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: - What to watch while dissociating. - A second season that is GOOD. - Lady Gaga, always flawless. - Samantha speaks. - The worst opinion Iâve ever seen. What to Watch While the World Burns Soâ¦this week sucked. I had fun, rejuvenating plans. I had dinner with my brother, sister-in-law, and their two kings, the reason to live, the explanation for why we keep breathing: the three-year-old twins whose cuteness might save this world. (They kept singing the âHappy Birthdayâ song to each other, if you have a heart that needs to melt.) But there was that night. I was as excited to come down from my birthday cake high and fall asleep scrolling through [Met Gala dresses](. I wasnât prepared for what Twitter would show me. The darkness crystalized immediately. Sarah Jessica Parker looking fabulous in Christopher John Rogers? Roe v. Wade is [going to be overturned](. Blake Lively stunned in a Versace dress inspired by the Statue of Liberty. [Gay marriage is next](. Lizzo played the flute while decked out in a Thom Browne ensemble. What a riot! I love her! Any civil right you take for granted is up for grabs. If healthcare was actually a thing in the U.S., I would file a claim for the emotional whiplash of this week. My neck hurts. My heart hurts. Iâm not the person to talk anyone through that, but I can do my civic duty. So let me distract you. I canât tell you how much I love the new show I Love That For You on Showtime. It stars Vanessa Bayer and Molly Shannon. Shannon plays a veteran star of a home shopping network, and Bayer is someone who idolized her. [After championing her book recently](, I feel like Iâm the CEO of the Molly Shannon Deserves Everything company, but sheâs so good in this. She gets to do the silly physical comedy we crave, but she ingrains that in a very human, relatable character. Youâre not watching a bit. Youâre watch a performance, someone you recognize, Thereâs a darkness to the showâs premise. Bayerâs character tells a huge lie that she has to grapple with perpetuating. But itâs so delicately handled, and anyway, the show is so fun. Vanessa Bayerâs smile is the kind of overwhelming, toothy beam that might threaten to shatter your screen. Jenifer Lewis, an icon, is doing her version of Miranda Priestly, which is to say that tuning in for her doing that is worth it alone. But itâs also such a funny show. Itâs bright. The colors are bright, the performances are bright, that Vanessa Bayer smile, again, is so bright. Iâm sorry I donât have anything more profound to say about it, but I can tell you that watching it these last weeks has been a balm. I would follow Molly Shannon to the end of the earth, and if she said leap off the edge, I would. But this is a show that is so interesting (the secret I wonât spoil) and makes good on what we all suspected: Vanessa Bayer was always going to be a star, if she could finally land the material that understood her brand of comedy. Do you need further distraction? Might I point you to Heartstopper? My colleague Fletcher Peters [did a brilliant rundown]( of why this will be your new favorite show. But in the wake of recent newsâI wonât detail it again, at risk of spending more days moaning in a cardigan while refreshing MSNBC.comâI concur. There is a sensitivity and yet also a seriousness that the show takes to a story about high school boys falling in love (GAY!!!!) that is incredibly sweet. And Iâm very grateful to add Olivia Colman to my YouTube video playlist of âComing Out to Parents and Make You Cry.â But thereâs also a beautifully heightened optimism to the seriesâthat the world can be better because we can also be better. I canât think of a better time for a message like that. I canât imagine one emerging from a Heartstopper watch with any complaint other than dehydrationâyou will cryâbut we all deserve more joy. Depending on your age (youâll find out mine when I die, and then all the people I have paid to lie about it also die), you might bask in the nostalgia and drama of The Real World Homecoming: New Orleans. Iâm a [broken record at this point](, but it nails what should be a gimmick. Getting together a reality TV cast should be silly and dumb. But this is a searing portrait that speaks to how we got to who we are, 20 years later, while still being entertaining as hell. In any case, do you still need cheering up? Did you know that the [final episodes of Grace and Frankie]( are up on Netflix? They are as beautiful as you would hope. I love the fact that a sitcom about elder friendship is now the longest-running show ever on Netflix, and so far ahead I canât imagine another series beating it. The last episodes are a wonderful showcase for Jane Fonda and Lily Tomlin. And itâs not a spoiler, but hopefully a tease, that Dolly Parton also appears. Because the Emmys are happening soon, there are a lot of Very Serious Shows coming out now. Iâm just so glad that these series are in the mix. We all need to feel right now. But we also need to feel good. Iâll Love This Show Five-eva In my mind, there is no greater line in TV comedy than the button on [the Girls5eva]( theme song. At the beginning of each episode, the group, a former Y2K pop act, sings, âWeâre gonna be famous 5eva, because foureverâs too short.â That alone is clever wordplay. Then comes the kicker. âSo what are you waitingâ¦five?â Itâs so dumb. But so brilliant. I cackle at the start of every episode. It might be the perfect piece of comedy writing. If you watched the first season of Girls5eva, then youâre unimpressed, given the conveyor belt of clever quips that made the show more of a meme than a comedy series. Those kinds of lines are in full force for the new season. â#AlbumMode is a state of mind that began when our album was announced and ends when Iâm at the Met Gala in a catheter because my dress is too complicated,â is one of Wickieâs (Reneé Elise Goldsberry) first lines. But whatâs so gratifying about the second season is that, while never losing those whiplash, drive-by, weirdly specific pop-culture jokes, it has the space to dive into the humanity of these characters. Itâs all layered, and the satire is even better. They are talking about motherhood. Divorce. Dating. The music industry. Middle age. Desperation. Feminism. Sexism. Ego. Double standards. And it all feels important, while hilarious. These are characters who were the first women to wear thongs to the White House, but theyâre also rewriting the rules of the industry as they make a comeback in it. And they get to wear a coat from the Nicole Kidman Undoing Collection while doing it. Iâll Hold Her Hand My poor office chair suffered a dramatic tragedy this week. Lady Gaga [released a new song](. âHold My Handâ is cheesy as hell. But itâs so good. It is âLive Laugh Loveâ interpolated as a classic rock song; Michaelâs having an open mic night. But the thing is, itâs also brilliant. Gaga realized a genre, and perfected it. Sheâs not flirting with a certain kind of song, sheâs perfecting it. All of this is to say that I bored a hole in my chair by twist-in-my-seat dancing to âHold My Handâ all week. Now there is footage of her [arriving in a helicopter dress]( to the filmâs premiere. Fantastic. And Just Like That⦠There was so much ugliness in the mediaâs version of [whatever back and forth]( there might have been between Sarah Jessica Parker and Kim Cattrall that led to Cattrall turning down a third Sex and the City movie and also not appearing in the sequel series And Just Like That⦠Whatever was said or unsaid between them became distilled to headlines or soundbites. So itâs really interesting to arrive here. Iâve been fascinatedâand very supportiveâof everything Parker has said to justify the existence of the new series. And, in doing that, I think I dismissed Cattrallâs point of view as petty. But reading it as a Q&A that underlines how smart and considerate she is, in this Variety piece, makes you think about everything differently. ([Read it here](.) Go to Sleep!!! The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills returns this week. It may be the most scrutinized season, with fans figuring out who is on the right side, whatever the right side is, in terms of Erika Jayne and her scandal. I have no opinion on any of that. But [this should be enough]( to get her fired: Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness: I had to type those words, so now you have to see it. (Fri. in theaters) Candy: Jessica Biel axe murderer in a perm wig. Of course weâre watching! (Mon. on Hulu) Sheryl: Pay some respect to the Crowe. (Fri. on Showtime) The Circle: Who is forcing you to watch this? (Now on Netflix) Advertisement
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