'Waiting Room's' all-female cast works
The message that the female body is mistreated in MSU Department of Theatre's "The Waiting Room" is as loud as the piercing screams in Act 1.
The message that the female body is mistreated in MSU Department of Theatre's "The Waiting Room" is as loud as the piercing screams in Act 1.
Imagine a world where you can be arrested for speaking out against your government, dancing at a concert or painting your fingernails.
The Oreos on display don't twist or crumble, and you definitely can't bite into them. The popular cookies are just a sampling of the smorgasbord of art in the victual-themed "Feast Your Eyes" exhibit at (SCENE) Metrospace, 303 Abbott Road.
A miniskirt? Too provocative. Toss it to the ground. An ankle-length gray number looks too matronly.
Every week, The State News presents five things going on in the world of pop culture that might make your life a little bit better.
Woody Allen could be a philosopher, but it's a good thing he opted for a directing career. "Match Point" weaves the story of four young people's lives into an example of how luck can dictate our paths.
When I browse through the DVDs at Best Buy or FYE, the last emotion I expect to feel is nostalgia. Yet that yearning for yesterday hits me time after time when I see the shows I grew up watching available to the masses again. The biggest shock has to come from learning that "Beakman's World" the science-experiment show that featured Beakman, the dour Lester the Rat and Josie has "The Best of Beakman's World" on DVD for the low, low price of $5.97 at Amazon.com. As a kid, I loved watching Beakman perform experiments to answer questions about rainbows and why the sky is blue.
The Xbox 360 is the current pinnacle of gaming experience. And as is appropriate for a pinnacle it's proved quite hard to reach.
Newly appointed chair of the Department of Theatre, George Peters hopes his strong administrative background will help put MSU theater in the spotlight.
"Last Night Out" describes the night before Brandon's wedding as Joshua takes a reluctant Brandon out on the town. The characters are played by Brandon Bautista and Joshua Ortman, whose first names correspond with their characters'. Ortman begins the night by flaunting his bad boy persona he hits on girls, drinks excessively and enthusiastically takes Brandon to a strip club against his wishes.
By Erik Adams Special for The State News As you can read in any rock magazine of note (Spin and Harp, for instance), Rilo Kiley frontwoman Jenny Lewis set out to make her solo debut, a soul album in the vein of 1971's "Gonna Take a Miracle" by Laura Nyro and LaBelle.
The Union Ballroom hosted an almost contradictory event Friday an arena rock show in an intimate environment. Contradiction or not, it was definitely a hand-clapping good time for audience members when Almost Queen a Queen tribute band hit the stage with screaming guitar solos, monstrous drum beats and heavenly vocal range. "Really, we started the band when we found a guy that looked exactly like Freddie Mercury," said Tom Cavanagh, guitar player for the tribute band, before the show. Cavanagh, who has a striking resemblance to Queen's guitar player Brian May, was right about his band mate Joseph Russo looking like Queen's late great lead singer Mercury. Russo wore the trademark white tank top with white jeans and, of course, sported the Mercury mustache.
The biggest sports game of the year is just down I-96, and you want to party with the big name celebs in Detroit.
Wynton Marsalis & the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra didn't just perform at the MSU Auditorium Wednesday night they generated a mind-blowing event. The show was over before the audience had a chance to grasp the virtuosity of jazz brilliance on stage.
MSU alumni Marty Shea and Ian Bonner are making names for themselves in the film business. Their recent short film "21 Carbs," which Shea and Bonner wrote and directed, has won two awards and been accepted to eight film festivals.
The title sums up the whole plot "Looking for Comedy in the Muslim World" is about just that.
It's that time of year again the quality of new motion picture releases has been progressively dropping, and it's about to hit the low point.
An MSU education has fueled alumni on the road to exciting careers all over the world. For 1999 graduate George Katsiris, his philosophy degree served as a catalyst for the creation of a record label based in the Big Apple.
Every week, The State News presents five things going on in the world of pop culture that might make your life a little bit better.
Crossword puzzles across campus are feeling spurned as more and more people turn to the number game Sudoku to tease their brains. The game that requires no math has become a staple in newspapers around the country, including The State News. It was reintroduced to the nation last spring, according to an article about the game in the current issue of American Scientist. Some students, such as accounting junior Sean Brennan, imported the game after spending the summer abroad. "I went to Ireland over the summer and they had that all over the newspapers," Brennan said, who now has a Sudoku day calendar and completes about two puzzles a day. Sudoku puzzles can usually take between 10 minutes and a half hour, depending on the puzzle's difficulty and player's skill, according to www.sudoku.com.