pop culture
Modern popular culture topics in the geek sphere.
Who Owns Oak Island in 2026? The Private Entities Behind the Mystery
Oak Island remains one of the most enigmatic and heavily scrutinized plots of land in North America. Famous for its legendary "Money Pit" and the long-running History Channel series The Curse of Oak Island, this 140-acre island off the coast of Nova Scotia has fascinated treasure hunters for over two centuries. But behind the television cameras, ancient legends, and excavation equipment lies a very real question that continues to stir curiosity: who actually owns Oak Island in 2026?
By Rukka Novaabout a month ago in Geeks
Quannapowitt Players' "The Seagull": A Riveting and Driven Performance
“In all the universe, nothing remains permanent and unchanged but the spirit.” - Anton Chekhov, “The Seagull.” As its first show in 2026, Quannapowitt Players presents “The Seagull,” a tragicomedy by Anton Chekhov. The play follows a group of artists at a country estate, where creative ambitions and unrequited love affairs collide. A question strikes them - what is the pursuit of happiness?
By Marielle Sabbagabout a month ago in Geeks
Sentimental Value
Sentimental Value has shown up well during awards season, and it has a stellar cast. It has been one of my most anticipated watches this year and now that the Oscars are breathing down my neck I have finally made time to actually see it. After meeting the main cast members I got even more excited to see it.
By Alexandrea Callaghanabout a month ago in Geeks
The Life of Chuck
Life of Chuck really assembled an interesting and wonderful team of creatives, to the point where I really don’t care what the movie is actually about. Mike Flanagan, Tom Hiddleston, Stephen King, Matthew Lillard, Karen Gillis, seriously this list is incredible. We even have Offerman doing a voiceover. So just based off of the list of people involved I knew I wanted to see this movie.
By Alexandrea Callaghanabout a month ago in Geeks
Thoughts on Stranger Things 5
Recalling cultural zeitgeists like HBO's Game of Thrones or the BBC's Sherlock, especially their lacklustre final seasons, gave legitimate reason for audiences to apprehend the quality of Netflix's final run of the hit series Stranger Things, released in three volumes over the last two months of 2025. The sense of finality has been undeniably palpable, given the show's success and decade-long run. Fans wanted to experience a proper conclusion to a story many around the world have grown up with. And like Benioff and Weiss, or Moffat and Gatiss, Stranger Things' creators - the Duffers - have irrevocably and indisputably proven themselves to be... well... just another pair of hack writers.
By Andrei Babaninabout a month ago in Geeks
Stranger Things Season 5 Review
**There may be spoilers ahead! After waiting for so long, we got what we were all waiting for season 5 of Stranger Things. Theories were made, declarations of who will die were cast, and the hope of Hawkins laid out. Given to the people in three sections, we had to wait even longer still to find out what would happen to our D&D kids.
By Rich Burtonabout a month ago in Geeks
5 Pieces Of 'X-Men' Content Worth Revisiting Before 'Avengers: Doomsday
It's an exciting time to be a fan of the Fox X-Men films. While 2024's Deadpool and Wolverine initially seemed to act as a love letter/goodbye to the Fox-verse, fans were delighted earlier in 2025 with the reveal that some of the Fox-verse X-Men were set to appear in Avengers: Doomsday. Doomsday's third teaser focuses on a few of these returning characters, including Patrick Stewart as Professor X, Ian McKellen as Magneto, and James Marsden as Cyclops.
By Kristy Andersonabout a month ago in Geeks
Jay Kelly - A Netflix Movie Review
Are you running to something or from something? Jay Kelly is a 2025 film about a famous movie actor who is beginning to have doubts about his career. While on the train to his next job, Jay reflects on his life, confronting his past and present.
By Marielle Sabbagabout a month ago in Geeks
What if the Inhumans Were Never Missing?
The Marvel Cinematic Universe has never suffered from a lack of ideas. What it has suffered from, increasingly, is congestion—too many concepts competing for narrative oxygen, too many histories forced to coexist without the space to breathe. Few properties exemplify this problem more clearly than the Inhumans, a civilization introduced with enormous mythological potential and then effectively abandoned, left dangling somewhere between canon and apology.
By Jenna Deedyabout a month ago in Geeks










