Skip to main content

Scream VI and Standing By Your Man

Hey dolls

It’s Thursday, which means we have another week of Dollhouse content coming in hot to your inboxes. We’re chatting exclusively with actor Liana Liberato (alongside a Disney Channel-inspired shoot by Savana Ogburn), thinking through the links between country music and second wave feminism, and marking the end of a cursed internet era with an essay on Omegle.

We’ve also got interviews with Eliza Rose and Merry Lamb Lamb, and on the podcast, Gina and Ione get into the Saltburn discourse, which you can listen to here (Opens in a new window). As for the rest, let’s jump in:

Liana Liberato on True Crime, Scream VI and Based on a True Story. (Opens in a new window)

Deputy Editor Gina Tonic chats with one of horror’s rising stars about her attraction to the genre, the moral quandaries of true crime, and her bumper year in 2023.

Hackney’s Finest: Eliza Rose, Jeannie Crystal and Rhiannon Barry are the Creative Team Prioritising Working Class Visibility (Opens in a new window)

Douglas Jardim speaks with Rose and Co about east London, community and the limitlessness of working class creativity.

Birth Control, Sex Workers and Standing By Your Man: Country Music and Second Wave Feminism (Opens in a new window)

Rosie Carter writes on Dolly Parton, Loretta Lynn, and other country musicians whose work was maligned by the feminist movement but which still spoke to the issues affecting women.

Merry Lamb Lamb on Vulnerability in Music, ‘Exodus’ and Utopian Visuals (Opens in a new window)

Platform Editor Charlotte Amy Landrum interviews musician Merry Lamb Lamb about Avril Lavigne, Belle and Sebastian and her new EP Exodus.

Unmasking Omegle: The Chatroom Will Always Be Racial (Opens in a new window)

Janan Jama discusses Omegle and race: “When you have seconds to make an impression or risk being skipped, visible blackness can make an impression for you, and there’s no more startling reminder of universal anti-blackness than the global chatroom,” she writes.

The Sweet East: America Through the Eyes of a Teenage Girl (Opens in a new window)

And finally, Charlotte responds to The Sweet East, its refreshing vision of the USA and its relatably zoned-out protagonist.

See ya next week!

XOXO,

The Polyester Team

0 comments

Would you like to be the first to write a comment?
Become a member of Polyester Zine and start the conversation.
Become a member