A Month of Zinesters: Andrea Manica
Next up, we ask Kitchener’s own Andrea Manica about the inspiration behind her prolific and award-winning zine-making. Based in: Toronto, […]
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On New Years Eve, Silver Sprocket rang things in on a damp note. Their HQ was slammed by historic rain. Here's how the radical publisher spared their stock from the flood.
"People will beg for AI-free content like they do for water that isn’t tainted with lead. And when AI becomes synonymous with ‘Shit,’ it will die like every other Silicon Valley Clown Show and nobody will miss it."
With many of these speculative stories rooted in sci-fi, the line between reality and metaphor nearly disappears, playing with a reader’s inability to clearly differentiate between fact and fiction when it comes to the realities of disability.
Life doesn’t unfold in a neat narrative, neither does Kelly Fruh's brief, deft, illustrated vignettes.
There are brighter days underground. Our latest issue features Cruelty Squad creator and Finnish artist Ville Kallio speaking about the anticipated follow-up to his unlikely hit and giving video games an overdue shock to their system.
Overview “Urban Legends” is a compilation zine about urban legends, local myths, and folklore. Share your writing or art that’s […]
View all Calls for SubmissionsNext up, we ask Kitchener’s own Andrea Manica about the inspiration behind her prolific and award-winning zine-making. Based in: Toronto, […]
Toronto’s kinda freaking out right now. We’ve long been anticipating a list of potential cuts throughout the city as proposed […]
Next, we shift our focus to the West Coast, and ask Aaron Moran of Smoke Signals Press why he makes […]
Bike, bake and boil – here are the week’s coolest indie events for the hottest days of Summer TORONTO: Wednesday, […]
By Kevin Bracken and Lori Kufner 1. Be cute. Your very presence should elicit a smile! Be playful! Wings help. […]
By Darren Wershler-Henry Il faut épater le bourgeois. –Charles Baudelaire Rebellion isn’t what it used to be. At the beginning […]
By Anna Bowness We thought we’d better jump on the bandwagon before it left us behind: this issue of Broken […]
Zines don’t need philosophy By Matthew Firth The idea of zine “philosophy” strikes me as an oxymoron. Zines, for me, […]
Springtime for Goldstein By Heather O’Neill Outside it is spring, but inside the house all the umbrellas are broken and […]
By John McCurley John McCurley dropped out of the Ontario College of Art to write psychedelic plays full time. He […]
By Alain Mercieca Condominiums, apartment buildings, call them what you will. Rectangular box friends that protrude out of most every […]
By Greg Shupak There was a rumour that I was dead. Actually, I survived. *** “Oh my God! Oh I’m […]