COLUMN: College girls' Instagram feeds may be the best branded content
After entering a party, there’s about a 10-minute window during which college girls’ inner social media star has a spiritual awakening.
74 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
After entering a party, there’s about a 10-minute window during which college girls’ inner social media star has a spiritual awakening.
It’s 7:50 a.m. here on Jordan Avenue, and the parade is about to start. There will be no marching band this morning, nor baton twirlers, nor suburban dads chauffeuring the family’s slow-moving convertible.
You first spotted her sipping a morning coffee or, excuse me, le cappuccino, which of course she captioned on Instagram, “Starbucks will never be the same.”
First impressions are weird. First dates, first classes, first meet-the-parents – we fret about what others will think. We wonder if our necklines are too low, if our hair is out of place or if we have lettuce in our teeth.
After receiving a $15 million donation from the Eskenazi family and a $20 million donation from IU, the Eskenazi Museum of Art will be closed to the public for renovations from May 2017 to the spring of 2020, according to a press release from the museum.
After receiving a $15 million donation from the Eskenazi family and a $20 million donation from IU, the Eskenazi Museum of Art will be closed to the public for renovations from May 2017 to the spring of 2020, according to a press release.
As the home of one the most prestigious music schools, IU also houses several a cappella groups, each vying for its own slice of the campus’ attention. But tonight, that attention will all swing toward Hooshir, a mixed Jewish choir that won a city-wide competition for the chance to perform alongside Vocalosity at 7:30 p.m. in the IU Auditorium.
Long after the homecoming parade’s candy was swept away and the Nebraska game stands were emptied, a hush fell over the crowd. Chris Botti, Grammy-winning trumpet player, stepped onto the IU Auditorium stage for his own homecoming: a concert for his alma mater.
In his senior year at IU, Sean Buehler finally found the key to hitting the books while hitting the bars. The answer to this classic college predicament lies in his newly founded series Science on Tap, which fills attendees’ minds with a bit of knowledge and their cups with a bit of beer.
Looking around her freshman engineering seminar, Nina Young found herself surrounded by a sea of men. Of the thousands of people enrolled in her major, she graduated from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology as the only woman in the ocean engineering program.
Students’ regimented routes to class Wednesday afternoon took an interesting turn when the pathway before them transformed into a world of all things green.
From the steps of the Roman Pantheon temple, a group of tourists watched the most peculiar street performer, a young man doing the Carlton as the Foals hit “My Number” played from his back pocket.
A baby grand piano sits in the back corner of the Round in Forest Quad. Throughout the day, its ivory keys are open to the tinkering of any student, but Sunday nights are a different story.
In an effort to introduce incoming students to the Bloomington music scene, Soma Coffee House and Juice Bar and Laughing Planet Cafe will be host to the pair’s first patio show featuring several local bands and solo acts.
It’s a casual week for Beyoncé when she drops an album, debuts a video and embarks on a world tour in a matter of five days.
The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge — or, as their friends call them, William and Kate — have successfully completed the couple’s vacation of the century: a week-long royal tour through the mausoleums, garden parties and safari rides in India and Bhutan.
In a swarm of fringed kimonos, floral print maxis and culturally appropriated headpieces, music festival season has officially commenced.
Chenille suit precisely tailored, hair coiffed in a modest curl and campaign button pinned to the lapel: this is the carefully vetted costume of a political spouse.
The femme fatale, an idealized woman of legs, pucker and seductive charm, is one of the most recurring players in modern culture. Starring on lofted billboards, magazine covers and silver screens alike, she’s a recognized constant that we as consumers have come to expect.