Beyoncé, as a black, female, feminist artist, is our time’s most groundbreaking — even without the best album Grammy. By Lauren Arnold
beyonce
-
-
DiversityEditorialsMusicOpinionPolitics
Opinion: Beyonce, ‘Formation’ and Black Lives Matter
by Ellis Arnoldby Ellis ArnoldPost-Super Bowl backlash against the star is new, but falsehoods and backlash against Black Lives Matter is not. By Ellis Arnold
-
ColumnsOpinionOur StancePolitics
Our Stance: Beyoncé’s Super Bowl statement
by Kaley LaQueaby Kaley LaQueaBeyoncé’s half-time show was one for the books; her politically-charged message about black culture was both strong and entertaining. By Kaley LaQuea
-
By Jillian Arja
Recap of the Super Bowl -
By Avalon Jacka
Why Beyonce’s lipsynched National Anthem shouldn’t matter, and what it means for her Super Bowl half time show. -
By Sarah Elsea
You survived the end of the world! Here are 13 good reasons to stick around in 2013. -
If you were walking in front of Norlin Library just before 8:00 p.m. Thursday night, you heard Beyonce singing softly across the quad, “I Was Here”.
The song played for the dozens of people standing by candlelight on the steps, in vigil for University of Colorado student Ikenna “Kenna” Egbune, who died late Wednesday.