Everything we canât stop loving, hating, and thinking about this week in pop culture.
[Manage newsletters]( [View in browser]( [The logo for Daily Beast's Obsessed]( Everything we canât stop loving, hating, and thinking about this week in pop culture. with Kevin Fallon Everything we canât stop loving, hating, and thinking about this week in pop culture. with Kevin Fallon This Week - A nation rooting for Marty and Meryl. - The best new show of the fall. - A national disgrace. - A very important image. Only Lovers in the Building We, as a society, love it when huge celebrities are paired together in a new movie or TV show. And, even more so, we love to imagine that those stars are banging each other while filming it. On one hand, itâs the entire point of the fantasy at play: The chemistry between actors should be so believable that youâre convinced that the people youâre watching are smuggling that spark into their real lives. On the other hand, weâre all just kind of pervy. Itâs fun to imagine that these super hot, super famous people are boinking. This grand, horny tradition is fed by countless instances of the fantasy coming to fruition: real-life celebrity couples whose romance started on set, from [Goldie Hawn]( and Kurt Russell, to [Blake Lively]( and [Ryan Reynolds](, to [Ben Affleck]( and [Jennifer Lopez]( (the O.G. version). The cynical Hollywood industrial complex isnât ignorant of this. Whether itâs Glen Powell and [Sydney Sweeney](, [Bradley Cooper]( and [Lady Gaga](, or Matt Bomer and Jonathan Bailey, co-stars who werenât actually hooking up (or so they sayâ¦) have been more than happy to indulge fansâ thirsty wishes and play the part for attention. We certainly never mind. Even the farce is funâthough these peopleâs spouses may be Godâs strongest soldiers. So while this isnât a new phenomenon, there is something strikingly fresh and unexpected about the latest iteration of it. That is to say: I donât think anyone anticipated the Second Coming of Brangelina to beâ¦Martin Short and [Meryl Streep](. Short and Streep play lovers on [Only Murders in the Building](, which just launched its fourth season this week. Ever since the bombshell dropped in October that Streep and her husband of 45 years, Don Gummer, secretly split up six years ago, Short and Streep became unlikely fixtures of tabloid rumors and gossip blogs. Energy typically reserved for chronicling that romantic exploits of [Taylor Swift]( or [Jennifer Aniston]( were suddenly redirected to the industry veterans, which was certainly a change of pace. Photos of them âcanoodlingâ on set (in other words, basically just hanging out and talking in close proximity) or out together for dinner after shooting were served up as proof of a burgeoning relationship. Those flames were fanned when they posed together and held hands at the Only Murders Season 4 premiere last week. On social media, people seem obsessed by the idea of these two being an item. A recent Daily Beast edit meeting was derailed for longer than any of us would like to admit by the entire staff buzzing about them. Itâs wild that the most talked about Hollywood pairing right now is, of all people, Meryl Streep and Martin Short. Thereâs nothing intentionally ageist about marveling over this. Sure, the love lives of septuagenarians are rarely fodder for TMZ stalking and culture vulture rumor mongering. If anything, itâs actually quite inspiring. When Iâm on my second or third divorce in my seventies, I hope the adoring public will be rooting for me to still be getting some, too. The intrigue, I think, lies in the fact that, famous as these two are, theyâve never been the kind of celebrity to feature in a frenzy over their personal lives like this. The surprise factor of it all is part of the fascination. Itâs also nice that there isnât anything torrid about the circumstances. Infidelity on anyoneâs part isnât a part of the gossip. Online trolls arenât villainizing or cruelly attacking either party. Itâs all kind of sweet and wholesome. These are two people who have been friends for decades. Itâs a fairy tale thatâs every bit as swoon-inducing to imagine friends falling in love late in life as it is to drool over the thought of the hot It Girl and Hollywood Hunk of the moment tearing each otherâs clothes off in the trailer between takes. (And if Streep and Short are doing that tooâeven better!) Both Streep and Short have denied a relationship. Streepâs publicist [said in a statement]( that theyâre just close friends, and Short said the same in an [interview with Bill Maher]( when he called them a âpower couple.â That doesnât matter to any of us. Weâll all still dish about them. In our collective minds, theyâll still be together. Heck, maybe Streep and Short are even taking a page out of the Sweeney-Powell playbook and exaggerating their relationship for publicity. We donât mind; weâre all complicit in the charade. Itâs part of the fun, and we need that fun. Thereâs something voyeuristic about being able to watch a show or a movie in which characters fall in love, with the knowledgeâor at least the suspicionâthat the actors were falling in love too. The romance between Short and Streepâs characters on Only Murders is so, so sweet. Who wouldnât want to imagine that for them in real life, too? You Need to Watch This New Show It is almost unspeakably refreshing to discover the next great show. With FXâs [The English Teacher](, which premieres Sept. 2, the joy is two-fold: The knowledge that the new comedy series is objectively, undeniably great, but also the realizationâand ensuing comfortâthat the sensibility and humor is directly for