When comedy becomes an act of rebellion
If you are lucky enough to have cable and a TV in your dorm/apartment, last night at the Oscars, you may have seen Jimmy Kimmel blow up Twitter by tweeting directly at President Trump.
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If you are lucky enough to have cable and a TV in your dorm/apartment, last night at the Oscars, you may have seen Jimmy Kimmel blow up Twitter by tweeting directly at President Trump.
Picture this: It’s five in the morning on another cold day in Washington D.C., President Trump prepares for busy day of being president of the free world by smashing buttons on his cell phone, sending out messages 140 characters at a time.
Photo Illustration: Cooper Newnam, a freshman industrial design student, holds up his iPhone featuring the Twitter account of President Trump
Isn’t it unbelievable that the interests of Native Americans are still disregarded in the United States?
Tempe Mayor Mark Mitchell speaks at the Tempe City Council meeting where the ASU sustainability project was approved on Thursday, Feb. 9th, 2017.
ASU and the City of Tempe will collaborate on a sustainability project to test the ability of plant-based service ware to compost, after the Tempe City Council approved the plan Feb. 9.
Louis Mendoza, Director of ASU's School of Humanities, Arts and Cultural Studies, stands in his office on Friday, Jan. 27, 2017.
What does America mean to you?
Ben Cooper, freshman philosophy major at ASU, waits for the light rail after leaving a protest on Trump's ban on refugees at Sky Harbor International Airport on January 29, 2017.
We may think that social issues will get progressively better over time, but what happens when years of legal progress simply comes to a complete and sudden halt? That might have just happened with LGBT+ rights, and every ASU student across the gender identity and sexuality spectrum should be worried.
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