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ESPN’s Malika Andrews Is Among The NBA Bubble’s Rising Stars

There is no one more familiar with the NBA Bubble than ESPN reporter Malika Andrews, who was the first reporter to make the trip to Orlando for the league’s restart at Walt Disney World’s Wide World of Sports complex, before any players or teams arrived.

It wasn’t just a massive personal commitment to spend the entirety of the NBA’s restart in the Bubble, but a professional one, too. With the limited available spots for media in the “green zone” of the NBA campus, where reporters can actually interact with the players, those that get those spots have to be able to expand their roles. For some, this has meant expanding their coverage to include more teams than are customarily on their beat, but for Andrews it’s meant becoming a TV sideline reporter in addition to her typical written coverage of the league.

It’s a step in her career that she was, initially, supposed to ease into by dipping her toe in the relatively calm, tepid television waters of NBA Summer League in Las Vegas this summer. Those games would’ve provided a lower stress environment to learn the role and grow more accustomed with being on television, as she came to ESPN from a newspaper background with no significant on-camera experience. However, as was the case for millions around the country, the COVID-19 pandemic changed plans, and suddenly her first taste of sideline reporting would be in the NBA’s seeding round and just two weeks into the gig, her first playoff assignment — which now extends to a spot on ESPN’s Game 1 broadcast for the Eastern Conference Finals.

“Robby, I was so nervous,” Andrews said with a laugh. “I mean, I was so nervous. I was sweating. That feeling you get in your stomach where you know you’ve eaten but it feels like you haven’t eaten in days because your stomach feels like it’s bottoming out, that’s how I was feeling on the trial sideline. Like that wasn’t even the real thing yet, and I had [producer] Ian Gruca, he was so patient with me and just kind of walked me through everything and it was very slow, but as I told Ian, it did not matter, I was so nervous.”

Andrews credits the support of the rest of the ESPN broadcast team with helping her transition into the sideline role. She’s had the chance to work games with the legendary Doris Burke, who is very familiar with the sideline role as she excelled at it for years before moving into the booth as an analyst, and cites a specific bit of advice Burke provided as something that helped focus her for in-game interviews.

“The switch that flipped for me was when Doris Burke told me that what she and Mike Breen, Mark Jones, whomever — those have been the play-by-play guys I’ve been working with the most — their cheat sheet; when she does sidelines, she likes to listen to them to get clues on what the in-game interview questions could possibly be,” Andrews said. “Because the way their conversation is going, it helps to be able to slide that interview in with the points they’ve already made or the questions they’ve brought up that then you can actually get the answers to. And when I started thinking that way — I was always listening, but I started to listen in a different way when she said that. It was sort of like, ‘That’s so simple, but ah-ha! that makes sense.’ So, that really helped. … I’m still sweating. My knees have stopped knocking, but I’m fully sweating [laughs].”

On the ground, fellow ESPN sideline reporter and Hoop Streams host Cassidy Hubbarth has been able to offer assistance from in the green zone, sometimes texting Andrews during games, like, “Hey, you got this? You need anything?” Hubbarth, not too far removed from her sideline debut, knows that, as much as anything, it’s understanding the limitations of the sideline role and accepting that your job is to enhance the broadcast however that may fit that can be the biggest hurdle early in your career.

“Yeah, that’s what I said to her,” Hubbarth said. “I think honestly this environment can actually help that anxiety of not contributing as much as you want to because you have a game in, like, another day. So you do feel like you’re working, and she’s just been a workhorse here. Not only is she doing sidelines, but she’s doing every SportsCenter hit imaginable, she’s writing; she’s been a marvel here.”

“I just tell her not to force it,” Hubbarth added, “because when you force things that’s worse than not getting in. Ultimately it’s about what’s happening on the court and you’re just trying to complement the action, and, yeah, sometimes all you’re doing — like I had a game where I was really excited about my opening hit but the game before us went long so we were pushed to ESPNNews and I didn’t get to do that hit and the way the game played out there wasn’t a lot of time or space for additional stories or stuff on individual players, it was all about the action. I always compare it to double dutch, where you’re just waiting to get in and sometimes you just don’t. Sometimes there’s not an opening.”