me. Thatâs to say that I am completely obsessed with the show and have spent all summer telling people to look out for it when it premieres Monday, and, even if Iâm a bit fanatical about it, I canât imagine a huge swath of TV fans loving it, too. The key is: Everyone needs to check it out. Brian Jordan Alvarez created the show, writes, directs, and stars in it. He plays Evan Marquez, a gay high school English teacher in Austin navigating his studentsâ coming of age in todayâs unrecognizable, tumultuous world while experiencing his own âcoming of self,â so to speak. Heâs passionate about his job and dedicated to his students, while also wondering how much of his life should really be taken over by work. He wants love, sex, and companionship, but also wants to be able to feel gratification and happiness on his own. Every time he thinks he understands his students, the changing world, or even what he wants for himself, an unexpected grenade detonates in one corner, an elephant in a room starts a stampede in another, and a wrecking ball comes swinging through the wall. How can Evan, or any of usâlet alone young studentsâsteady ourselves when modern life is so rife with seismic activity? Those questions lend a profundity that complements The English Teacherâs dry, biting humor. Its âWhat is going on in the world? Has everyone lost their minds?â observations arenât smug, or crotchety, or whining. Theyâre insightful and irreverent, just as they are exasperated and, really, just confused. A brilliant scene minutes into Mondayâs premiere sets that tone. Evan and his fellow teacher and best friend Gwen (Stephanie Koenig, who also writes for the show) are in the lunch line marveling that the new class of students have gone beyond woke to the point of being less woke: âItâs circled back around.â âTheyâre for what they say theyâre against.â âRight, and theyâre saying the r-word again.â â[One student] said I had to teach both sides of the Spanish Inquisition, and then he started crying.â âI have kids who are showing me AI porn of Oscar Wilde having sex with women. He was gay!â How anyone is supposed to make sense of changing social mores across generations is a major throughline of the series. A high school, with students and teachers constantly interacting is the perfect setting for those conversations, and The English Teacher adds nuance by being set in Texas. In the premiere, for example, Evan is censuredâand could possibly be firedâwhen a studentâs mother files a complaint after her son apparently saw Evan kissing his then-partner inside the school the previous year. (Would you believe that this conservative womanâs son, who is now graduated, came out as gay when he arrived at college, perhaps motivating this retaliation?) Itâs a show that has fun with the prickliness of todayâs exhausting discourse. Thereâs something novel about that. We could all use that lesson, to find the humor in all the messiness and uncertainty; luckily, class is about to be in session. Advertisement
Youâve Got to Be Kidding Me I have never even in my life felt more betrayedâattacked, evenâthan when I learned that Capri Sun is ditching its indelible juice pouches for bottles. Just look at these monstrosities: I am aghast. Offended. Kamala Harris: What is your plan to address this? I know Tim Walz is not going to stand for this. You call yourself a journalist, Dana Bash? Where was the question about this pressing issue during your big [CNN interview Thursday night](? This is going to go down as one of the most catastrophic rebrands in history. You think generations of people have been drinking your sugar water for the taste, Capri Sun? Fools! The clumsy, borderline unfunctional bag that you stab a straw into that then squirts back at you was the entire point. Capri Sun is an experience, not a food. Drinking it felt avant garde. âI donât drink juice out of a box or a bottle. I drink it out of a bag.â What role am I going to serve in my nephewsâ lives if they donât need me to put the straw in their Capri Sun anymore, and can just twist the cap off the bottle themselves? You are destroying families, Capri Sun. I hope you can sleep at night. May We All Have Such Whimsy Here is a photo Diane Warren [tweeted]( of herself with a tortilla chip on her shoulder, captioned, âI got a chip on my shoulder!â Enjoy the holiday weekend. [ ]( More From The Daily Beastâs Obsessed - Jason Schwartzman and Carol Kaneâs unlikely love story. [Read more](.
- On the hottest day of the summer with sweat pouring down my body, I interviewed Bravo queen, Real Housewife Heather Dubrow. [Read more](.
- An ode to the delightfully ridiculous character names on Only Murders in the Building. [Read more](. [See This] - The Lord of the Rings: Rings of Power: The hugely expensive series finally woke up from its nap for a [much-improved Season 2](. (Now on Prime Video) - KAOS: Itâs about time someone cast [Jeff Goldblum as a God](. (Now on Netflix) - Only Murders in the Building: Whether or not Marty and Meryl are shtupping each other, Season 4 [doesnât disappoint](! (Now on Hulu) - The English Teacher: Best new show of the fall! (Mon. on FX) [Skip This] - Reagan: It is without hyperbole that we announce this is the [worst movie of the year](. (Now in theaters) - The Deliverance: Not even [Glenn Closeâs outrageous wig]( can save this one. (Now on Netflix) [The logo for Daily Beast's Obsessed]( [TV]( [Movies]( [Reviews]( [Previews]( [TV]( [Reviews]( [Movies]( [Previews]( [Daily Beast Obsessed Facebook]( [Daily Beast Obsessed Twitter]( [Daily Beast Obsessed Instagram]( Advertisement
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