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But I’m a Cheerleader brilliantly satirizes heteronormative society

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A film still featuring a group of bored-looking teens sitting on a couch looking up at a projected video. The projector is shown pointed towards the camera and an older woman is clicking the remote. The girls are dressed in pink button-ups and skirts, and the boys are dressed in blue button ups with ties.
PHOTO: Courtesy of Ignite Entertainment

By: Cameron Palmer, SFU Student

Content warning: conversion therapy and queerphobia.

The first time I watched But I’m a Cheerleader (BIAC), I was a passionate “ally” of my high school gay-straight alliance club. Celebrating queer identities and making straight people the butt of the joke was controversial in the ‘90s, but even in 2014, watching it for our club’s first movie screening was the first time I saw a romcom that centered queer experiences. While Mean Girls and Clueless went down as household names, BIAC is a hidden gem in mainstream culture. As a hilarious, self-aware satire that tackles growing up queer in homophobic environments, it’s a comforting classic in queer communities.

The film follows Megan (Natasha Lyonne), a cheerleader and goody two-shoes straight-A student whose family, friend, and even boyfriend, suspect she’s a lesbian before she discovers it herself. After an intervention, they send her to True Directions, a gay conversion camp where boys and girls are separated, follow a five-step program, and are trained to perform normative gender roles to “fix” their sexuality; things like cooking and cleaning, for the girls, and fixing cars for the boys. It’s there where Megan meets Graham (Clea DuVall), who’s unapologetically lesbian, and confusingly endearing. Her defiance clashes with Megan’s naïvety and obedience.

With campy costumes that feel like a Dr. Seuss pastiche, a Barbie house style set, and hot pinks and baby blue contrasts which comically depict the rigidity of gender norms, the film’s over-the-top-ness accurately reflects the absurdity of conversion therapy and gender norms. The deadpan delivery of the campers professing their sexuality’s roots in group therapy, like being born in France and being vegetarian, is extra hilarious because it highlights how irrational these stereotypes are when they’re being regurgitated by teens.

The film touches on taboo topics like masturbation, and I’ll admit, a few jokes went over my head when I watched it as a teen, as I was very sheltered growing up. For instance, Megan learns she can shock herself with a small taser everytime she thinks about girls, and discovers why fellow camper, Sinead, says she likes pain and shocks herself under the covers throughout the night.

Megan’s character is cartoonish (when she realizes she’s lesbian, her jaw drops for so long, she drools), but you root for her because she’s simply gullible, and a product of a harmful environment. This is something I can relate to when I think of my younger self.

Watching this as an adult for the first time since high school, I could understand some of the themes better. Compulsive heterosexuality (comphet), coined by Adrienne Rich, means we often don’t have the same opportunities or motivations to explore non-heterosexual attraction, and therefore don’t question our sexuality until later in life. I considered myself an “ally,” and didn’t grasp I was bisexual until adulthood, because the possibility hadn’t even crossed my mind. Or, maybe it had, but I pushed those thoughts away due to the shame surrounding queerness that was conditioned by my religious upbringing. 

Megan’s response to the accusations of her lesbianism, “But, I’m a cheerleader!” exemplifies how gender stereotypes reinforce comphet — she assumed that being feminine and popular made her straight. On the flip side, Jan is a masc-presenting character who “likes balls,” and is sent to True Directions even though she insists she’s attracted to men. However, no one believes her because she looks stereotypically lesbian.

While the characters are one-dimensional and the plot follows typical formulas in the genre, like enemies-to-lovers, it’s self aware, playing into these expectations to subvert them. Plus, sometimes you just want to watch something familiar and easy, especially for processing difficult or traumatic experiences.

SFU’s “What’s Next” report outlines their upcoming priorities

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This is a photo of the SFU Burnaby Campus. A small pond in a courtyard is surrounded by buildings and small trees.
PHOTO: Kriti Monga / The Peak

By: Eden Chipperfield, News Writer

SFU released their second “What’s Next” report on March 8. The 2023 report provides insight into what the SFU community can expect their faculties to be actively working on. This includes online discussions, and round table talks from the community to understand how the university can evolve to better serve its community. 

Central topics SFU addressed included: embracing accountability for student learning, promoting and protecting the mental health and well-being of students, advancing social justice, inclusion, and climate action. Each topic included various action points to create a strategy that addresses those goals.  

We are living through a critical time in history. From a global pandemic and growing inequities to shifting geopolitics and the climate crisis, the challenges we face are complex and daunting, said SFU president Joy Johnson in a statement announcing the report’s release. 

The report highlights accountability as a key priority. It noted the strategies used to address challenges will succeed through implementation. Various working groups and appropriate resources will be introduced to ensure these issues are appropriately discussed. Implementation reflects the conversations occurring through the working groups aligning with executive and governance processes.However, no specific details were provided about said working groups.

