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: - Crying your way through your day. - What the hell are the Oscars doing? - The Wheel of Fortune puzzle that broke America. - Get in losers, weâre watching West Side Story. - The tweet of the week. The TV Show That Actually Feels Healing Right Now There are things we (OK, I) do when everything everywhere seems so incomprehensibly bad. There is the ceremonial staring stoically out the window imagining that âEverybody Hurtsâ is playing and we are poignantly framed in a moody music video. A filthy calorie orgy of mozzarella sticks, ice cream, and variations on the theme of âwineâ is typically involved. Our trusty olâ friend, The Fetal Position, gets a long visit. But those are numbing mechanisms, and they donât do the service thatâand Iâm serious hereâTV does. Iâm not talking about those things we turn to in order to distract ourselves or turn off our minds, be it [a Real Housewives binge]( or a classic comfort watch of Sex and the City for the 17th time. (Fine, 23rd time.) [The Great British Baking Show](, a cooking competition in which ordinary people bake cakes and I inexplicably cry once an episode, is a bit closer. Itâs the feelings that matter. These last few years, and especially this past week, Iâve found myself drawn to the kinds of shows that donât ignore the Big Feelings of life, but guide you through them. Not shows that trigger intense emotional reactionsâsay, a weekly irritation download after each [new episode of And Just Like Thatâ¦](âor center something tragic or harrowing. Iâm talking about shows that trade in the everyday; that acknowledge that we carry with us a constant montage of the incomprehensibly bad, but also that we still need to get through the day, with all its joys and pains, and all the ways we fail and grow. Iâm talking about [a show like Better Things](. [Pamela Adlonâs precious jewel]( of a series launched its final season this week on FX with two new episodes, which you can watch now on Hulu. They are lovely, as this series always has been. They are also needed, and seem to be right on time. For five seasons, the show has been a fractured mirror [to Adlonâs own life](: a single mother, a working actress, and a collector of passionate, loyal friends. As such, itâs a tour de force of intimate, personal storytelling. Adlon directs every episode, and even details like the clothes her character, Sam, wears and the paintings that decorate the showâs house are her own. The stressors and the pleasures that weave through each episode feel like theyâre hers, tooâbecause they also feel like theyâre ours. Better Things has a bemusement about everyday life and everyday things, when so much comedy seems cynical about it. Itâs comforting to watch a TV series thatâs not necessarily escapist, but also not too brutally real. It makes you feel a little less crazy about getting through the day when you watch Sam try to get through hers. Youâre transported into reality, not out of it. Daily battles are waged with compassion and an open heart, but Better Things doesnât retreat from the unpleasantness that manages to infiltrate, despite our best efforts. In some ways, everything is placed on an even playing field. What are our familyâs finances and whatâs going to happen when mom dies and where can we park near the restaurant and also what the fuck are NFTs? In Samâs world, theyâre all equal, and equally impossible to answer. There are times when, in the chaos of life, Sam will pause and see her child, her mother, or her friend. Maybe theyâre also in the midst of a personal crisis, doing something frantic or exasperating or otherwise preoccupying. Maybe theyâre doing nothing but just livingâwhich is to say doing so much, even if thereâs a brief instance of stillness. In these moments, Sam seems to be jarred to a sudden haltâas if time stood still, the heavens parted, and a ray of sunshine is illuminating this person she loves. She canât help but notice them. Life is forcing her to. She sees them, and she cracks an easy smile. Itâs as if all the things she knows about this person, admires so deeply about them, despises about them, or makes her feel so close to them overwhelms her. The smile is a spasm. A reflex. Itâs a charge that crosses space and time and laws of physicsâthe way emotions doâand electrifies her, because she and them are connected. Itâs the smallest little thing, but each time, as it has for the last five seasons, it makes me cry. Can something break your heart and make it stronger at the same time? Is that possible? Maybe itâs this thing where, by tearing it a little, the scar tissue grows and now you have this heart thatâs resilient, fortified, and bigger for more feeling, more loving. These smiles are important because it means life is happening. It means it moves on. It moves past the fights, the petty ones and the really big ones. It moves past the tense phases, just as it moves past the honeymoon phases. It moves past both the arguments about homework and the sweet kisses good morning; both the divorces and the great sex; the days that went well, the ones that felt like they took a year off your life because they were so impossible, and the ones that were unmemorable and mundane. The moving on is never easy. In fact, it usually isnât. You lose things and you gain things on the way, but you are still there. You make it through. It seems so simple, but it couldnât be more unfathomable to process, especially on a daily basis. Thatâs why I canât resist those moments where Sam smiles. Iâm not sure she realizes whatâs happening in those momentsâwhat sheâs feeling and what it means for a person drifting through. But itâs a beautiful, invaluable reminder that it is happening and may even be happening to us, every day. The moving on, the feeling our way through life, is so natural that we donât notice it. What a comfort to, through this show, remember that. There are other things Iâve turned to recently for a similar feeling of catharsis. Bridget Everettâs [HBO series Somebody Somewhere]( is an exquisite example. [Station Eleven was gorgeous](. Even [something like Encanto](, which was so emotionally honest about what it means to be a part of a complicated family and unsure of who you are within that, did the trick. But now Iâm so thankful to have Better Things back, though Iâll be so gutted to see it go. Did You Know the Oscars Hate You? To love anything as much as the Academy loves [making an Oscars telecast]( that panders to people who under no circumstances will ever watch the Oscars. Oh, and for making the people who actively appreciate and are invested in the Oscars apoplectically mad along the way. Itâs a bold strategy! Someone over at the Academy was given a shovel when they were put in charge of this yearâs showâthe one that was supposed to mark the Oscarsâ triumphant return to glitz, glam, and the celebration of cinemaâand they have absolutely gone to town with it, digging a hole deeper and deeper, pissing off its members, filmmakers, critics, and the showâs fans along the way. Ridiculous decisions were made in an attempt to salvage the showâs ratings slide and bring new viewers back to the telecast. To keep the ceremony to a tight three hours, eight categories will be presented before the live show. (âFinally, they got rid of that Best Documentary Short category! Now Iâll watch!