ESPN

Accepting that truth of the sideline job is something Andrews has noted has been a “tough” adjustment, but, as Hubbarth notes, there certainly shouldn’t be any feeling like she’s not doing enough in the Bubble overall. Andrews maintains her role as a writer and reporter for ESPN.com, along with doing TV and radio hits from on-site as one of the few who is in contact with players. It’s quite the workload, but something Andrews has embraced in such a unique environment, because ESPN would typically have more than a hundred writers, reporters, editors, and broadcasters on the ground in the NBA Playoffs, but in the Bubble green zone, that number is under 10 meaning everyone has to wear a number of hats.

Where all of those roles came together most notably was when the Milwaukee Bucks led a work stoppage in protest of police in Kenosha, Wisc. shooting a Black man, Jacob Blake, in the back seven times. The Bucks refusal to play Game 5 of their first round series against the Magic not only resulted in halting the NBA Playoffs for three days, but became a movement that saw stoppages in the WNBA, MLB, NHL, MLS, and more.

As the sports world stopped, sports outlets began having conversations rarely seen in an extended format. Prominent Black voices at the league’s TV partners were given airspace to share stories and experiences with racism and police brutality at length, a rarity when games are happening. For Andrews, who covered it from the beginning outside the Bucks locker room on that Wednesday afternoon — and really conversations with players about Jacob Blake being shot all week — it provided a further sense of purpose to what she was doing in the Bubble,.

“It was heavy and draining and there was a whole lot of uncertainty, just in terms of what would happen next,” Andrews recalled of that week. “These players, that entire week you could see them reckoning with this guilt — and that’s my word, not their word. … Like I mentioned with the testing, this is such a privileged existence that we are living here. It’s hard, it takes a mental toll, but it’s also one of the safest places in the country right now. We have an abundance of testing. You can almost forget [the problems of the world], if you choose to turn off the television and not read the Times, because there’s a buffer between us and what’s happening around this country and around the world, and I think for these players that feeling was made more acute because they look like and have the same skin color as these men — and women — but men in this case with Jacob Blake who are being shot. So you could feel that visceral emotion all week, but there was a sense even as the Celtics and Raptors were talking about what they wanted to do. There was a sense with multiple people that Milwaukee would be the group to say something. Looking back, I think you can feel you’re covering something monumental when it’s happening. You can feel this is something that is pivotal, but I think the weight of it was still sinking in because you’re kind of running on fumes and trying to cover it, trying to be diligent, trying to be sensitive while running on three hours of sleep.”

But Andrews believes there was a sense that this was exactly where she needed to be.

“There was this column in the Associated Press about the feeling of being Black and not protesting and if that makes you … what that feels like,” Andrews said. “And for me there is this reckoning of, what is objectivity? Is objectivity the privilege of white journalists? Because historically objectiveness and white has been kind of — objectivity has been white-washed. And how can you show up and continue to work and cover things in this even way when many of these things directly effect you, whether that be as a Black person or a woman. I think that my outlet, what is cathartic for me, is having the opportunity to cover these events and make sure that objectivity isn’t as white-washed as it would’ve been in the past or other circumstances. That gave me a sense of purpose as I continued to write and cover those things, because it was such a privilege that these players trusted me, but also I felt like I had a duty to our readers and our listeners and our viewers to really take care in how we covered this and also highlight facts that are hard to hear or uncomfortable, especially for sports circles. Because, I think you said earlier, so many people are in this because they love basketball, and I do love basketball but I got into this because I love journalism. I just happen to cover basketball and those three days were kind of the epitome of that love and that intersection for me.”

That next Saturday, the Bucks and Magic were set to play the first game since that stoppage and Hubbarth was scheduled to be on the sidelines for that game, as well as ESPN’s late game that night, as they were putting their A-team on those games. However, Hubbarth called senior coordinating producer Tim Corrigan and pushed for Andrews to take sideline duties for that game, given she had been at the forefront of their coverage of the stoppage.