To aid in establishing the action items in What’s Next?SFU identified four priorities: upholding Truth and Reconciliation, engaging in global challenges, making a difference for BC, and transforming the student experience, according to a statement provided by the SFU administration to The Peak. 

Reconciliation is a primary subject of interest, and will be addressed under Chris (Syeta’xtn) Lewis, director of Indigenous Initiatives and Reconciliation, and president Johnson. The report stated its goal is to strengthen Indigenous faculty and staff attraction and retention through targeted hires and permanent positions, embedding Indigenous knowledge systems and ways of knowing.An Indigenous Strategic Plan is also in development and will be shared in time.

The report also touches on climate action relating to SFU’s progress with the Sustainability and Climate Action Plan released in September 2022. SFU has already made significant progress toward reaching net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, including announcing it will divest from fossil fuels,the administration statement reported. SFU cut greenhouse gases by more than 50 percent from 2007 levels in 2021, exceeding provincial interim targets and our own Race to Zero targets as well.

Regarding their goal of making a difference for BC, the strategy describes a future medical school at SFU’s Surrey campus. SFU is working closely with many partners, including First Nations Health Authority and Fraser Health Authority, to develop a medical school focused on educating community level specialists, including family physicians and being accountable to the province’s diverse communities it will serve, the administration stated. SFU plans to begin student intake for the medical school in September 2026. It will facilitate evidence-informed public dialogue that fosters pluralism and shared problem-solving across the province, as featured in the report. 

The last priority discussed in the report is transforming the SFU student experience. This priority aims to break barriers, reduce biases, and create systems that promote student success, improve campus vibrancy, and create space for everyone to do their best work”. The strategy includes actively changing the curriculum and providing service enhancements for the changing needs of learners, including more information on mental health, affordability, and flexibility.  

SFU will need to remain agile as the next months and years unfold, and this strategy serves as a vital compass to guide the university,” according to the “What’s Next” report. 

For more information on the What’s Next report, visit their website at sfu.ca/about/sfu-strategy.html. 

Summer just started and it’s practically over

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Someone walking away from summer items (ex: beach balls, watermelon, sunglasses) wearing fall colours, a jacket, and holding a pumpkin spice latte
ILLUSTRATION: Alyssa Umbal / The Peak

By: Hailey Miller, Peak Associate

Well, the longest day of the year has already come and gone. The day erupted into the sky at the crack of dawn, like a fleeting shimmer as the seasons pass by. If you blinked, you probably missed it, because summer just started, and it’s already on its way out. It’s been preparing for this all year — it knows Vancouver is the perfect place to throw some shade and keep us weather-complaining locals on our toes. So, the season comes and goes, and no one even knows. It’s a literal flip-flop, after all. But you better make sure those flat-footed, ergonomic hazards of a sandal (if you can even call them that), accompanied by a brutally uncomfortable toe piece, stay on your feet. Otherwise, you’ll get burned by the sizzling sidewalk underneath. Oh, but don’t worry, those improper flip-flops will slide right off in the sweaty summer heat. 

June 21 may have been the longest sunlit 24 hours the Northern Hemisphere had to offer, but it sure didn’t show it. As the clock struck midnight, the sky swallowed the wistful days of summer’s rays, leaving behind melted ice cream drips and spontaneous road trips, impatiently awaiting their turn to conquer the dog days. You want to enjoy a nice night at the beach and take in the summer breeze? Forget it. The wildfire smoke is too thick for that, and the only breeze you’ll feel is your useless fan working overtime as your hair sticks to the back of your neck, heavy with sweat. The only sunset you’ll see is the fiery haze in the sky as you watch from inside your house, quarantined from climate change. Nothing says summer like being locked down in the heat. Gone are the days when you jumped in the ocean without the thought of an E. Coli outbreak. 

What’s not to love about summer when the days are already shorter, and the ocean water is still colder than your frigid air conditioner kicking into overdrive? One minute it’s a torrential downpour, and the next, the sun’s rays are searing down so hot you might as well cook your breakfast outside on the sidewalk. Who wants to turn on the stove and transform their kitchen into a furnace when you can fry an egg on the pavement instead? Why bother wasting energy when climate change is right on your front doorstep! The walls of your house are already crumbling in the heat — accompanied by a cesspool of sweat — so you might as well go outside and enjoy the blistering sun for an entire two seconds before it’s too hot to handle. Good thing fall is just around the corner. Just kidding, we’ll probably get a “second summer” in October while pumpkin spice runs through the city streets, slides down the pipes, and into the kitchen sink — readily available on tap.

