The McGill Tribune
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 2017 | VOL. 37 | ISSUE 1
Published by the SPT, a student society of McGill University
McGILLTRIBUNE.COM | @McGILLTRIBUNE
EDITORIAL
McGILL 101
POP RHETORIC
The McGill community must confront the fentanyl crisis
The Tribune’s welcome guide
Taylor Swift is her own hot take
PG. 5
PGs. 2-4
Or face fatal consequences
Information, advice, and more
She doesn’t need yours
PG. 11
(Marie Labrosse / The McGill Tribune)
Café Mission Keurig: A day at a coffeehouse for Montreal’s homeless
PGs 8 - 9
The allegory of Trump in Canada Domenic Casciato News Editor As an American student at McGill, many of the things I’ve heard some Canadians say about the United States––
particularly its politics––have been false, absurd, and, on occasion, hypocritical. More concerning, however, is the apparent failure of many Canadians to understand American politics and learn from our mistakes. In my experience,
Canadians distance themselves from the wave of populism that swept the U.S. during the 2016 election, but this isn’t indicative of Canada’s moral superiority– it’s suggestive of unpreparedness. To understand the challenges they might
face in this era of post-truth politics, Canadians need to step outside of their ivory tower and treat Trump as a lesson, not a punchline.
PG. 5
‘Big Brother’ now a tool to study linguistics An unlikely pair: Reality TV meets university research about accent dynamics in individuals Daniel Lutes Web Developer
After moving to a new place, some people’s accents change readily while others stay more or less the same for the rest of their lives. McGill University linguist and Assistant Professor Morgan Sonderegger recently spearheaded a study that explores the science behind accent dynamics. Some studies on accents have analyzed only one conversation with a subject, while others have spanned years of observation.
Sonderegger, however, wanted to explore the relatively unknown realm of mediumterm accent dynamics— how accents change over a timescale of months. While this is not the first study on the subject, Sonderegger said that it’s “certainly the most detailed.” Rather than using a lab setting, Sonderegger executed a “natural experiment.” He likened his research to evolutionary biologists studying birds on an isolated island—where participants interacted only with each other
in a removed, yet natural, setting. The researchers used the British version of reality TV show Big Brother to examine how people’s speech changed over a three-month period. Big Brother follows a group of contestants who live in a house together and are continuously voted off the show by viewers until a winner is selected. Sonderegger was drawn to the United Kingdom because of the extreme accent diversity in a relatively small geographic area.
PG. 13