

INTERVIEW: Life moves pretty fast so you'd better get an internship
In 1986 John Hughes created a 103-minute long tribute to the freedoms of adolescence – Ferris Bueller's Day Off . Like many of his coming-of-age films it showcased his distinct talent for stretching time like an accordion, portraying an amplified sense of possibility available to the young. That very nature of 'possibility' fluctuates as each generation changes. The meaning of freedom is tallied to the economy, politics, trends and education. Different generations face differ

The language of gallery-going
We've all known a real-life Mary Wilkie – a person who was designed and placed on this planet to make you feel completely inept at holding an adult conversation about anything. Mary – the seemingly effortless pop-connoisseur played expertly by Diane Keaton in Woody Allen's Manhattan – is infuriatingly bright and well-read. She glides through conversations leaving a trace of superiority, condemning her co-conversationalists to a fumbling marathon of one-upmanship. Her patronis