But before you enter into your pumpkin spice, Libra-living, vampire-vanquishing, Halloween-haunting glory, just remember: swirling a copious amount of the infamous autumn sauce (basic latte code for pumpkin spice, obviously) into every drink imaginable is a law that must be abided by, following the immediate fall of summer. That’s why it’s called fall, after all. Whether your special spice recipe is concocted via Witches’ Brew or handpicked from the pumpkin patch in your backyard, the irresistible autumn elixir will surely work its magic to remedy the summer disappointment of relentless heat. The crisp autumn air will soon whisper upon the horizon, enticing pumpkin spice connoisseurs and witches alike, leaving the dog days long behind.

Fast-paced reads perfect for poolside reading

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A banner featuring the book covers of the titles in this list.
PHOTOS: Courtesy of Berkley, Courtesy of Clarion Books, Courtesy of Penguin

By: Saije Rusimovici, Staff Writer

There’s nothing like opening up a good beach read and completely forgetting about real life for a couple hours. This selection features authors who capture the reader and transport them into each story. From a feel-good travelling tale to an edge-of-your-seat thriller set in Italy, these enticing reads are sure to catapult you into your summer reading groove. So sit back, grab yourself a cold drink, and dive into these reads (don’t drop your paperbacks in the pool though)!

PHOTO: Courtesy of Berkley

Every Summer After by Carley Fortune

I’m not normally a big fan of romance or the friends-to-lovers trope, but the way Fortune writes is captivating and not only feels relatable, but real. Tragedy brings Persephone Fraser back to the small town of Barry’s Bay in Eastern Ontario, where her family used to vacation when she was a teenager. It also brings her back to the place she met and fell in love with her best friend, Sam, whom she hasn’t spoken to in more than a decade. The story carries the reader back and forth through time, the chapters alternating between past and present, through all the stages of Persephone and Sam’s relationship, up until the reason it ended. But the story doesn’t only focus on romantic love; Fortune also explores themes like friendship, family, loss, and mental health. 

PHOTO: Courtesy of Clarion Books

With Malice by Eileen Cook 

Content warning: mention of car accidents and death.

Get ready to be transported to the Italian coast and sucked into a thriller that keeps you hooked from the first page to the last. Jill Charron had been looking forward to visiting Italy on a high school trip with her best friend, Simone, for months. Only now, she has no memory of it. After waking up in a hospital bed, Jill is informed that Simone has died in a car accident and she was the one driving. Devastated, Jill attempts to piece together what happened on their trip, while dealing with the allegations that she tried to hurt her best friend on purpose. This is one of those books that keeps you flipping the pages until you realize you’ve finished the whole thing in one sitting. Cook keeps you on the edge of your seat, over dangerous twists and turns that keep you guessing the entire way through. 

PHOTO: Courtesy of Berkley

Eighty Days to Elsewhere by K.C. Dyer

I had the opportunity to meet my mom’s favourite author, K.C. Dyer, at a book signing in Coquitlam last year. This novel is the first book in the ExLibris Adventure series, starring protagonist Ramona “Romy” Keen. Desperate to save her uncles’ bookshop from going out of business due to high rent increases, Romy applies for a job at ExLibris Expeditions, a company that recreates famous literary journeys and creates feasible travel itineraries for prospective clients. Romy is tasked with retracing the steps from Phileas Fogg’s trip in Jules Vern’s Around the World in Eighty Days — and her competitor is none other than the nephew of the landlord trying to run the bookstore out of business. Dyer is witty, comforting, and writes with a flair you can’t help but gravitate towards. The spine is completely creased from how many times this book has been flipped through in my house. Travel with Romy this summer and you might learn a little bit about life, the world, and even yourself! 

PHOTO: Courtesy of Penguin

The Sugar Thief by Nancy Mauro 

What first drew me to this book was the pastel-pink cover. As a baker that’s slightly obsessed with cooking tutorials and a sucker for a good mystery, this book grabbed my attention instantly. I have to admit, it was a bit of an impulse purchase. With that being said, I’m so glad I did. Mauro crafts the story of Sabine Rose, YouTuber and baker, masterfully. Just as Sabine is about to launch her own television show, she decides a well-documented trip to her family’s bakery in Thunder Bay is exactly what she needs to get that final push to stardom. However, after learning her father, an acclaimed pastry chef, has recently died, Sabine begins to uncover dark truths about the family bakery and secret recipes. Mauro takes you on a journey from the modern, sometimes cutthroat world of the media industry to the humble beginnings of her father’s legacy in Italy. 

Alternative music has a misogyny problem

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PHOTO: amirhossein hasani / Pexels

By: Isabella Urbani, Staff Writer

Content warning: mentions of sexual harassment, grooming, sexual assault of minors, misogyny, and queerphobia. 

There are a few ways in which women are generally framed in alternative music — usually rock, punk, and metal. They’re playing hard to get, they’re too young for the singer but the singer “can’t resist” the urge to pursue them, they’re slut shamed for “lusting” over the singer, or they’re ridiculed for not “understanding” the singer’s angsty past. 

