In our October cover story, the comedian discusses his relationship with Pete Davidson, the problem with white dudes, and how his partying days came to an end.
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John Mulaney Is More Than a Funny Guy in a Suit and Tie
Alex, one of eight child actors sitting in a circle with John Mulaney, has a grand unified theory about blooper reels that he would like to share right this second. âBefore I see a movie, I always watch the blooper reels,â he explains. âIf that movie has no fun moments, like, so that means they didnât even have fun doing it? So then Iâm not gonna watch the movie.â Mulaneyâs eyebrows fly upwardâAlexâs logic is a touch cockeyed but impressive. âThatâs brilliant!â he says.
Itâs a Tuesday afternoon in July, and he and the actorsâages eight to twelveâare gathered in a fluorescent-lit rehearsal space in Manhattanâs Theater District, here to rehearse his next, as-of-yet-untitled comedy special. A couple years ago, on the same block, he starred with his friend Nick Kroll in a hit Broadway show they cowrote, Oh, Hello, portraying two grumpy, corduroy-sporting septuagenarian weirdos partial to cocaine, casual misogyny, and Steely Dan. Last year, five blocks north, Mulaney did seven straight sold-out stand-up shows at Radio City Music Hall; footage from one of those shows became his third special, Kid Gorgeous. Whereas that one, released by Netflix, was a watchmaker- tight hour of jokes, heâs trying something new this time: a childrenâs variety show. And these children have a lot to say about bloopers. âI think they should have blooper reels at the end of scary movies so people can go home and not feel terrified,â another kid interjects. âRight,â Mulaney says, nodding. âA catharsis of sorts.â He scans the circle. âThis whole special,â he tells the kids, âis going to be a blooper reel.â
Mulaney, thirty-seven, is modeling the new special on the entertainment he loved growing up: 3-2-1 Contact, the eighties-era PBS after-school classic; Really Rosie, a 1980 musical by Maurice Sendak and Carole King; and, of course, Sesame Street. âItâs been on TV how manyâfifty years?â Mulaney tells me later. Heâs been rewatching old episodes recently, in thrall to their elastic approach to narrative. âItâs modular, fast-paced. Bizarrely paced,â he says. âTheyâll cut to a kid who blows up a balloon, draws a smiley face on it, and pops it. Like, âGreat, love it, moving on!â â With the new show, he wants to make something that will appeal to kids and adults alike. His thinking is twofold. âItâs something Iâd like to watch,â he says. âAnd I donât wanna do anything anyone else is doing.â
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The Esquire 25-Part Guide to Funny 2019
With so much hilarity, in so many formats, the options can be overwhelming. Consider this: On the first day of the year, Netflix released forty-seven stand-up specials. FORTY-ÂSEVEN. Amazon is entering the game, releasing specials by Jim Gaffigan and Ilana Glazer (her first). And thatâs just stand-up. The glut of comedy means thereâs that much more to sift through. Guess what: We did the sifting for you.
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The Forever Coach: Jim Boeheim's First Interview Since the Crash That Claimed a Man's Life
Itâs twilight at the Turning Stone Resort and Casino, and the curtains glow a dim blue. Jim Boeheim stands on his heels at the lectern, the night before his annual charity golf tournament. Weight back, hips supinated, eyes down. The thunderheads are in. The bad weather is jammed in to the west and headed this way. Golf tomorrow is probably off.
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For Ken Burns, Country Music Tells the Story of Race, Class, and Inclusion in American History
Eight and a half years ago, the most famous documentarian of the modern era got down, metaphorically, on his knees and, as he likens it, "proposed to country music." It's the second genre that Ken Burns has directed his camera lens towards in his careerâJazz debuted in 2001 to wide acclaimâand, as he recalls, it felt inevitable. "Iâm looking for stories that are firing on all cylinders," he explains, "and [Country Music] is an American story firing on all cylinders."
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The Instagram-Famous Socks That Really Are That Good
I was at a friend's house when I realized that my socks are, in some instances, a conversation starter. It's not because they're covered in some zany print (perish the thought), but because this particular friend had seen these socks before. Loads of times, in factâjust never in real life. "Oh, those are those Instagram socks!" he almost shouted. "Are they actually any good?
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The Best Fall Books of 2019 Will Get You Through the Months Ahead
Something about fall demands a new stack of books. Maybe itâs that infectious back-to-school energy. We rounded up some of the seasonâs best reads, from urgent nonfiction about sexual abuse and toxic masculinity to spellbinding novels about monsters, families, and climate war.
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