Katie Kalmusky
About Katie Kalmusky
Katie Kalmusky is a Canadian writer currently based in Vietnam. Her writing has appeared in several international publications from South Korea to the U.K. She is passionate about travel, sustainability and the environment. She can be reached at [email protected] or on Twitter.
Environmental groups call on Ontario candidates to put a cap on bottled water
As the clock ticks down on Ontario's provincial election, reporter Katie Kalmusky asks the Liberal, Conservative, NDP and Green parties for their take on a movement trying to scrap bottled water from the picture.
'Plastic China' film shows terrifying images of families impacted by first world waste
Bright-eyed children run between heaping piles of plastic, a worn-out worker spends his meager wages on alcohol, and a preteen girl gazes solemnly at Western product advertisements she picks out of the monstrous piles of trash around her home. Welcome to Wang Jiuliang’s Plastic China.
Aronofsky's film 'mother!' is a frenzied, exhibitionist mess
SPOILERS: Aronofsky's mockery of Christian theology is where the film becomes a pretentious mess and loses any hope of meaningful connection with an audience, writes Katie Kalmusky.
This Netflix Super Pig could shake up the American food chain
Netflix's newly-released film, Okja, is far from a cry for vegetarianism. But you still won't want to eat bacon after watching it, writes reviewer Katie Kalmusky.
Fierce, fiery and incomplete: Rebecca Solnit’s ‘Mother of All Questions’
Solnit’s series of essays examines rape culture, the role of men in feminism and female silence with a fierceness that made me wish I’d read her work much sooner.
Season One finale of The Handmaid’s Tale a disturbing TV masterpiece
SPOILER ALERT: The wait for Season Two of this series will be an exercise in patience, but in the meantime, Nolite te bastardes carborundorum, ladies.