Songs of this nature were customary as the rock genre gained traction throughout the ‘50s, with lyrics that were disgustingly straightforward in their predatory advances, and at their peak in the ‘80s and ‘90s

Elvis Presley’s 1968 track, “A Little Less Conversation,” includes the lyrics “close your mouth” and “satisfy me,” as he tells a woman to stop “fighting” and talking because it’s “aggravating” him and taking away from his “satisfaction.” 

The so-called Rock ‘n Roll king groomed his ex-wife Priscilla Presley, pursuing a relationship with her when he was 24 and she was just 14. During their marriage, Elvis was known to control what Priscilla wore, and sexually assaulted her. Even before Priscilla, Elvis was known to bring 14-year-olds with him on tour and sleep with minors at different stops of his tour, and was brash about it too.

As disgusting as this is, it didn’t turn many heads in the ‘60s. “A Little Less Conversation” was seen as romantic for the times, and apparently even so in 2009, when it was featured on the first-ever Just Dance game. A quick look at the song’s Youtube comments proves people are still willing to overlook and make excuses for Presley’s known pedophilic behaviour to protect their nostalgia for his music — which glorifies his actions. 

He’s not the only one being protected by nostalgia. The Beatles threaten to kill a girl in “Run For Your Life.” The Rolling Stones sing about controlling their girlfriends. Rock band Kiss’ song, “Christine Sixteen” is about lusting over a 16-year-old schoolgirl, and continuing to do so, while admitting that it’s wrong, as if that makes it any better. The song “My Sharona” by The Knack talks about how younger girls are sexually arousing and although it’s “dirty,” the band’s “never going to stop.” Distracted by a good tune, people rarely listen to the lyrics and ignore the sinister intentions laid out right in front of them. These songs are still commonly played on alternative radio stations, and “My Sharona” is a hockey game staple, fitting for the numerous allegations and sexual assault court cases against professional hockey players.

Songs are more often than not written from personal experience. With how negatively women are portrayed in alternative music, it’s not surprising that countless alternative bands have grooming and sexual assault allegations against them. Despite this, many of these abusers end up remaining in the band. These allegations include large names in the genre, such as Pierce the Veil and Of Mice and Men

Years later, nothing has changed. So, no, you can’t justify a song by referring to it being socially acceptable for that time. It’s still gross. Morals don’t work like that! Bands may not be as upfront in their lyrics about being misogynistic predators, but you don’t have to listen very closely to pick up on it. However, so many of these songs receive mainstream recognition and aren’t called out for being criminal. 

Blink 182’s song “Dumpweed” from their most popular album, Enema of the State, talks about the band wishing they could train women to take commands like a dog. When touring to promote that album, the band would shout expletives to women, asking them to show their chests

More recently, in 2022, Jacob Hoggard, the former lead singer of Canadian rock band Hedley, was sentenced to five years in jail for sexually assaulting a woman in Ottawa in 2016. That same year, Hoggard was engaging in a sexual relationship with a 15-year-old online, arranging for her and her friends to see a Hedley show in Toronto, where he subsequently groped her. This isn’t isolated. Multiple bands and popular singers in the alternative music scene are fraught with sexual assault allegations. Evidently, there’s a sexism problem — women in the industry themselves have spoken up about facing harassment, too. 

The solution to this problem is pretty simple: bands need to stop grooming and manipulating fans. Better yet, just respect women and girls. Less than 10% of inductees into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame have been women. It’s nearly impossible to find a mainstream rock band consisting of all women. Most women-led bands, including Paramore, No Doubt, the Yeah Yeah Yeahs, and Tonight Alive, only have one member that’s a woman. 

With few women-fronted rock bands compared to men-fronted bands, fans, many of whom are teenagers, are looking up to the same individuals who are using their trust and position of power to take advantage of them. These aren’t good people, and however much you like their music doesn’t excuse that fact. All it actually does is keep survivors from speaking out.

There’s no need for misogyny in music — ever. Rock music doesn’t get a pass just because its music is vocal about being anti-establishment and pushing boundaries. Members of Nirvana, the band who “saved rock music from itself,” were outspoken feminists and 2SLGBTQIA+ allies. In 1992, they performed at an Oregon benefit concert, which was protesting a motion that would allow schools to teach children that being gay and being a pedophile were one and the same. The bill was called Measure 9, and was thankfully never formally adopted. 

