Everything we canât stop loving, hating, and thinking about this week in pop culture.
[Manage newsletters]( [View in browser]( [Image] with Kevin Fallon Everything we canât stop loving, hating, and thinking about this week in pop culture.
This Week: - Dancing our way out of the pandemic. - An ode to Younger, the best silly show on TV. - Our two best bingeing recommendations. - Sebastian Stanâs butt. - A-Rod...hahahahahha. The Dance Floor Is About to Get Pfizer-ed Up I donât want to brag, but this week Lady Gaga called me an âartist.â Yes, obviously it was directly to me and not to the 84.2 million people who follow her on Twitter and the perhaps billions more who [read the message]( once countless news websites picked it up. She and I just have that relationship. She knows my taste level like that <3. [Alternate text] The comment/compliment was in reference to [her album ARTPOP](, released in 2013, suddenly [surging to number one]( on the iTunes Pop Album chart and into the top 10 of overall albums. It was a byproduct of a fan campaign in support of Gagaâs experimental album, which received mixed reviews eight years ago, to prove how underappreciated the music was now that weâre all older and wiserâand, apparently, have caught up to Gagaâs artistic vision. âMaking this album was like heart surgery, I was desperate, in pain, and poured my heart into electronic music that slammed harder than any drug I could find,â [she wrote](. âI fell apart after I released this album. Thank you for celebrating something that once felt like destruction. We always believed it was ahead of its time. Years later turns out, sometimes, artists know. And so do little monsters. Paws up.â As one of those âartistsâ she mentionsâme, specificallyâIâve always loved the album, almost as much as I love being smug. âApplause,â as [culture critic Louis Virtel wrote](, was as if âa pop star who sounded like the B-52s had chugged 20 Red Bulls and we dared to be indifferent about it.â The anthem âGypsyâ was as if Bruce Springsteenâs âBorn to Runâ mated with an Elton John ballad and a drag queen came strutting out of the womb. It is one of my favorite Gaga songs, and, yes, I have cried to it during a SoulCycle class. The whole point of bringing all this up is that it made me think of music getting its due, especially as the faint light of hope at the end of this pandemic is starting to resemble a disco ball sparkling over a dance floor. I canât wait to do spastic clap choreography to âApplauseâ after several drinks at a bar and scream over the music about how ARTPOP went to number one this year to a person who doesnât care. More than that, I canât wait to elevate the seated-at-my-desk wiggle choreography that Iâve been perfecting these past 14 months (you should see my meticulous shoulder bops to [Dua Lipaâs âLevitatingâ]() to on-a-dance-floor wiggle choreography (equally embarrassing) when the music thatâs been released finally gets its rapturous communal rave. May God and Oprah bless Gaga and Dua Lipa for giving us ace soundtracks for dancing through a world on fire this last year. But what a relief it will be to jump up and down like a drunken pogo stick when âRain on Meâ from [Gagaâs Chromatica]( plays while weâre out with our friends. Imagine the blissful, possibly upsetting chaos the first time youâre out and âWAPâ comes on, or scream-singing to a track from Fearless (Taylorâs Version) with your friends. I truly believe that the first time Cardi B raps âbroke boys donât deserve no pussyâ from âUpâ and a group of gays dancing in a circle shout in unison âI KNOW THATâS RIGHT!â will be the healing moment this country needs, a musical act of purpose not seen since we all joined hands to sing âHeal the World.â This idea of any sort of normal or celebration is happening fast. Letâs just say that the speed of the vaccine rollout has come as a great surprise to me and my pandemic body. I havenât not not googled âpost-Moderna crash dietâ several times in a late-night anxiety spiral. But the promise of it all, from big things like seeing loved ones to little things like finally giving dancefloor justice to the last year of music, is still so exciting. How have I weathered the last 14 months? I bought three plants, all of which died almost immediately. My hair has committed mass suicide, leaping to their deaths in an act one cannot properly determine is related to pandemic anxiety or the fear of old age. Pieces of my soul have followed suit with each passing month, not to mention theâsnark asideâvery real and painful losses my family and I have experienced. All of which is to say it is time to celebrate life again, even if it is with only half a soul left and while partially bald. Cue up the Dua Lipa. Let Younger Age Us Out of TVâs Horrible Pandemic Era Have we maybe, finally, reached a time when our favorite TV series donât feel the social responsibility to [awkwardly shoehorn the pandemic]( into their plot lines? If the newâand finalâseason of Younger is any indication, the fantasy is here. As it should be. For six seasons, the show has been [my favorite TV fantasy](. The most gratifying thing about any âguilty pleasureâ seriesâespecially one that embraces soapy romance, indulgent and aspirational fashion and lifestyle, and is so female-centric that the perfume practically wafts off the screenâis when the sheer quality of its delights become well-known enough to erase the âguiltyâ from the pleasure label. [Alternate text] Thatâs been the case with Younger, the TV Land series [about a 40-something divorcee]( who lied about being in her 20s to combat sexism in the workplace (and, eventually, her steamy love triangle). Season 7 premiered this week with four episodes on Paramount+ and Hulu, picking up exactly where Season 6 left off: Does Liza ([Sutton Foster]() say yes to Charlesâ (Peter Hermann) marriage proposal? When she delivers the answer, no one is wearing masks. I canât tell you what a relief it was to see these characters navigating their incestuous mix of work and love in the publishing world of a slightly more