“She came from being on the Bucks beat, and she was at the arena when the Bucks didn’t leave the locker room. I wasn’t,” Hubbarth said. “I was at the hotel getting ready to got to my game later that night, and she was on the scene and she had been covering it. She did a masterful job covering that story during the pause and being in talks with several Bucks players because of her relationship, and, to me, it’s always about what’s going to be the better broadcast. Obviously I’m confident I could’ve stepped up to the plate and done the job of covering what happened, cause I’m still here and I have my own connections, but she was, by far, all over that story. So I just called Tim [Corrigan] and said, just broadcast wise she’ll be the better reporter on this game and that will make our coverage better. That’s what it’s all about. This experience here has been so rewarding in so many ways that to keep score like that, what are we doing it for? It’s not about us, it’s about what’s the best coverage to cover such a historic moment in time for the league and also us as a broadcast group.”

The gesture resonated with Andrews, and only furthered to strengthen the bond between the two.

“I was so touched by how, I think especially airtime and all this stuff can be something that is sensitive and people compete for, but this group — that’s emblematic of how solely focused they are on putting out whatever it is that is going to serve our viewers best,” Andrews said of Hubbarth’s insisting on her taking the assignment. “Who has the best information? And Cassidy has the best information on the Western Conference. She felt that I was going to be the best addition to that Milwaukee Bucks game. Like, she’s just the best. The best.”

That game was the real convergence of all of Andrews’ roles at ESPN, and she’s finding that it’s not just that her reporting background helps her on sideline duty, but that working sidelines is furthering her reporting by building better relationships with coaches and players around the league. For all of the hats she’s had to wear in Orlando, they’ve helped to reinforce and refine her skills across the board.

Doing interviews for TV, where being as concise as possible is a necessity given time constraints, only helps when distilling questions into their simplest for when talking to coaches, players, and executives for print stories. Having the chance for more face time with people from around the league, particularly in the Western Conference where she has far less experience, only grows her contact list and creates more resources for her across the NBA landscape.

For NBA players, the Bubble has provided an opportunity if they’re willing to take it to boost their profile and we’ve seen a number of young stars do so, from Devin Booker to Donovan Mitchell to Jamal Murray and Nikola Jokic. The same can be said for the select reporters in the green zone, as they’ve gotten a chance at rare access and opportunity to expand their roles for their outlets because of the limited entry. There have been some standouts, like Taylor Rooks of Bleacher Report, and Malika Andrews certainly falls into that category as a rising star in the industry.

As Hubbarth said, Andrews has been “thrown into the fire” of sideline reporting and has handled being thrust into that new role with incredible poise and thrived in it — even if she’s still sweating on the inside.

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John C. Reilly, Fred Armisen, And Tim Heidecker Want To Visit The Moon In Showtime’s ‘Moonbase 8’ Trailer

When you hear the term “scene stealer,” who is the first person you think of? For me, it’s John C. Reilly. The Oscar nominee is great as a lead (Check It Out! with Dr. Steve Brule, a very funny show; Walk Hard, a masterpiece) or co-lead (Step Brothers, another masterpiece), but even when he’s in a supporting role, he’s, well, stealing scenes. Think: drunk R2-D2 in Cedar Rapids, “what do you bench?” in Boogie Nights, guiding Jack Black through his mushroom trip as Sasquatch in Tenacious D in The Pick of Destiny.

In Showtime’s new comedy Moonbase 8, Reilly is one of three doofus astronauts, along with Fred Armisen and Tim Heidecker, who are preparing to travel to the Moon. With all due respect to Armisen and Heidecker, both of whom are extremely funny, I expect Reilly to be the show’s MVP. He’s very good at being very good.

Here’s more on Moonbase 8 (you can watch the trailer above):

Set in the isolated desert of Winslow, Arizona at NASA’s Moon Base Simulator, Moonbase 8 follows eager astronauts Skip (Fred Armisen), Rook (Tim Heidecker) and their leader Cap (John C. Reilly) as they attempt to qualify for their first lunar mission. While working vigorously to complete their training, a series of unexpected circumstances forces the astronauts to question their own mental sanity, trust in each other, and whether or not they’re cut out for space travel.

Moonbase 8 premieres on Showtime on November 8.

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John Boyega Parts Ways With A Perfume Company After Being Controversially Cut From A Chinese Commercial

John Boyega has stepped down as the brand ambassador for the Jo Malone fragrance after the actor learned that he was replaced in an ad campaign that he created.

