It could have been worse.
After the cinematic war crime that was Batman v. Superman, one might have expected Justice League to be a miserable movie filled with violent dude-bros and unseemly plot holes. Surprisingly, it wasn’t.
I'm working as an audio producer at The Ryersonian as part of my fourth year in Ryerson's journalism program. In Fall 2017, I interned at CBC Radio show Day 6. I was the business and technology editor at The Eyeopener between May 2016 and May 2017. I've got three-years' worth of bylines at that paper. Along with Jacob Dubé and Mitchell Thompson, I co-host and produce Radio Free Krypton, a comic book radio show/podcast on CJRU 1280 AM.
It could have been worse.
After the cinematic war crime that was Batman v. Superman, one might have expected Justice League to be a miserable movie filled with violent dude-bros and unseemly plot holes. Surprisingly, it wasn’t.
It’s lunch time. You take a moment, grab a bite to eat and sit by yourself to enjoy it. If that sounds familiar, you’re not alone.
It’s clear the majority of Toronto’s commuters resist submission.
You can see it in eyes rolling at delay announcements or the fist-shaking when buses too full to pick up passengers skip stops.
The third time’s a charm. Following two inspired Thor movies, Thor: Ragnarok gets the god of thunder right. The film is a fast-paced, interplanetary romp that takes Thor out of his element.
Lost, hammerless and—at one glorious point—shirtless, the Avenger finds himself on a quest to save his homeworld, Asgard, from a seemingly unbeatable threat.
The online world is getting more dangerous, so in October, Ryerson held its biggest Cybersecurity Month campaign ever.