Nirvana said they wanted to perform at the benefit concert to “end bigotry and narrow-mindedness everywhere.” True to their word, earlier in the year, the band refused to tour with Guns N’ Roses due to some of the band’s racist and homophobic lyrics. When a fan jumped on stage to ask Nirvana to change their minds during the Measure 9 protest, lead singer Kurt Cobain told them that Axl Rose “is a fucking sexist, racist, and a homophobe, and you can’t be on his side and on our side.” He also spoke about teaching men to respect women amid the oppression they face. While the band faced controversy on some of their own songs, Cobain always maintained his intentions were to empower women. While intentions and execution are not one and the same, you would think those influenced by him would also listen to his sociopolitical commentary, for someone so influential in the genre. 

Rock songs are perfectly capable of not shaming and objectifying women. “Rock ‘n Roll” culture needs to take a stand against violence towards women. Historically, the genre has been not only problematic, but malicious — it needs to change. 

A FIRE Story About My Day at SFU Burnaby

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Bathroom stalls. You can see someone's shoes. Alarm is going off. Text bubble of person in stall swearing.
ILLUSTRATION: Andrea Choi / The Peak

By: Izzy Cheung, Staff Writer

Disclaimer: This is a true story. I wish I could say it isn’t. 

Everyone’s heard about the fire that rocked the world (or just the Burnaby campus) on Wednesday, June 28. You might have been studying in the library when the alarms went off. Maybe you were with friends in the SUB. Maybe you weren’t even on campus, and instead heard about it from classmates or coworkers. Well, I, my friends, was there — only floors away from the scene of the crime, tied up in an awfully unfortunate situation. 

I don’t go up to SFU Burnaby that often, usually because my classes are at Harbour Centre. Especially since it’s summer now, my excursions to Burnaby Mountain are few and far between. On this fateful and unfortunate day, I went up to check out a couple of exhibits on display at the library, which I wrote about last week. That went fine — heading up to the library’s seventh floor was daunting, but whatever. That was okay. 

I went to see the exhibits, took some photos,  then headed into the SUB to get some work done (by work I mean leaving my laptop screen open while scrolling through TikTok). One of my friends works at a place in UniverCity, so I made plans to have a corporate girl lunch with them (AKA sitting at the same table and not talking to each other while checking our emails and crying). I was going to grab tacos from Guadalupe, head up to their workplace, then eat lunch with them outside. It was supposed to be a fun little day up on Burnaby Mountain. 

Around 12:40 p.m., I decided to pack up and start heading out. I planned to stop by the bathroom, grab my tacos, then walk to UniverCity. Foolish, naïve, innocent me — I went down to the main floor of the SUB, headed into the bathroom, and picked out my stall. 

I was sitting on the porcelain throne when the goose-like apocalypse horn went off like a seagull at the beach. Now, I feel like most fire alarms have a distinct sound  — the shrill, bell-like warning similar to that of a high school lunch bell. Well, this one didn’t have that. I’m not sure if anyone else has heard the SUB fire alarm before, but prior to that moment, I hadn’t. 

You can imagine how that went. 

Luckily, after briefly reflecting on the life decisions I made to get me to this point, stuffing my phone into the back pocket of my shorts, and very quickly washing my hands (sure, I might’ve caught on fire, but I wouldn’t have been doing it with dirty hands), I left the bathroom. Thankfully, people were exiting one of the nearby offices, so I followed them out of the building. There was a very kind stranger who held the door open for everyone. Of course, I was too far away for either of our comfort — but she held it open anyways, pressuring me into doing the awkward little half-jog, half-speedwalk to get to the door in an amount of time that didn’t make it look awkward. 

Taco-less and cursing my luck, I made my way toward UniverCity to meet up with my friend. Walking up the steps to the reflecting pond, I saw a small cloud of smoke billowing up from beneath the library. Yes, it was another car fire. Yes, it’s happened before. No, it has never happened while I was in the bathroom — not until now. 

And people wonder why I don’t come to the Burnaby campus that often . . .

The Art of Dimension reveals Indigenous knowledge through Haida metalwork

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A photo of a corridor on the mezzanine of the Bill Reid Gallery featuring glass cases, Haida-style wood carvings depicting abstract faces and creatures on the wall, and a totem pole emerging from the first floor.
PHOTO: Amirul Anirban / The Peak

By: Kelly Chia, Editor-in-Chief

One of the featured artists in the newly opened The Art of Dimension exhibit, Skii Xaaw Jesse Brillon, writes that repoussé is a method of art where you hammer out metal from the inside. You can see that in the elements around each curve in Jesse’s hammerwork: the details of each facial wrinkle convey stories and folklore. Jesse’s art is displayed alongside his niece’s, Haaylingtso Marlo Wylie Brillon, who debuts her art in this exhibit in the Bill Reid Gallery of Northwest Coast Art. Marlo has been working in textiles since a young age, but credits learning how to create original Haida art to her uncle. Marlo’s sculptural works, rendered and sculpted in cedar, reflect her close relationship to Jesse as her artistic mentor. The selected carvings in this exhibit call to their experiences and stories.

