Spider-Man: Far From Home, The Rook
This week on Geek Girl Riot we’re breaking down the good, the bad, and the ugly [faces we made] about Spider-Man: Far From Home…plus we share our thoughts on the new Starz series The Rook.
This week on Geek Girl Riot we’re breaking down the good, the bad, and the ugly [faces we made] about Spider-Man: Far From Home…plus we share our thoughts on the new Starz series The Rook.
We chat with Long Shot director Jonathan Levine and star June Diane Raphael! Plus hear our take on Detective Pikachu and our breakdown of the new Spider-Man: Far From Home trailer.
The team behind Golden Girls are cooking up something new—with the upcoming comedy, Silver Foxes!
We’re double-teaming on this weeks episode with two of Geek Girl Riot’s intrepid token geek Jersey Boys, to talk Spider-Man: Homecoming, and The Bachelorette.
This is the best SPIDER-MAN we’ve seen, both actor and story.
When you head to the theater to watch War For The Planet Of The Apes, you can do so knowing that the film studio bringing you the movie has done anything but declare war against wildlife—in fact, they’re helping out.
I’ve been on and off the road working for many different artists for the last ten years, and when work allows, I like to document my travels.
The Decoration’s debut EP Anywhere Is Home shines with positivity and optimism, and is guaranteed to be perfect for those hot summer days.
In 2004, U.K.-based independent label Memphis Industries released the sample-heavy, intentionally lo-fi and daringly jarring “Thunder, Lightning, Strike,” the Go! Team’s debut full-length CD. The buzz was deafening, so in 2005, the label entered a joint venture with Sony BMG to distribute the album internationally, with the major’s Columbia subsidiary handling it in the United States. It’s a turn of events that every band dreams of — unless that band is the Go! Team. The brainchild of Ian Parton, the Go! Team was never supposed to be mainstream. Parton set out to make “dirty” pop songs — danceable, catchy tunes… Read more »
Lesson to all potential Fall Out Boy hecklers: If you plan on plying your craft, perhaps it’s better to do so from the relative anonymity of the arena cheap seats rather than during a private party attended by roughly 200 industry peeps and/or friends of FOB. That latter scenario is exactly what went down early Tuesday morning (June 12) at Chicago rock club Schuba’s, which hosted a Spin magazine party following Fall Out Boy’s concert at the nearby Charter One Pavilion. The band was scheduled to perform a brief acoustic set at the soiree, but thanks to one particularly aggressive… Read more »