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
New This Week - Stanning Amy Schumer.
- Stanning Jennifer Coolidge.
- Stanning Grey Poupon.
- Stanning Tony Danza.
- Stanning Tinky Winky. The New Inside Amy Schumer Season Is Great Two words made me laugh harder than anything Iâve seen on TV did this year: âFart Park.â Iâm cracking up again just from typing them. Fart Park! On [Inside Amy Schumer](, which launched its fifth season Thursday on Paramount+, [Schumer plays a character]( who stumbles upon Fart Park. Itâs a gated section of Washington Square Park, âpart of a city-wide initiative, judgment-free zones where people can go fart outside.â We see people sheepishly milling about the lawn, staring at the ground and kicking some grass to kill time as they take care of business. âThatâs whatâs going on in there? Everyoneâs just farting?â Schumer asks. âHopefully,â a stranger replies. âWeâve seen some accidents.â The camera zeroes in on the hunter green parks department sign thatâs familiar to New Yorkers. Over the usual circle-enshrouded leaf, it reads in stark letters: âFART PARK.â Thereâs an outrageousness to the mundanity of it all. Iâm laughing again. If youâve [seen Inside Amy Schumer](, the [Emmy-winning comedy series]( that [made Schumer a star](, you know that the sketch doesnât end by solely making the perfectly alliterative joke. (âAll fart and no bite, as we like to say around here,â is another gem.) It escalates into outlandish territory: Schumer falls in love with a fellow farter, thereâs a murder in Fart Park, and she becomes a famous author after writing about it. âI had a moment where I was likeâ¦I donât think we need a murder at Fart Park,â Schumer later says in a video explaining the origins of the sketch. âAnd everybody was like, youâre an idiot, Amy. There has to be a murder at Fart Park.â Juvenile as we are, we giggle every time we see the words âFart Park.â But itâs not necessarily the best sketch of the two Season 5 episodes that premiered this week. And itâs certainly not the most important. It will likely get passed around and shared, and will absolutely enter the lexicon. (As if I will ever pass a park in New York City now without mentioning âFart Park.â) Itâs a more genial, accessible example of Schumerâs comedy, which, as the new season of Inside Amy Schumer proves, is more pointed, more political, and more uncomfortable than ever before. The fifth season of Inside Amy Schumer was actually greenlit in January 2016. Thatâs quite a time stamp; suffice it to say that it was a much different world then. There was no Paramount+, for starters. I only cried once a week compared to once an hour; I donât think I had even started my daily screaming-into-a-pillow yet. It would be trite to detail the social and political change that has happened, or the trauma weâve all weathered. In the years since, Schumer herself has gotten married, had a child, become a passionate activist, and cemented her status as a lightning rod in comedy. Ever the lemming, Iâve joined the legions of people who, in recent years, have relied on television for comfort. I might as well be president of the Basic Bitch Convention, with my ecstatic embrace of ânice TVâ like [Schittâs Creek](, [Abbott Elementary](, and [Ted Lasso](. I rolled my eyes at everyoneâs marathon watches of The Office and Gilmore Girls during the pandemic to soothe themselves. Iâm far more sophisticated; I rewatched 30 Rock and Sex and the City. âWho has the time or the desire to watch something as dark and depraved as House of the Dragon?â I said to myself as I settled down to watch my [ninth Bravo show]( of the weekâwhich I followed up by turning on an [episode of Diners, Drive-Ins, and Dives]( that Iâve already seen. Four times. Thereâs nothing wrong with craving pop culture that makes you feel good when everything else is terrible. Iâm actually grateful for a shift back toward earnestness in comedy, even if the real-world catalyst for the trend was so bleak. But watching the new season of Inside Amy Schumer was interesting because it reminded me of what was so gratifying about a certain kind of television that we had run away from or flat-out rejected. Schumer is as skilled as ever at making comedy that challenges, at finding jokes in the things that are woefully unpleasant about life. It goes without saying that, glancing at the male-dominated sketch-comedy landscape, Schumerâs perspective is distinct. There are memorable sketches in the first two episodes revolving around the pressure to wear Spanx, being the only woman working at a tampon company, and feeling the need to justify procedures women have done in order to live up to unrealistic beauty standards. Sheâs also fearlessly political. â[Colorado](â satirizes the kind of commercial that tourism boards make to attract visitors. In it, Schumerâs singing the praises of a place that is beautiful and definitely worth visiting, especially if you happen to live in a surrounding state that has banned abortion. Itâs merciless, more so if you let yourself ponder the reality that a state really couldâand maybe even shouldâmake an advertisement like this. Thereâs another sketch in which female college students excitedly meet with their dorm R.A. for the first time. As they go through their welcome packages, theyâre confused. Rape whistles? Mace? Where is the fun in that? The sketch is smartly casual; the R.A. is matter-of-fact and ambivalent about the collegeâs institutionalized mistreatment of women and indifference to their safety and justice, but the things she is saying are pointed. It was interesting to watch the episodes at a premiere screening in New York with a crowd. There was a palpable tenseness as this sketch aired. People didnât seem to know when it was appropriate to laugh, or even if laughing was allowed at all. (The correct answer is: through the whole thing. It was really funny, and the comedy and its intended impact arenât mutually exclusive.) Whatâs remarkable about Inside Amy Schumerâs six-year hiatus is that Iâm not sure it even could have existed in those six years. Would I have wanted to watch comedy about the things that were happening? Would I have been able to laugh? The fifth season of the show feels evolved, because weâve all evolved. Wellâ¦evolved to a point. Iâm still laughing about âFart Park.