their human owner, the novel is far more than a tale about animals—it is a profound commentary on political power, corruption, and the cyclical nature of oppression.
By Zain writesa day ago in Geeks
Theater of the Wound: A Philosophical Review of THE DRESDEN DOLLS (2003/2004)
The Dresden Dolls' self-titled debut album, released in 2003 (with a 2004 reissue), erupts like a vaudeville grenade in the staid landscape of early-aughts indie rock. Amanda Palmer, the band's pianist, vocalist, and sole songwriter, teams with drummer Brian Viglione to craft a sound that's equal parts Weimar-era cabaret, punk fury, and confessional poetry. Stripped to piano and drums, the album feels intimate yet explosive--Palmer's lyrics a torrent of wit, vulnerability, and venom that dissects trauma, desire, and societal absurdities. It's not just music; it's therapy session as spectacle, where self-destruction dances with defiance.
By ANTICHRIST SUPERSTAR10 days ago in Geeks
"PROPHET LO-FI PIONEER" [Sheryl Crow (1996) album review]
What makes Sheryl Crow so compelling is that it doesn't behave like a unified "statement" album--it behaves like a field of fragments, a cultural collage where sincerity keeps breaking through irony, and irony keeps destabilizing sincerity. It's closer, in method, to Don DeLillo or Viktor Pelevin than to traditional confessional songwriting: a montage of media, memory, sex, boredom, God, and America.
By ANTICHRIST SUPERSTAR11 days ago in Geeks
10 Soap Operas That Shaped Me
Soap operas aren’t just TV shows—they’re commitments. You don’t just watch them, you grow with them. The characters evolve, the stories stretch across years, and before you know it, you’re emotionally invested in lives that feel almost real.
By Travis Johnson11 days ago in Geeks
Why Does "In Memorians" Segments Always Disappoints
Every year during Oscars, the segment memorializes those actors, filmmakers, musicians, and others related to the industry. The segments consist of images or video clips of the recently departed individuals, edited together into a montage and usually accompanied by music. However, The "In Memorian" segments , the Emmys, the Grammys, the Tonys, the Olivier Awards, the SAG Awards, TCM, BBC Sports Personality of the Year, and by the NFL during Super Bowl week. In 1978, the 50th annual ceremony for the Academy Awards (the Oscars) honored the golden anniversary of the award with a special segment featuring Sammy Davis Jr., singing the Marvin Hamlisch song, “Come Light the Candles,” over a memorial montage. That was until 1994, the Oscars paying tribute to the movie stars, film crew members, and Hollywood movie executives who had died in the previous year became an annual Oscar tribute, beginning with the 66th Academy Awards. Soon after, the Grammys, the SAG Awards, did the same way.
By Gladys W. Muturi12 days ago in Geeks








