by Leah Kelly
Staff Writer
SLAMedia is a publication of the news for the Science Leadership Academy community. Writers come from the student body in 10th, 11th, and 12th grades. We work in unison to create a functioning paper with biweekly postings on a variety of events.
Hallway Fashion
By: Angelica Owens
Who influences your outfits?
For special occasions a lot of my influences are influenced from tim burten, bands, directors and movies that I watch. I’m not really inspired from anyone particular. I put pieces of clothes that I have and make outfits out of them.
What style of clothing do you categorize yourself as wearing?
I don’t know. People tell me I’m punk rock or gothic. I go forever I like to wear. I don’t like to label because I wear all type of stuff.
What clothing store is your favorite?
I shop online most of the time but if I do go to stores, I go to Hot topic a lot or zumiez but if I shop online ill go on webites like dolls kill and too fast. I also shop at “crash, bang, boom.”
What clothing store do you shop at the most?
Between Hot topic or crash bang boom
Who picks out your clothing? Do you have anyone approve your clothing?
When I was younger I couldn’t wear what I wanted but now I decide what I wear and no one really has a say. For the most part I choose what I wear.
How did you develop such a unique style of clothing?
I guess I looked around at a lot of music artist I like and I really like costume clothing. It’s all about layering and you can do so much with it so I guess movies and artist I listen to.
What kind of fashion advice would you give people?
Don’t let anyone tell you what to wear or what not to wear. You can try to experiment so you can figure out what you like to wear. Try collecting clothing to make things stand out. Don’t be too skimpy but I don’t judge so if you are younger don’t be to skimpy.
Hallway Fashion
By: Angelica Owens
1. What influences your outfits?
Nothing really. I don’t want to be a follower.
2. What type of clothing do you categorize yourself as wearing?
Hipster
3. What clothing store is your favorite and/or you shop at a lot?
Zumiez. I shop at forever 21 the most.
4. Who picks out your clothing? Do you have anyone approve your clothing?
I do all my clothes on my own. No one helps me with it.
5. How did you develop such a unique style of clothing?
I used to get bullied in school and I tried to dress like everyone else and I wasn’t being myself but then I decided to start being myself and express myself through clothes.
6. What kind of fashion advice would you give people?
If you feel like you’re giving into peer pressure and if you are trying to be like everyone else than don’t do it and just be yourself.
Sean Morris
Staff Writer
Admittedly when I came into the theatre I didn’t know what to expect. But when I left, I still didn’t know what to expect in what is probably one of the most odd, hard to follow movies that I have watched and Christopher Nolan has done. I honestly needed to read the Wikipedia article of the plot before coming here, so I knew what I was actually talking about.
Essentially the film takes place in a world that can no longer support humans so Matthew McConaughey’s character, a former astronaut named Cooper, who, along with a team of scientists, head out into space, specifically though a mysterious wormhole in search for a planet that can sustain humanity.
To the film’s credit, it has MANY impressive visual feats that makes it a shoo- in for at least a nomination for best visual effects. For example, when Copper and his team are first traveling through space it has some beautiful shots of Earth from a distance, Saturn and especially when they travel through a wormhole. It also has a well-picked cast that carry off their characters fairly well, even if the characters themselves may not be fully developed or rounded. It’s able to pull off some emotional moments fairly well, even leaving me slightly teary-eyed.
However, it is overall a missed opportunity and failed to reach the heights and ideals it promised us as an audience. We come in thinking it’ll be about trying to secure humanity’s future beyond the planet we came from and ultimately leaving the world that we’ve had our collective history on. Instead we had Matthew Mcconaughey complain about not seeing his kids. The go-to-space-to-save-the-earth plot is a great concept to work with but got so tangled up in the individual character’s drama’s and problems it began to lose its overlaying sense of epicness. The world is dying, but the film only portrays one small town and how they are dealing with that, when the film could have shown how it affects the rest of the world-in big cities and internationally. And not to mention that with the entire world at stake, the majority of people working on this mission are white, which made the focus of the film seem narrow.
While I felt that Christopher Nolan’s film Inception was a masterpiece, Interstellar failed. In broad strokes they had similar storylines- massive ideas and concepts that revealed intimate moments of the human experience. In Inception’s case, it made more sense as it’s core was exploring the human mind, while Interstellar is suppose to be exploring the universe and the collective mass of humanity, so trying to whittle it down to the relationship between one man and his daughter didn’t feel right.
I would recommend the film if you’re interested in big space shots, beautiful cinematography and solid acting, but would not recommend it if you’re someone who needs a clear plot line to follow or doesn’t like not getting what they came for.