As I walked into this exhibit, I was drawn to the intense expression on a silver bracelet Jesse had named, “‘WaasGo & The Three Fishermen Bracelet.” Jesse describes ‘WaasGo as a supernatural figure. It’s part-wolf, part-whale — and you can see these features carved in the large wolfy ears and lips adorning the front of the bracelet. ‘WaasGo is known to “sometimes capsize canoes.” Jesse wrote on the bracelet’s plaque that he and the Martynuik brothers were shipwrecked on Banks Island in 2012. The trio were forced to subsist themselves on clams and seaweed for eight days awaiting rescue. He carves and represents the small group above ‘WaasGo’s ears, caught in roaring waves. Stories like this persist through Jesse’s other featured works in the exhibit, expertly carved with stunning abalone inlay, which shines iridescently against silver and gold. 

A sculpture of an abstract creature, its face carved in metal, whiskers sticking out from its head, and a white fur coat covering its head and falling back. It’s in a metal case and placed in front of a turquoise-blue fabric hanging on the wall with a Haida-style abstract painting.
PHOTO: Amirul Anirban / The Peak

These stories persist, too, in the cedar works Marlo had carved. A particularly evocative piece, called “Kalga Jaad and Xuuya,” features a woman with a serene, maternal expression, breastfeeding a raven. She was beautiful: I couldn’t help staring at the grooves in the aged red cedar, the calm look in Kalga Jaad’s eyes as she looked on benevolently. Marlo wrote that she had based this piece on the “story of Kalga Jaad soothing the fussy Raven by breastfeeding them to keep them quiet and calm.

“The story resonated with me for two reasons, one is that my mother and great-grandmother’s name is Kalga Jaad. While this name has been passed down over generations through our matrilineal line, I also feel the story of Kalga Jaad conveys beautiful imagery and captures a moment that highlights the role of women in motherhood,” she wrote. Marlo dedicates this piece to her uncle, Jesse, her partner, Karver Everson, and her step-father, Andy Everson, thanking and acknowledging the matrilineal Laana Tsaadas clan for guiding her continual work in upholding their culture. 

On a larger scale, this piece, through retelling Kalga Jaad and the Raven’s story, exemplifies Indigenous connection through storytelling in art. Bill Reid, the Haida artist that the gallery is named after, is a member of the Raven clan. He was often compared to the Raven, who he’d describe as a “mischievous trickster, [playing] an important part in transforming the world,” and would receive the Haida name, Yaahl Sgwansung, in 1986: “The Only Raven.” The Raven’s mischievous expression in Marlo’s piece made me think of Reid, whose artistic influence is evident in the works displayed in the gallery.

The Art of Dimension showcases Indigenous storytelling by Jesse and Marlo’s impressive carving work and art, as well as their appreciation and connection to one another. It is open to the public from July 4–October 15, and the gallery is free to Indigenous peoples, and SFU students and if they provide ID. Tickets are otherwise $13 for adults.

Anti-queer rhetoric is not an opinion, it’s violence

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A group of people wearing masks and protesting, holding up a sign that says protect trans youth and pride flags.
PHOTO: Nikolas Gannon / Unsplash

By: C Icart, Humour Editor

Content warning: mentions of gender-based violence and queerphobia.

Whenever I see anyone ranting about “gender ideology,” “wokeism,” or using miscellaneous words in parentheses to mock pronouns, all I hear is, “I hate you. I hate you. I hate you.” The first two phrases are right-wing buzzwords that are used to silence or invalidate marginalized communities, whereas the last sentiment actively mocks queer folks and contributes to the harassment they continue to face. 

When it’s online, I can swipe to another page or hit block, but I know the hostility still exists when I can’t see it. When it’s at work, in the street, or in class, I change the topic, de-escalate, or walk away, knowing what could happen if I get into it with the wrong person at the wrong time. Sometimes, I worry I’m overly cautious — paranoid, even. Then, I see another news story, another anti-Pride protest, or another hate crime. We need to pay attention to this. 

Warnings about the rise in anti-2SLGBTQIA+ violence are not exaggerated. “In Canada, there was a 64% increase in hate-motivated violence targeting 2SLGBTQ+ people between 2020 and 2021,” according to Xtra Magazine. For me, Pride Month ended with so much devastating news. First, I read about a hate-motivated attack in my city, Ottawa. Then, one at the University of Waterloo. What happened at Waterloo was a gender-based hate crime. The hateful and misogynistic attack on a professor and two students in a gender studies course happened on the 54th anniversary of the Stonewall Uprising — a horrific reminder of why Pride continues to be a protest today. My heart goes out to all the victims and survivors and their families. 

