The hit web television series 13 Reasons Why has recently released its third season, and fans are raving. The new season touches on hot button social issues this season such as abuse, gun safety, and immigration. Brendan Angelides, better known by his stage name Eskmo, returned to score the third season of the binge-worthy Netflix show.
You would think, that after creating countless controversies ranging from on-screen suicides to graphic rape depictions, the 13 Reasons Why writers would eventually learn their lesson. Many fans were skeptical when the show was renewed for a third season, and after its release, it seems as though they had every right to be. You’d think
Netflix’s 13 Reasons Why has been a constant topic for discussion, followed by years of controversy since its 2017 premiere. The show left many viewers unsettled with its graphic depictions of suicide and sexual assault, which went against the strict advice of mental health professionals. The Netflix original is an adaptation of Jay Asher’s novel under
I don’t know about you but if I don’t have any work to do, you will probably find me hanging out on Netflix or any other streaming website, watching my favorite T.V shows and movies. I always get yelled at by my parents because it supposedly “stupefies me” but I don’t agree and have realized
*Trigger warning: This article contains comments on ab*se, p*dophilia, etc* If there’s anything that 2017 has taught me, it’s that television watchers have every right to be critical and strategic in what shows they invest time and energy in. For many of us, the TV shows we love often reflect real-life situations that we can
ABC’s Shakespearean drama “Still Star-Crossed,” an imagining of what happened after the conclusion of Romeo and Juliet, has been essentially cancelled after three episodes. While the rest of the season will air, a second is not in the makings, and starting July 8th the remaining episodes will air on Saturday, rather than Monday. Perhaps the cancellation
It’s no secret that 13 Reasons Why brings up strong emotions in people. It has professional psychologists, parents and schools weighing in. Hundreds of articles have been written about it and in every lunch break, without fail, you hear it from across the cafeteria. That’s a pretty big reach for one TV show. There is no denying
Things were not “So Good” for the Swedish pop singer, Zara Larsson, when she quoted a tweet on Twitter asking for her opinion on Netflix’s newest TV series, 13 Reasons Why. The show, partly produced by Larsson’s pop colleague, Selena Gomez, has received mixed reviews – the positive reviews praising the show for encouraging awareness on
*This article may contain spoilers from Thirteen Reasons Why* What is the first word that comes to mind when you hear the name Bryce Walker? If your answer was rapist then consider yourself correct. Bryce is a character from the novel, and now Netflix series, Thirteen Reasons Why. Besides a handful of blinded “fans”, everyone who
I’ve always been a reader, inhaling books faster than I could get my hands on them, and they have always shaped me in some way. Similarly to Rory Gilmore, I too carried a book everywhere, and I never cared much about whether it seemed rude to pull a book out at the dinner table. Growing
If you haven’t been on social media or been keeping up with any of the recent tabloids, then you probably have not heard of the craze that is “13 Reasons Why”. For many like myself, this Netflix original was once a class read during our time in high school. I can account for several times
If you’ve been on social media at all in the last week, you’ve most likely heard of the internet’s new obsession: 13 Reasons Why. Executive produced by Selena Gomez, the Netflix series follows Clay Jensen as he listens to tapes left by his former classmate, Hannah Baker, as she reveals to her classmates why she