In the documentary Cusp, a group of teens share the highs and lows of growing up in modern-day Texas, from social media to sexual assault

In summer 2018, photographers Parker Hill and Isabel Bethencourt were at the tail-end of a road trip from Montana to Austin when they were diverted to a gas station in a small Texas military town. It was two in the morning, but the truck that pulled up next to them was thrumming with energy — music blasting, a group of barefoot teenage girls spilling out of the cab, charisma free-flowing and uncut.

The groups hit it off, and soon Hill and Bethencourt were careening down a dirt road toward a high school party of about 15. Cameras out, they asked the teens about their lives: what’s it like to be you? What are you dealing with? What do you want to talk about?

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

UK rows back on ex-PM’s claim Israel is outside remit of international criminal court

Government appears to withdraw from past assertion by Boris Johnson amid shift…

Shelling in Russian border city kills 10 and injures 45

Russian officials accuse Kyiv of carrying out attacks, which come after 18-hour…

Sharp rise in disorder at football games in England and Wales last season

Rise of 60% from last full pre-Covid season to 2021-22 Incidents at…

Seven hours’ sleep is ideal amount in middle to old age, study finds

Too much and too little sleep linked with worse cognitive performance and…