Later, I learned the US Supreme Court (SCOTUS) ruleduniversities cannot explicitly consider race in granting admission. This effectively ends diversity-based considerations in workplaces and universities, also known as affirmative action. While this is not explicitly connected to 2SLGBTQIA+ rights, it speaks to how conservative the SCOTUS has become and will affect diversity on US university campuses. Additionally, they ruled a Christian web designer’s First Amendment rights allowed her to refuse to design websites for same-sex couples. This decision will prevent US governments from enforcing anti-discrimination laws in a number of contexts. The acts of violence are not isolated incidents and the rulings are not only an American issue. This is a direct result of widespread anti-trans and anti-queer rhetoric. Time for action in so-called Canada is long overdue and we’re not immune to right-wing ideology.

As I see more and more people feeling emboldened to say hateful things and spread harmful lies about the 2SLGBTQIA+ community as a whole — and more specifically, trans and gender-nonconforming individuals — I am terrified of what is to come. Community organizers have been talking about this for years. We don’t need empty statements after horrific things have already happened. We need action from our politicians and leaders today to prevent further violence and hold perpetrators accountable. 

This alarming rise in violence needs to be addressed now, and that is precisely what the #Act4QueerSafety campaign is looking to do. The campaign calls for “decisive action” from the federal government to combat the rise in anti-2SLGBTQIA+ hate. It includes six specific demands, including calling on the Government of Canada to provide funding to address “misinformation targeting queer and trans communities” and appoint a representative tasked with “addressing and preventing anti-2SLGBTQIA+ hate.” #Act4QueerSafety is an initiative from Momentum, an advocacy group for 2SLGBTQIA+ people. Their president, Fae Johnstone, was the target of online harassment after being featured on limited-edition Hershey’s bars for International Women’s Day. 

Even though I acknowledge statements are insufficient to ensure the safety of 2SLGBTQIA+ communities, Pierre Poilievre’s silence on the issue is particularly loud. As leader of the Official Opposition, he is running to be Prime Minister of Canada. Considering his emphasis on “freedom,” I ask, is it freedom to be afraid to leave your home, go to school, or wear what you want? Is it freedom to require parental consent for someone to be addressed the way they would like? If it is, that’s not the freedom I want — minors are individuals too and deserve respect. This is why we need to be wary of messaging that insinuates the “freedom” to have “opinions” about others lives and identities is just as important as the safety and lives of marginalized people. The well-being of 2SLGBTQIA+ individuals should always be a priority. 

Despite the intimidation tactics and violence, 2SLGBTQIA+ organizers and activists are not backing down. We are here; we will always be here. Education about 2SLGBTQIA+ communities and issues is crucial in schools, including post-secondary, to foster inclusive environments for 2SLGBTQIA+ individuals and teach people of all ages about acceptance. At SFU, Out On Campus offers multiple services for 2SLGBTQIA+ people and their allies and is definitely worth checking out if you would like to learn more about this topic. Please shut down misinformation and anti-2SLGBTQIA+ rhetoric when you see it happening around you if you feel safe enough to do so. Pouring water on the flames of hate instead of fanning them saves lives. Regardless of how many online trolls say caring about the safety and well-being of queer and trans folks makes you a “snowflake,” queer and trans lives matter.

Will U-Pass Your Summer Course?

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A photo of someone looking prim in an office chair with a thick book in their hands.
PHOTO: Pexels

By: Hana Hoffman, Peak Associate and C Icart, Humour Editor

Dear Peakie, 

I was at the movies watching The Little Mermaid because, duh, and the fire alarm went off, and we had to evacuate! So obviously, I complain to the manager about making us wait outside for no reason. There’s no way there was a fire; we were all under the sea! Sure, I got a refund, but I’m also considering legal action. What do you think? 

Swimmingly, 
Siren Song Enthusiast 

Dear Siren Song Enthusiast,

I feel sorry for you and all the attendees who sacrificed their time and money to watch The Little Mermaid. But serious events do happen behind the scenes sometimes. From my experience, my landlord’s cat often pulls the fire alarm when hungry. He needs that food to survive! I’ve also seen a student at my old school pull the alarm because the nearest water fountain was out of service. She needed to hydrate herself with the fire showers ASAP to prevent dehydration. So at the end of the day, someone probably needed that fire alarm during your movie. Let’s be grateful that these alarms exist and cherish their ability to call for help even if there’s no fire, because you never know when you might need it.

From the bottom of my flaming heart,
Peakie

Dear Peakie, 

The sun’s out, and so are all the white people who say, “I’m almost as dark as you now!” after precisely one hour of tanning. I’ve been training all winter, so I’m in peak shape to run away from them, but do you have any other advice?

Sincerely, 
Sunburn Red is NOT the new Black

Dear Sunburn Red is NOT the new Black,

I first want to acknowledge your effort in training to become a better runner. Keep it up! That’s something I need to do myself, and it’s not easy. Well, I think the best way to make those slightly tanned/sunburned people realize they’re wrong is to hand them a mirror the next time they say that. Then they can look at themselves and see that they’re only a teeny tiny bit darker or redder than they were originally. No matter how hard they try, their tanning methods will never make them the new Black!

