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Geeks has assembled the top list of all things comic, entertainment, superheroes, and popular culture.
Where Is The Cast Of 'Orange Is The New Black' Now?
While Netflix was still in the early days of blockbuster shows, the streaming service hit the jackpot when it launched the prison-dramedy series, Orange is the New Black, in 2013. The show followed a white collar criminal, Piper Chapman, as she faced consequences for a past mistake, and was based off the memoir of the same name by Piper Kerman. In fact, OITNB was just the second Netflix original series after House of Cards.
By Jenika Enoch11 days ago in Geeks
My Top 50 Favorite Sci-Fi/Thriller Movies of All Time
***Author's Note*** I realize there are several repeats from past lists included on this one. Sci-fi is my favorite genre, so when I started creating a list of my top 10 favorites, I realized I had to make the list much longer to be able to fit and talk about all the amazing sci-fi films I love.
By Madison "Maddy" Newton14 days ago in Geeks
The Best SpongeBob SquarePants Episodes!
#1 - "Band Geeks" (Season 2, Episode 15) I love that stadiums and sports/concert arenas have begun attempting to recreate the SpongeBob anthem that rallied a generation. The Bubble Bowl is the SpongeBob equivalent of the Super Bowl, and honestly, Bikini Bottomites put on a better halftime show than the NFL. By a long shot.
By Madison "Maddy" Newton15 days ago in Geeks
Stephen King’s Multiverse
Stephen King’s interconnected universe isn’t just a fun bonus—it’s a structural masterpiece. His novels, novellas, and adaptations form a lattice of recurring characters, cursed towns, cosmic beings, and sly winks that reward readers who pay attention. Let’s go deeper into the most fascinating, specific Easter eggs and the narrative logic behind them.
By Kristen Barenthaler15 days ago in Geeks
Top Mobile App Development Companies in Philadelphia (2026 Guide). AI-Generated.
Finding a reliable mobile app development company in Philadelphia has never been more important — or more competitive. In 2026, the city's tech ecosystem has matured into something genuinely impressive. Startups, healthcare networks, fintech firms, and logistics companies are all racing to build custom digital products. The demand is real, and the talent to meet it is right here.
By Sherry Walker15 days ago in Geeks
Bruised Autonomy: A Review of Kathleen Edwards' album FAILER (2002)
Failer, the 2002 debut by Kathleen Edwards, is a record about the psychology of romantic self-sabotage set against highways, motels, parking lots, and barstools. It belongs to the same moral weather system as Raymond Carver and Alice Munro: ordinary people making small decisions that quietly alter the trajectory of their lives. No one here delivers a Nietzschean manifesto. No one collapses in Dostoyevskian hysteria. They just fail--intimately, repeatedly, lucidly.
By ANTICHRIST SUPERSTAR20 days ago in Geeks
5 Underappreciated Cartoons IV
Well, well, I finally found more. It's been three years since my last Underappreciated Cartoons list. That's three years of searching for stuff to put into a fourth entry. It took a while, but I think I finally found a couple of good ones.
By Greg Seebregts24 days ago in Geeks
Your Utah Healthcare App Is a Lawsuit Waiting to Happen. Here’s Why.. AI-Generated.
I was sitting in a coffee shop in Lehi last month—one of those places where the caffeine is strong and the ambition is stronger—and I overheard a founder telling his buddy that they’d "figure out the HIPAA stuff" after they launched their MVP. I nearly choked on my cold brew. Y'all, in the world of Utah healthcare startups, that’s like saying you’ll figure out the parachute situation after you’ve already jumped out of the plane.
By Samantha Blake25 days ago in Geeks
Why Every Good Meal in Cincinnati Now Starts on Your Phone (2026)
I was standing outside a brewery at The Banks last Friday, freezing my tail off while trying to scan a QR code that just wouldn't load. Ope, there I was, staring at a spinning circle while my friends were already inside ordering a round. It’s 2026, y’all, and I reckon we should be past the "broken link" era of dining out.
By Sherry Walker25 days ago in Geeks
Regina Spektor's FAR (album review)
Regina Spektor's 2009 album Far,* her fifth studio effort, arrives like a whimsical comet streaking through the indie-pop cosmos--bright, unpredictable, and leaving trails of introspection in its wake. Produced with the polished touch of multiple heavyweights like Jeff Lynne and Mike Elizondo, Far refines Spektor's signature blend of piano-driven quirkiness, vocal acrobatics, and lyrical depth without sanding off her eccentric edges. It's an album that feels both intimate and expansive, as if Spektor is whispering secrets from a crowded room while gazing at distant stars. Clocking in at just over 45 minutes, it explores the absurdities of existence through a lens that's equal parts playful and profound, inviting listeners to laugh, cry, and ponder the human condition. But beneath the melodic charm lies a rich vein for analysis: from psychological unravelings to sociopolitical undercurrents, Far begs to be dissected like a dream journal scribbled in the margins of a philosophy text.
By ANTICHRIST SUPERSTAR30 days ago in Geeks









