Yildiz Subuk

A hazy photo of a road surrounded by wilderness and mountain leading around a curve and a sign that says “welcome to twin peaks.”
3 min 0 1982

Twin Peaks blurs the lines between reality and the unconscious mind

Peak Web March 30, 2024

By: Yildiz Subuk, SFU Student Content warning: mention of death. Shows like The Sopranos and The Simpsons are frequently mentioned as the most groundbreaking shows of all time, and while there is merit to those claims, there is one show that often gets overlooked in discussions around shows that redefined television: Twin Peaks, which first aired its pilot episode on April 8, 1990. At the time, David Lynch was one of the most fascinating art house film directors, well known for writing and directing surrealist films such as Eraserhead. Surrealism is an artistic approach to cinema that reveals aspects of…

Continue reading Read more
An illustration of J Dila
3 min 0 1650

The everlasting effect of brilliant sampling: J Dilla’s Donuts

Peak Web February 19, 2024

By: Yildiz Subuk, SFU Student Sampling in hip-hop had been around since the early days of the genre, but producer J Dilla took it a step further and composed an album entirely through the use of sampling. Donuts, released on…

Continue reading Read more
The Wire TV series cover featuring a man in a car with the window pulled down looking out the window with a scowl on his face. In the window reflection, a man is scowling back at him.
4 min 0 1294

In Case You Missed It: The Wire shows how the American Dream fails

Peak Web January 30, 2024

By: Yildiz Subuk, SFU Student Content warning: mentions of death, drug use, and violence. It is not often that a piece of television frames an important social issue from its first few lines of dialogue. The Wire is an HBO…

Continue reading Read more