COLUMN: Facebook's conservative concealment
More and more often, the response most millennials give to the question, “Where do you get your news?” is, “Mainly social media sites. I find out what’s important from what people share on Facebook.”
110 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
More and more often, the response most millennials give to the question, “Where do you get your news?” is, “Mainly social media sites. I find out what’s important from what people share on Facebook.”
Throughout my collegiate years, I have come to find stink bugs are disgustingly distracting.
After Tuesday’s home run, Trump’s victory speech relied very little on the actual speech and very heavily on the victory by using the phrase “presumptive nominee” to further inflate his permanently spray-tanned skull.
As cannabis users around the globe lit the flame and celebrated 4/20, Snapchat came under fire as well.
On Tuesday, English physicist and cosmologist Stephen Hawking, Russian billionaire Yuri Milner and Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg announced they’re investing billions of dollars to send a fleet of robot spacecraft to Alpha Centuri, the nearest star system.
I remember bounding down the stairs on weeknights as an adolescent, eagerly anticipating the mockery that was soon to ensue on the family-room TV.
During the first few days of April, I think we’re all a bit wary about the things we’ve read on the Internet.
“Oh, you’re an English major. So do you want to be a teacher or something?”
I’ve been an Indiana Hoosier for three years, but through every basketball game I’ve attended, I have had some unusual companions who arguably have the best seats in the house. I’m not talking about the guy who sings the national anthem. I’m talking about big heads.
Lately it seems as if there are no original ideas anymore on TV, and by “TV,” I mean Netflix. Cast revivals and spinoffs leave me with the empty feeling I get when I eat an off-brand bowl of cereal — it just isn’t the same as the original.
In the midst of these dark and dreary months full of groutfits and hitting the snooze button too many times, I thought I’d take the time to talk about the most important meal of the day: breakfast.
Edward Snowden described it on Twitter as “the most important tech case in a decade.”
Have you ever felt like you’ve been hanging around the same kind of people your whole life?
February, otherwise known as the month of love, or more aptly the month in which you binge-watch Netflix while spooning copious amounts of macaroni and cheese down your throat, is upon us once again.
Yesterday I ate a twice-baked potato made by the chef at my sorority. Sadly I was underwhelmed by the potato-like flavor most Idahoans know and love so well.
It’s being called the “meatball war” — something that sounds as harmless as an elementary school cafeteria food fight. But it’s actually something far more damaging.
The 21st century, more aptly named the Century of Stupid Things on the Internet, has #won once again.
I’ve never been one for tears. Therefore, I have solemnly pledged I will not cry upon leaving Denmark, which I currently identify with more than home.
While we’re struggling to decide whether to circle B or D on a multiple choice question for a final, Kylie Jenner is stressed about whether to choose a mint or emerald green wig for her next outing.
Recently, our news outlets have begun to closely resemble that of Gotham City’s. Threats are suddenly popping up in our backyards, and there’s no one there to save the day.