Archive
Why is Town So Shit? An Investigation
Posted 4:56pm Sunday 20th September 2020 by Elliot Weir
It's no secret that Dunedin has flat parties good enough to make boomers get mad on the news. But when it comes to going into town, we’re a bit shit compared to anywhere else. With only a couple of clubs, long lines, minimal food options, and a student body that can't actually afford Read more...
The Mothras: a Review of OUSA’s Long Lost Film Festival
Posted 4:47pm Sunday 20th September 2020 by Annabelle Vaughan
Back in the good old days, OUSA held an annual student film festival called the Mothras. It was created by student Stephen Hall-Jones in ‘91 and lasted a whole two decades before being ruthlessly taken from us for being too expensive and timely to produce. R.I.P. Originally sponsored by Read more...
How to Pretend you know E-Sports
Posted 9:42pm Thursday 17th September 2020 by Anon
As American Baseball All-Star Sean Doolittle said, “sports are like the reward of a functioning society”. We recognise the trials of athletes as an achievement for life being normal. Unfortunately, life is not normal right now. Now that traditional sports are no longer as massive as they Read more...
Learning Te Reo Māori as a Māori Student
Posted 10:48pm Thursday 10th September 2020 by Kaiya Cherrington
Te reo Māori is an official language of Aotearoa, but has only been recognised as such since 1987. For Māori, their language has always been the ‘official’ one. For Māori in the early 1900s, most notably before the World Wars, te reo was their first language. However Read more...
Post-Colonial Faith
Posted 10:36pm Thursday 10th September 2020 by Naomii Seah
“Māori theology is spiritual, but it’s also political.” Māori religion and theology has a long and complex history in Aotearoa New Zealand. Importantly, conversion of Māori to Christianity during the 1830s benefitted increasing Crown interest in land speculation: Read more...
Minorities in Medicine: Why Otago University’s proposed cap on medicine will break, not make, the future of our health workforce
Posted 10:34pm Thursday 10th September 2020 by Annabelle Vaughan
About two months ago, Critic published a story titled ‘A Seat at Our Table’ which shared the experiences of Māori students here at Otago University and the stigma surrounding alternative entry pathways. While the article and interviewees were met with plenty of support, there was no Read more...
The Faces Behind the Feed: The Stories Behind Dunedin’s Most Iconic Cafes
Posted 10:13pm Thursday 3rd September 2020 by Annabelle Vaughan
Dunedin loves its legendary cafes. They are meeting places, study spaces, a place for a catch up with friends, a gig, or a date. Our social lives, as well as our energy meters, revolve around these spaces. But there’s a high chance that we don’t know the stories behind these places, or Read more...
The Politics of Shared Flat Cooking
Posted 10:12pm Thursday 3rd September 2020 by Caroline Moratti
Shared flat cooking can sound like the best idea in the world. You get to save time, money and kitchen space, all whilst bonding with your flatties over a kitchen table and a square meal. What could be more charming? The reality though, can be far from the Brady Bunch lovefest you might be Read more...
What’s for Dinner?
Posted 9:57pm Thursday 3rd September 2020 by Fox Meyer
“Cooking is about controlling fire and water.” With two elements safely under his belt, our professional chef-for-a-day is halfway to becoming the Avatar. Critic extorted him for a free meal. I asked Tony Heptinstall (Senior Lecturer at the Polytech’s Food Design Institute) to Read more...
How to Make Your First Date Less Boring
Posted 9:18pm Thursday 27th August 2020 by Naomii Seah
Dating in Dunedin is hard. It’s even harder when the three options available for a date location are: a generic George St cafe, a bar, or their house at 3am. Without some real imagination, Dunedin is relentlessly boring - where else are you going to go? St Clair? The museum? While all decent Read more...