Don’t sweat it,
Peakie

Dear Peakie, 

I enrolled in classes this summer to get a U-Pass (#LifeHack), and now my professor actually expects me to submit assignments. Bro, can’t you just be a G and pass me? I don’t have time to write essays and discussion posts while zooming through zones one, two, and three in a multi-million dollar skytrain car. How do I tell this man to chill? 

Sincerely, 
Millennium Line Voyager

Dear Millennium Line Voyager,

My fellow skytrainer, I feel you. Professors don’t understand the significance of owning a U-Pass because they drive their little slow cars on the ground and think that’s the fastest method of transportation. Like . . . have they ever looked up at the sky? Look at this fun, futuristic, intersection-less air travel! Giving your professor his first compass card will change his life. As a result, he will be so amazed and distracted by Translink’s sky limos that he’ll procrastinate on marking assignments and tests. In the end, he’ll just give everyone an automatic pass so that he can spend more time riding the Millenium line like a millionaire.

Warm regards while singing the chorus of #thatPOWER by Justin Bieber and will.i.am,
Peakie

Shoebox is an ode to queerness and cultural identity

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An album cover featuring a clay-molded forest in a yellow box, and a wide, hollow tree stump in the middle, inside which Kimmortal sits holding their legs and looking out playfully. They’re wearing royal blue overalls and have black hair with straight-cut bangs.
PHOTO: Courtesy of Kimmortal

By: Olivia Visser, Copy Editor

Content warning: mention of intergenerational trauma.

It’s been a while since I’ve listened to an album in one sitting, but Kimmortal’s new release, Shoebox, had me doing so with ease. Kimmortal is an established and well-loved “queer non-binary Filipinx rapper” based in so-called Vancouver, BC. They’ve received widespread acclaim for their creative soundscapes, visual art, and music. Released on July 7, Shoebox brings together an innovative blend of rap, hip-hop, pop, and electronica in a feel-good yet emotive collection of songs. Themes of diaspora, settler-colonialism, and queerness permeate their lyrics and make for a meaningful listening experience. According to their website bio, “Kimmortal strives to build worlds that make queer and diasporic weird kids feel like they belong.” This album does just that. 

I was mesmerized by the powerful bassy backtracks that accompany most songs on the album, but even more drawn towards Kimmortal’s intricate lyrics. For example, “Run” focuses on intergenerational trauma, with the opening lyrics being: “My mom buried her mom’s shit / Who buried her mom’s shit / Who buried her mom’s shit / Who buried her mom’s shit / Deep in the soil of another country / So why talk about it?” I was particularly struck by the raw passion in Kimmortal’s voice, which pairs well with the atmospheric instrumental.

Kimmortal is particularly talented at speaking to challenging feelings, but they also weave in tracks that radiate pure joy. In their press release, Kimmortal describes Shoebox as “a nostalgic collection of memories, reflections on lessons learned, and queer joy.” They draw from childlike influences like the documentary, “How We Got To Sesame Street,” and write that “the album is dedicated to [their] inner child.” Appropriately, “Tabi Tabi Po” is a short yet breezy track with nostalgic allusions to Kimmortal’s Filipinx roots. Tabi tabi po means “excuse me” or “may I pass” in Tagalog, and is generally addressed to spirits as a means of avoiding bad luck. The song’s muted yet bubbly guitar backing made me feel warm inside. 

Likewise, “I like what I like” is an upbeat queer anthem that’ll stick in your head for days. Melodic ukulele meets a bouncy bassline and celebratory lyrics like, “I love being queer, Brown, and non-binary.” Kimmortal also directly references their eccentric album cover in this song, saying, “I use clay to make a weird tree forest / And then I photoshop myself into it.” The following track, “Don’t Be Afraid,” boasts a deep raunchy riff that’ll make you dance wherever you are. “Fill up that white space with colour,” echoes throughout the song as a reclamation of Black and Brown visibility in white colonized spaces. 

One of my favourite tracks off the album, “K I’m Mortal,” is bound to be a hit. Its catchy pulsating beat accompanies lyrics about colonialism, neurodivergence, and queerness. It was refreshing to hear words like, “ADHD what the doctor wrote / I found it buried inside my notes / Too many femmes not diagnosed / Cleaning up after bros.” 

I wish I had the space to expand on each song, because they’re all so individually captivating. For those interested, Kimmortal is hosting a Shoebox listening party on July 24 at The Cobalt. Tickets are $20 on Eventbrite. Don’t miss out!

Check out Kimmortal on their website, https://kimmortalportal.com, and Instagram @kimmortaltheartist.