Emily Bishop, Columnist OK, Boomers, “let’s get this bread”. This is a slang phrase us Gen Z and millennials have started to use. This is one of the most popular phrases. “Let’s get this bread” is used to be referred as doing something. Urban Dictionary describes the phrase, “Let’s Get This Bread is a phrase commonly used to mean ‘let’s get/make money’, where the ‘bread’ refers to money.” Using this slang phrase can be used for really anything, not just about getting paid or getting money. It can be used as motivational to do things in the morning like this sentence for example, “Good morning, let’s get this bread!”
0 Comments
Amy Lemco, Art & Life Writer A new installation, “Ellipsis”, by Maryland artist and professor Amanda Burnham, opened in McGlothlin Center for the Arts (MCA) on Nov. 11 and will run until Dec. 7. Visiting the mixed media, three-dimensional piece is like walking into a life-size comic-book collage, with recognizable objects and vignettes appealing to all the senses. Burnham sat down to answer questions about her process, aesthetics and advice to students.
Amy Lemco, Arts & Life Writer This soup is especially easy to prepare with leftover chicken or turkey, so it is perfect for this time of year—that is, if the Thanksgiving turkey isn’t already picked clean to the bone! You could, of course, substitute pork, beef or hearty vegetables.
Amy Lemco, Arts & Life Writer With ovens already preheating for Thanksgiving, films simmering with a subplot about delicious food are the perfect inspiration for new recipes to try. According to a 2009 TIME issue, cooking shows actually began over the radio waves in the 1940s. Within that same decade, “In the Queen’s Taste” debuted on television, hosted by Dione Lucas—the first female graduate of Le Cordon Bleu.
Jacob Cordle, Arts & Life Writer EMORY, Va. — The Emory & Henry Theatre Department will once again take the stage to bring wondrous, attention-grabbing performances to the community. This semester, they will be staging the hit production “Legally Blonde: The Musical.” The musical follows sorority member Elle Woods, who in an attempt to save her failed relationship, attends Harvard Law School. However, she soon finds her passion for law and proves to her doubtful peers that she is capable of being a successful lawyer, all while staying true to her fun-loving self.
Amy Lemco, Arts & Life Writer ABINGDON, Va. — At its core, Barter Theatre has been about community outreach since a head of cabbage could be traded for a ticket in the 1930s. Recently, as awareness grows that not all have equal access to the arts, Barter has become a leader in local efforts for inclusion by staging a sensory-friendly performance of every Barter Players production in the Smith Theatre.
Elysia Moreta, Arts & Life Columnist It only took the Organic Food Production class four class periods to harvest:
Mark Finney, Faculty Advisor Lee Israel was an American celebrity biographer who became famous, not for her authored works, but for literary fraud. Based on her memoir, 2018’s “Can You Ever Forgive Me,” starring Melissa McCarthy, tells her story.
Jacob Cordle, Arts & Life Writer EMORY, Va. — In one of the three scheduled art gallery events this semester, Emory & Henry College is currently displaying Matt Mitros’ “Artifacts of Expectation,” located at the McGlothlin Center for the Arts.
|
AuthorWhitetopper Staff Archives
March 2020
Categories
All
|