glamorous New York City without social distancing and Zoom calls. (How very un-chic.) Younger has been such a success because of its ability to beat with the pulse of the zeitgeist, but then also inject it with an IV of a trendy $25 cocktail that makes the reality just heightened enough to be funnyâblack-and-white issues about sexism, ageism, generation gaps, and love playing out in bold, saturated color. Itâs a relatable show that is ultimately escapism, which makes it the perfect series to usher us into a post-pandemic world of pop culture. For as resonant as the showâs themes were when it premiered, it caught on because it debuted during a perfect storm of nostalgia. The millennial generation who had maybe been too young when it first aired had become devout appreciators of Sex and the City. Having blessedly escaped the litany of horrific copycats that followed, they were in the market for a series that revived the seriesâ depiction of strong, fiercely independent women navigating dating in a way that is both brutally blunt and hopelessly romanticâbut this time in a modern age where work life and, certainly, the world of dating has fundamentally evolved. Essentially [the original Big Little Lies](, the central conceit of Lizaâs fib about her age and how long she could keep the ruse going added dramatic intrigue and also social resonance to sustain the show, which is, to use the word again, as wonderfully escapist now in its seventh season as when it premiered. This time the fantasy includes watching Liza and her friends at a bar without COVID restrictions and the employees at the publishing house they all work at never once worry about pandemic-related layoffs. But more than that, the show still manages to balance its sweeping fairy-tale romance with its shrewd, outrageous humor. There is a scene in the premiere in which Liza and Charles debate the carousel of love and relationships while on an actual carousel. Itâs sad that the Younger carousel will stop spinning this season, but weâre grateful for the dizzying ride. The Other Two âAh-mahzingâ Binges For This Week I keep a running list of shows that I screen throughout the year that I think could merit consideration for my year-end Best of TV list, to make sure that I donât forget anything. Letâs just say that, thus far in 2021, that list is sparse. (Donât be surprised if the list ends up being nine moments from [Oprahâs interview with Meghan and Harry](, plus [Itâs a Sin from HBO Max](.) In any case, thatâs how Iâve found myself finally enjoying some of the 425 streaming services I subscribe toâs libraries of old shows, which this week became an almost overwhelming pile-up of goodness. Iâve had to pause my rewatch of The Nanny (HBO Max) to revisit The Other Two (HBO Max), which I then paused to revisit Happy Endings (Hulu)âthree underrated comedies from different eras of the last 25 years that are all, thanks to streaming binges, getting a little bit of the accolades and appreciation they were owed when they debuted. Weâve already [written about the comedic glory]( of the lady in red while everybody else was wearing tan. So let me instead fervently recommend [checking out The Other Two](, the Comedy Central show from early 2019 about two millennial siblings struggling to reconcile their stagnant lives with their 13-year-old brotherâs overnight fame as a YouTube star. It features, as an added bonus, Molly Shannon in a momager performance that should have won her an Emmy and [the best use of âfaggotâ]( in a joke that there has ever been on television (not to mention one of [the best Very Special Gay Episodes]( Iâve seen). Its joke-per-scene ratio rivals 30 Rock and, while we wait for a COVID- and streaming-delayed season two, revisiting the underheralded first season is a welcome treatâespecially in this climate. Then thereâs Happy Endings, which celebrated the 10-year anniversary of its pilot this week. Itâs perhaps the best âfriends hanging outâ series since Friends, and maybe even the only truly great one. I believe that the world will be a better, more peaceful place if they would just revive it, but until then, revisit [Casey Wilsonâs all-time-great]( âwhoreâs bathâ monologue as a balm for the soul. ([Watch it here](.) Sebastian Stan Knows How to Promo To promote his new movie Monday, out Friday, [The Falcon and the Winter Soldier star]( Sebastian Stan posted [a photo on his Instagram]( of himself flashing an empty street, his bare bumâor whatever the butt equivalent of underboob isâgloriously peeking out from under his coat. âWhen I say we gave it our âall,â we literally did,â he captioned, teasing the filmâs nudity. [Alternate text] Monday premiered at this yearâs virtual Toronto International Film Festival, which allowed critics to screen films online. Did I hear a rumor that Stan appears fully naked in the film and fast forward through it to see? Yes. I am a journalist. Itâs called an investigation. One Day, Iâll Stop Laughing at This A-Rod Post I need everyone to know that, just hours before J. Lo and Alex Rodriguezâs breakup was officially announced, Rodriguez [posted a video on his Instagram]( Stories in which he pans through a shrine to his relationship with Lopez set to âFix Youâ by Coldplay, perhaps the most outlandish use of that song [since that one episode of The Newsroom](. Itâs since expired on his Instagram, but here is a screenshot. Imagine Chris Martin singing over the worldâs most dramatic orchestral swell while you stare at it. Bless. [Alternate text] [Alternate text] - Mare of Easttown: Everyone loves murder shows! This one, starring Kate Winslet, is actually good. (Sunday on HBO) - Cher & the Loneliest Elephant: This is a documentary about Cher and a lonely elephant. Need I say more? (Thursday on Paramount+) - Couples Therapy: A voyeur's dream. (Sunday on Showtime) [Alternate text] - Wahl Street: Honestly I was barely interested enough to Google what this was about: Mark Wahlberg in a reality show about his businesses. (Thursday on HBO Max) Advertisement
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