![]() with Kevin Fallon Everything we can’t stop loving, hating, and thinking about this week in pop culture.
This week:
The Groundbreaking, Trashy Sexually Fluid Dating Show There is perhaps no greater evidence that there are just far too many shows on TV than the fact that the current season of MTV’s seedy, high-concept dating series Are You the One? has been airing and, by my rough calculations, not a soul is talking about it. You see, this current season features a cast of entirely sexually fluid and gender non-binary contestants. In other words, every single person on the show is fair game to bang each other. And you know what? They do! Gross! Also, progress!
![]() In the first episode alone, a trans man who recently had his top surgery heads to the “boom-boom room” to have sex with a sexually fluid cis girl, and then a few hours and several drinks later returns to have sex with a cis guy. It’s wild. And yet, scanning the web for reaction, not a peep. It’s like Horton Hears a LGBTQ. “We are here! We are queer!” And yet, no one is listening.
The Streaming Apocalypse Is Nigh The future of TV is exhausting. Not only are there more than 500 series that have aired this year, long-canceled series also now demand your attention as well. The hottest story in entertainment is what is going on with reruns of sitcoms that aired more than a decade ago, one of which was only moderately popular at its peak.
![]() People are acting like the shows’ removal from Netflix means that they will never again be able to watch them, something that, on the one hand, I get and, on the other hand, you’re all idiots. I’m not trying to explode anyone’s mind here or rock you off your axis of understanding, but I watch Friends every single day after work, and again before bed, and do it without ever once logging onto Netflix. I have a secret, decades-old trick for this, something of lore from the olden days that is only whispered about with wonder and astonishment now. It is called cable.
Living For Team USA ![]() Finally, the U.S. is making news on the international stage for reasons that aren’t utterly embarrassing and completely mortifying. (Just kidding: It is also one of the most egregious examples of gender pay disparity we have right now. You’re trash, America!)
The Farewell Is the Best Movie of the Year Truth is stranger than fiction. Yet nothing this year has been packed with more uncomfortable, beautiful, complicated truth than the lie in The Farewell. The film stars Awkwafina as a Chinese-American New Yorker whose grandmother, “Nai Nai,” receives a terminal cancer diagnosis back home in China. As is sometimes custom in China, her family lies to Nai Nai, allowing her to think she just has a cold so that she can live out the rest of her life without fear. In order to see Nai Nai one last time, the family lies again, throwing a fake wedding for a cousin so that everyone can be reunited to say goodbye. ![]() Though the opening title card reads “based on an actual lie,” this is a true story that happened to writer-director Lulu Wang. When I saw The Farewell for the first time at Sundance, I burst into tears near the end. So did everyone around me. I’m pretty sure just minutes before, we were all laughing hysterically. It’s a gorgeous movie about universal themes of grief, loss, family, and identity. I can’t recommend it enough.
This Big Little Lies Rudeness ![]() They deleted this scene, in which Reese Witherspoon throws an ice cream cone at Meryl Streep’s head, from an episode of Big Little Lies, so we never got to see it. HBO is canceled.
![]() Sword of Trust: Phenomenal indie director Lynn Shelton, fake news, the Civil War, and Marc Maron in one of the best performances of the year. Enjoy! The Farewell: Once more for the cheap seats. Shangri-La: A very good documentary on Rick Rubin, co-founder of Def Jam records. ![]() Stuber: He’s an Uber driver. His name is Stu. I’m serious. Crawl: The flood is the least of their problems! (The killer alligator, however, isn’t!)
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