Niche Numbers: #5
Jamie Tahsin and Jake Kennedy bring you some more of their favourite songs with < 50,000 views on YouTube. Episode Five.
A conversation with: Cuntry Living Zine
The ISIS Broadcasting meet Cuntry Living, a feminist zine and collective based in Oxford. We chat feminism, idols, girl power, the greatness of social media and what it means to identify as a girl today. Production: Alex Hines, Tobi Thomas and Max Reynolds.
The ISIS Presents: Glue
Isis Presents is a new weekly podcast showcasing Oxford DJs. This week our mix comes from Glue’s Mr Wong, part of the team running their not-for-profit underground electro and techno nights. It isn’t what you might expect: not built with the dance floor in mind at all but rather, for lonely
5 centuries of Tim joss workout routine
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On This Day: Paul Simon
Anybody who, like me, spent at least one fifth of their childhood dinner-times in the welcome company of Simon & Garfunkel’s Bridge Over Troubled Water cannot have helped forming an opinion on the relative artistic merits of Art Garfunkel. For better or worse, it seems to me that Garfun
A Kiss for Syria: Tammam Azzam
In early 2011, Damascus was witnessing the rise of a revolution. The world was beginning to notice a rebirth occurring in the Syrian capital and from all corners of the globe, it was being watched with a wary eye. Art had seized the city and the force of this renaissance was reverberating far beyond
Widening the Lens
It’s seventeen degrees and there isn’t a cloud in the sky, which is exactly the kind of weather that Hong Kong is most agreeable in. The sweltering humidity of summer has passed, and this year’s predicted ‘polar vortex’ hasn’t yet set in. I’m making my way down Hollywood
Navy bandsman Graham Jackson (1945)
There is, of course, no such thing as a ‘Perfect Photograph’, nor is there any way of truly judging such a subjective medium. And yet, if there was ever a portrait which uses the ostensible ‘Golden Ratio’ so perfectly, it’s Ed Clark’s melancholy snapshot of Navy bandsman Graham Ja

