Face it, you’re tired of using Zoom to chat with your friends because it reminds you of your 8:40 seminar and all those times you’ve been in an awkward breakout room. It’s time to switch it up a little. Here are some alternative platforms that you should try out instead!
“Oh, to be as carefree as a newborn infant,” is a thought Bwogger Sydney Contreras has at least 5 times a day. But besides 10-15 years and enormous amounts of stress, is there actually a difference between you and your five-year-old self??
Yes. I know most of us wish we were back on campus. We would even put up with the Hartley bathrooms if it meant coming back. But, let’s feel better about our situation by naming some of the god-awful things we don’t miss about campus.
New York City is packed with amazing culture and inspiring art and now with so much of it online for free, there’s never been a better time to experience it first-hand. “Where Art Thou” is a weekly guide to interesting and notable lectures, events, and performances for the literary/musically/theatrically-inclined.
Making a new constitution would take a lot of planning especially during COVID-19, but some things are worth the effort.
You’re on the cottagecore side of Tiktok, but isn’t it kind of weird how they know that’s your vibe?
President Beilock has announced the creation of a new health and wellness center for the Barnard community, the Francine A. LeFrak Foundation Center for Well-Being, in an email shared this afternoon.
Against all odds, Bacchanal 2021 will be the best Columbia has had in years, thanks to yours truly.
College life is busy, stressful, and certainly not cheap. The last thing you need to worry about is running to the grocery store every day. Bwog is here with some apartment food hacks to help you eat well, without breaking your budget!
Who would win in a race–Prezbo or Fauci?
Daily Editor Lillian Rountree manages to attend class and a talk at the same time at Maison Française’s “A Medical Disaster and its Aftermaths: The Quest for Sleeping Sickness Eradication in Colonial Africa.”
On Tuesday night, the African American and African Diaspora Studies Department and the Department of History, in partnership with Columbia University Libraries, hosted a panel discussion with Kimberlé W. Crenshaw, Eric Foner, and Henry Louis Gates, Jr. on the topic of reconstruction and why it matters. Events Editor Brigid Cromwell attended.
International Contemporary Ensemble: A Concert Of New, Experimental Music
April 11, 2026Hate Letter: Prices At Ivy League Stationers & Printers
April 7, 2026Roommate’s Brother: An Ethnographic Study Of A Friendly Modern Mullet
March 26, 2026Student Journalism Roundtable: A Conversation With Barnard Senior Administration
March 24, 2026