â) And to presumably attract those who think votersâ tastes are out of touch with mainstream audiences, a Twitter poll was launched to [determine a Fan Favorite movie](, as well as one to recognize a [classic âCheer Momentâ]( from film history. These ideas were lambasted when they were announced. Now that the actual details about them are trickling in, thereâs no recourse but to just laugh and laugh. For starters, the embarrassingly pandering decision to do a Twitter poll backfired when, instead of being a barometer for what the general public was enthusiastic about, it was targeted by intense, mobilized fan armies, some of whom are historically criticized for their toxicity, who spammed the voting. Yes, Spider-Man: No Way Home appears on the list of finalists, as the Academy likely hoped. But no other major Marvel release or studio blockbuster like F9 or No Time to Die did. Instead Zack Snyderâs Army of the Dead and DC Comicsâ The Suicide Squad, neither of which were hits, made the final cut. Also raising an eyebrow: the much-maligned Camila Cabello-starring Cinderella and, most confusingly, the Johnny Depp period piece you never heard of called Minanata, which was ostensibly buried amidst his scandals and only just recently scored a domestic release. As [Adam B. Vary wrote in Variety](, its inclusion here is likely âdue to Deppâs highly organized and extremely online fandom, who have rallied to support the actor throughout his career downswing.â As for the Oscars Cheer Moment finalists, not one film mentioned predates the year 1999. Is this really what the Academy wanted? Worse, these asinine initiatives are getting a spotlight in the telecast at the expense of hardworking craftspeople, some of whom threatened to boycott the Oscars because of how offensive and demeaning it was to remove their categories from the show. This week, [we learned that producers plan]( to present these awards an hour before the live telecast starts, and then edit the speeches into the show. Sounds like a lot of work when they could⦠just⦠put the awards in the TV show that is about handing out awards. In any case, if there is one small silver lining to any of this, itâs that itâs fired up Oscar fans to suggest their own ideas for how to fix this shitshow. Some are serious, like [this Twitter thread]( you should definitely click and read all the way through. Others, blessedly, just make me laugh. Just Another Feather in Your Lap People giving real dumbass answers on game shows is one of my favorite genres of internet clips. When I scroll through my Instagram, thereâs usually at least three a day I can rely on of someone saying something outrageously stupid on Family Feud while Steve Harvey loses his shit. But itâs rare for one of those game show fails to generate as much attention as one did this week from Wheel of Fortune. At first blush, thereâs nothing that different about this gaffe. The puzzle is obvious, and youâre on your couch screaming because you know the answer. In this case, the solve was âanother feather in your cap.â But inexplicably, the three contestants keep missing it. Over and over again. Itâs two minutes of astonishing TV, but also absolute torture to watch. But what could have been a crazy viral moment has had a second life, as one of those contestants has publicly addressed the âtrollsâ and his critics, apparently unhappy that his intelligence is being questioned. âYou go up there. Half of you donât even have public speaking skills. You go on Wheel of Fortune and go into the shoes of where we were standing. And then it will be a whole another conversation when they are trending and making donkeys of themselves,â player [Christopher Coleman said](. âJust go easy on me and the other contestants because we are very educated people, and we donât want to be put in a situation where we are being cackled and publicly humiliated on a show that was a lifelong dream.â Like, sure. Fair point. But also, itâs not that serious! Anyway, [watch the clip here]( and be prepared to scream in frustrated agony, but entertainment-value ecstasy. I Beg of You, Watch a Good Movie This Weekend It is my public service to inform you that the two best films nominated for Best Picture at this yearâs Oscars, [West Side Story]( and [Drive My Car](, are available to stream right now. At this very moment, you could sign off for the day and watch! Your boss will understand! Itâs for the sake of cinema! West Side Story is currently on both Disney+ and HBO Max, while the latter is also streaming Drive My Car. I donât have to tell you what West Side Story is, but I will scream at you IT IS SENSATIONAL, MY GOD, YOU NEED TO WATCH IT. The nationâs collective crushes on Mike Faist and David Alvarez arenât burning nearly hot enough, and not enough of us understand why Ariana DeBose is coming for that Oscar. (If youâre an O.G. 1961 West Side Story purist, great news: thatâs on HBO Max, too.) And I almost donât want to tell you more about Drive My Car (a three-hour Japanese film about grief with English subtitles) because Iâm worried it would deter you. But donât let it. If you can give up three hours for yet another [godforsaken Batman movie](âyep, thatâs the running time of the new Robert Pattinson jointâthen you can devote it to something as good as Drive My Car, too. Whoâs Excited for Lady Gaga? We will be unpacking this moment in history for the rest of our lifetimes. I never want to make light of it. That said, I have not and likely wonât stop thinking about [this stan account tweet](. What to watch this week: The Batman: If three hours of Batmanning is your thing, live it up this weekend. (Fri. in theaters) Lucy and Desi: A Lucille Ball documentary thatâll hopefully lobotomize you from that other Lucy movie. (Fri. on Amazon Prime) After Yang: A gorgeous film about identity and connection, and Colin Farrellâs sensational abs. (Fri. in theaters and on Showtime) What to skip this week: Fresh: With all apologies to my husband, Sebastian Stan, I really hated this one. (Fri. on Hulu) The Masked Singer: Stop enabling this travesty! (Wed. on Fox) Advertisement
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