F News Amplified
Episode one of F News Amplified, the new podcast of F News. This episode covers musician Charli XCX's endorcement of Kamala Harris via X, and the deluge of memes that followed. This episode is hosted by Gren Bee, Multimedia Editor of F News, and is produced by Sidne K. Gard, Alex Lee , and Sophie Goalson. Music for the show was created by DrakeAndTheBeatles: This episode features the song, Freak Freak! by Marcilla Dmanisi, which you can stream here and find the video for here: Song: Video: Sources for this episode are linked below: ...
info_outline Architecture is HumanF News Amplified
In our one and only, extended cut episode of season 7, we talk with Architect Duo Dickenson and SAIC Professor Douglas Pancoast about the changing landscape of architecture in our society today. But it's not just about buildings. It's about us.
info_outline A peek inside Patient Info, the Ukrainian Village DIY Artist Space.F News Amplified
In the second episode of this season, we take a peek inside Patient Info—a DIY artist space here in Chicago that retains the structure of its former purpose: a doctor's office. To get a better understanding of the space and how its intact history converses with the work showcased in the venue, we sat down with MFA student and Director of Patient Info, Brian Jucas.
info_outline Katherine Skwira-Brown's 'Porch Portal'—A Terrain Biennial ExhibitionF News Amplified
In this two-part season, we speak with SAIC students working beyond the studio, outside the institute—After hours. Our first episode follows BFA student Katherine Skwira-Brown as she guides us through the complicated creation process of her Terrain Biennial exhibition piece, 'Porch Portal'.
info_outline S05E02 - Shawné Michaelain Holloway on sexuality and power structures in the artsF News Amplified
To follow our exploration of SAIC's first dormitory history as a former Playboy mansion, we speak with Shawné Michaelain Holloway, an SAIC professor and alum who recently taught a course titled "Sex and Gender in New Media." Her instruction involves a critical engagement with existing ideas of sex and gender, so we asked her to share her observations about how these conversations have evolved over the years.
info_outline S05E01 - Why did SAIC students live in a former Playboy mansion?F News Amplified
In this two-part season, we’ll explore how conversations about sex, gender, and sex work have evolved at SAIC over the years. Our first episode recounts the story of SAIC’s first residence hall — the original Playboy mansion — and poses some of the questions we can ask now, as artists and students.
info_outline S04E03 - Sami Ismat on the consequences of whistleblowingF News Amplified
When the U.S. put sanctions on Syria in December of 2019, Sami Ismat (MFA 2020) questioned this sequence of events through a performance that brought participants into the mind of a whistleblower. In this final episode of Season 4, Sami explains why exposing injustice is not always foolproof.
info_outline S04E02 - Zhisheng Wu on destruction and preservationF News Amplified
MFA first year Zhisheng Wu describes a project he worked on with residents of a shantytown in Southern China to preserve their memories after the demolition and reconstruction of their home. His sculpture, titled Message Wall, combined the bricks from the fallen town and the dreams and wishes of its residents into a single form to honor the community’s roots.
info_outline S04E01 - Nicole Marroquín on the power of rebel youthF News Amplified
Artist, researcher and School of the Art Institute of Chicago Art Education professor Nicole Marroquín describes a critical moment of activism among Black and Latinx Chicago youth in the early 1970s — the Harrison and Froebel High School student uprisings, which were a grassroots response to racial injustice in the city’s public education system and beyond.
info_outline S03E02 - Two Lies & A Truth: Brontë MansfieldF News Amplified
Brontë's stories:
info_outlineJanet Desaulniers, co-creator of the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (SAIC)'s MFA Writing program, received a contract to publish a short story collection at the ripe old age of 25. The book, titled What You've Been Missing, ended up taking 20 years to publish. We talk with Janet about the thrills and perils of early success — of making it before you've made yourself.