â Jennifer Coolidgeâs âHoliday Pourâ Is All I Think About Now I havenât seen [The Watcher](, but I am still confident in proclaiming [Jennifer Coolidge](âs character, a real estate agent named Karen, the best thing thatâs been on television this year. The horror series is based on a [New York magazine article]( about a couple who bought a house in New Jersey (thatâs not the scary part) and begins to receive unsettling letters from someone who calls themselves âThe Watcherâ (the scary part). The couple never moved into the house and the article doesnât solve the mystery of who sent the lettersâa bummer!âbut the series fictionalizes what would have happened if they did. It is, as friends of colleagues have told me, [not entirely a mess](, which is surprising given [Ryan Murphyâs track record at Netflix](. And Coolidge apparently steals the show, which, letâs be honest, is not a surprise at all. Given [the clip of her in the show]( thatâs gone viralâand changed my life completelyâitâs easy to understand why. In the scene, she is having lunch at a country club. The waitress pours her a glass of white wine. Before she walks away, Coolidgeâs Karen calls her back. Sheâs going to need an extra âholiday pour,â she explains. A holiday pour! This is entertainment as a public service. What is a âholiday pourâ of wine? Let me explain what I learned after reading an article titled âWhat Is a âHoliday Pourâ of Wine?â [According to the article](, it is a glass of wine that is filled to the brim. It is the kind of serving you enjoy while on holiday, âwhen you donât have to get up in the morning.â I would counter that it is the kind of serving you enjoy while living your damn life on a Tuesday or Wednesday in this rotten hellscape of a world weâre in. Itâs 2022, babe. Every day needs a holiday pour. (But I understand the sentiment.) I am immensely grateful whenever Jennifer Coolidge is on my television screen. I am even more thankful when she is on my screen delivering a line about food and/or beverages that I will immediately incorporate into my own vocabulary. Do you â[look like the Fourth of July?](â Well, it âmakes me want a hot dog real bad.â And Iâm going to need a âholiday pourâ of wine to wash it down. Breaking News in the Special Salad Saga If you have eight or nine hours in your day, please contact me so that I can discuss the story of Olivia Wilde, Jason Sudeikis, [and the âspecial saladâ]( with the depth and specificity that the topic deserves. In lieu of that, know that exes Wilde and Sudeikis apparently got in a fight once because she was making her âspecial saladââwith her famous dressing that Sudeikis felt an apparent intense, emotional connection toâfor her new beau Harry Styles. The internet tracked down a recipe that Wilde made once on the Food Network, and then the actress-director sent the Great Special Salad Saga of 2022 into overdrive by posting a screenshot of Nora Ephronâs Heartburn that had a recipe for a vinaigrette that, we can all assume, she used. That was all an appetizerâthe salad course, if you willâto my favorite twist in the drama. My colleague Fletcher Peters [made a video and wrote a post]( about making the salad dressing herself (as Ephron says, everything is content!) and was immediately reached out to by the director of communications at Kraft Heinz on behalf of Grey Poupon Dijon Mustard. Yes, Grey Pouponâs got a publicist. âGrey Poupon Has Entered the Chat,â the subject read. (Phenomenal subject line. No notes.) Following its starring role in Wilde and Ephronâs recipe, the mustard is releasing a limited edition jar, with a name inspired by the title of Wildeâs new movie: âDonât Worry Dijon.â Just outstanding. I love it so much. The Boss Is Back It is very meaningful that, after a polarizing first season, the Sex and the City sequel series And [Just Like Thatâ¦]( has chosen to fully embrace absolute chaos. Case in point: this new casting news that I 100 percent endorse. It was [announced this week]( that Tony Danza will play [Che Diaz](âs father in the sitcom about their life. In the Season 1 finale, in which Che revealed they are moving to Los Angeles to shoot the TV series, they said what seemed like a throwaway line of dialogue but then became a casting imperative: âTony Danza is coming in to read for my father. Heâs not Mexican or Irish, but he is Tony Danza.â Damn straight heâs Tony Danza. It is high time for the Danzaissance. Iâm Weirdly Thrilled This Kids Show Is Returning My king gets to keep his purse! I am already exhausted by the inevitable discourse around the [Teletubbies reboot](, which hasnât even premiered yet. (It debuts Nov. 14, which gives Tucker Carlson weeks to prep his tirade.) [Obsess over it!]( [See This] - The Banshees of Inisherin: If Colin Farrell doesnât get his Oscar nod, we ride at dawn. (Now in theaters) - Aftersun: King of tender, moody brooding, Paul Mescal, broods tenderly and moodily. (Now in theaters) - Acapulco: This is a really fun series that flew under the radar in its first season. Rectify that for Season 2! (Now on Apple TV+) [Skip This] - Black Adam: Bold decision to cast the Rock as a superhero and strip him of all charisma. (Now in theaters) - My Policeman: Harry Styles, just because youâre handsome doesnât mean you should be in movies. (Now in theaters) Like our take on what to watch?
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