Critique
Tom Morello: The Revolutionary Guitar Legend Shaping Modern Rock Music
Who Is Tom Morello? Born Thomas Baptist Morello on May 30, 1964, in Harlem, New York, Tom Morello grew up in Illinois before moving to Los Angeles to pursue music. He studied political science at Harvard University, a background that would later deeply influence his songwriting and activism.
By youssef mohammed27 days ago in Art
Actor Andreas Szakacs on AI Cinema as Szakacs Films Prepares Echoes of Tomorrow for May 2026
Szakacs Films is stepping further onto the international stage with the announcement of several new global projects, led by the upcoming feature film Echoes of Tomorrow, currently targeting a May 2026 release. The announcement reflects a broader creative shift for the company, signaling a deliberate move toward future-focused storytelling that engages with emerging technologies and contemporary cultural questions.
By Andreas Szakacs27 days ago in Art
Essence, Embodiment, and Relational Reality
The Failure of Reduction and the Need for Synthesis There is a persistent failure in many modern attempts to explain what a human being is. Some frameworks reduce the person entirely to matter, insisting that identity, consciousness, morality, and meaning are nothing more than emergent properties of physical processes. Other frameworks move in the opposite direction, detaching spirit from reason and grounding belief in intuition alone, often at the cost of coherence or accountability. Both approaches fail because both misunderstand essence. One denies that essence exists at all. The other treats it as something vague and undefinable.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcastabout a month ago in Art
The Theft of Three Hundred Thousand Rupees
The Theft of Three Hundred Thousand Rupees (Article No. 1427) Bano and Shehla, the sisters of Mansoor and Munir Shami, studied at Tower House Grammar School, a private institution run by Begum Nayab, who was both its owner and principal. She was known as a kind, intelligent, and principled woman. Her school, which offered education from playground to matriculation, had an excellent reputation. Parents from far-off areas sent their children there because of its strong discipline and high academic standards.
By Sudais Zakwanabout a month ago in Art
Why John LoPinto Values Intentional Travel Over Speed and Volume
In a world that celebrates movement and accumulation, travel has increasingly become about speed and volume. More destinations, tighter itineraries, and constant motion are often seen as markers of experience. John LoPinto takes a different approach. He values intentional travel over rapid consumption, believing that depth of experience matters far more than distance covered. For him, travel is most meaningful when it creates understanding, not just memories.
By John LoPintoabout a month ago in Art
When the Artist Becomes the Art. Content Warning.
We like to think we can separate the art from the artist, but can we, really? Art is born from the same place as sin. It mainly emerges from conflict: between what is felt and what is permitted, between the self that is lived and the self that must be hidden. No figure embodies this tension more vividly than Oscar Wilde: a man who transformed his own contradictions into style, wit, and devastating clarity. His novel The Picture of Dorian Gray is not merely a tale of aesthetic decadence but the battleground on which this question is fought.
By Yasmine Lagrasabout a month ago in Art
The Uncopiable Human Wit to Write
We all have been in that spot at least once in our schooldays where we have been wringing our brains off to curate written articles of some sort until our soul-less friends were born. At just four years old, our beloved soul-less, metallic, digital assistant who is always by our side when we turn on our computers and smart phones, will be doing much more than curating written content for us all, if you know what I mean.
By Sound Savvy2 months ago in Art
The Crossroads of Becoming
I found it by accident. Tucked between a laundromat and a shuttered bookstore, half-hidden by ivy and time, stood a rusted phone booth. Not the sleek glass kind from movies, but an old metal one—peeling paint, cracked receiver, a dial so stiff it groaned when turned. No one had used it in years. Probably decades.
By KAMRAN AHMAD2 months ago in Art
The Girl Who Turned Her Face Into an Aquarium . AI-Generated.
When people first saw the photo, most of them thought it was edited. A young woman stared into the camera, her face transformed into a living aquarium. Tiny painted fish swam across her cheeks. Blue water-like shadows curved around her eyes. Light reflections gave the illusion of glass, depth, and movement. It looked surreal, impossible, and strangely emotional.
By shakir hamid2 months ago in Art