In a Twitter thread announcing his exit, Boyega revealed that he was tapped to execute a short film for the company that went on to win the Best Media Campaign at the 2020 Fragrance Foundation Virtual Awards. The film featured Boyega’s home neighborhood along with his friends and family. “The film celebrated my personal story,” the actor wrote. However, things went south when Jo Malone entirely reshot the campaign for a new ad in China without his “consent or prior notice,” prompting Boyega to speak out and resign from the brand.

“While many brands understandably use a variety of global and local ambassadors, dismissively trading out one’s culture this way is not something I can condone,” Boyega tweeted. “It’s back to back but I assure you this will be dealt with swiftly. I don’t have time for nonsense. We press on and strong.”

You can see Boyega’s full statement below:

Ahead of Boyega’s resignation, Jo Malone had attempted to rectify the situation on Saturday by releasing a statement to The Hollywood Reporter, to which the fragrance company admitted its mistake and apologized to all parties involved:

“We deeply apologize for what, on our end, was a mistake in the local execution of the John Boyega campaign,” Jo Malone London said in a statement sent to THR. “John is a tremendous artist with great personal vision and direction. The concept for the film was based on John’s personal experiences and should not have been replicated.”

The company said it also apologized to [actor Liu] Haoran, who was not involved in the “concepting” of the campaign.

“While we immediately took action and removed the local version of the campaign, we recognize that this was painful and that offense was caused,” it added. “We respect John, and support our partners and fans globally. We are taking this misstep very seriously and we are working together as a brand to do better moving forward.”

By that point, the damage was already done. Boyega has become a fierce advocate against cultural slights, even going so far as to call out Star Wars, and clearly, he was not about to let this latest transgression stand.

(Via John Boyega on Twitter)

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Clairo Takes To The Piano For A Lovely Carole King Cover

Clairo’s usual instrument of choice is the guitar, but she’s branching out during the pandemic. Last night, she shared a cover of Carole King’s frequently covered classic “You’ve Got A Friend,” and she notes in the SoundCloud description that the performance was her “first time recording while playing piano.” She also said the performance was recorded in one take, and she sounded like a natural on the simple but lovely recording.

This isn’t Clairo’s first take on somebody else’s song in recent days. In April, she took on Anna Domino’s “Everyday, I Don’t,” and in May, she performed Johnny Flynn’s “Brown Trout Blues.” She also participated in an all-star The 1975 tribute livestream and has guested on a Charli XCX livestream.

She has been getting some original music out there as well. She debuted an “Everything I Know” demo in March, and she also premiered a pair of new songs during a livestream festival.

Back in spring, she began a slew of tour dates supporting Tame Impala, but she didn’t get to conclude her run thanks to the coronavirus pandemic. Still, she managed to make a brief video diary about the experience.

Listen to Clairo cover “You’ve Got A Friend” above.

Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

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Teyana Taylor Is A Phone Sex Operator In Her Spike Lee-Inspired ‘1800-One-Night’ Video

For her last several music videos as director, Teyana Taylor has adopted the alias Spike Tey, a play on the stage name of famed Do The Right Thing director Spike Lee. In her latest video, the Harlem singer takes the parallel a step further, borrowing inspiration from her namesake’s 1996 comedy Girl 6 to tell the story of a group of comedic phone sex operators — which is only right for a song called “1800-One-Night.”

The video for “1800-One-Night” opens by giving each of Taylor’s “co-workers” a spotlight, showing how the reality of their mundane, office-bound desk jobs contrasts with the fantasy service they provide their customers. The girls read magazines, sip wine, paint their nails, and fake orgasms for their clients — although one gets really into her performance, decorating her desk with adult toys and sensuously downing a chocolate syrup-covered banana. Taylor takes over at the 2:18 mark, singing the song from her recently-released project The Album as the scene switches to depict her in a phone booth solo. The end of the video parodizes (or pays homage to) the late-night television commercials for phone services like the one depticted, before the camera again pulls back to show the filming of the commercial, as Teyana stumbles away from the shoot, declaring “I’m too pregnant for this sh*t!”

Watch Teyana Taylor’s ‘1800-One-Night’ video above.

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Japanese Whiskies To Help You Better Understand The Style This Fall

Japanese whisky is booming and has been for some time now — with an approach similar to that of Scotland, in that the main focus is on blends and single malts. But just because they spell “whisky” the same way, doesn’t mean that the Japanese and Scottish methods totally overlap. The climate, water, mashing, distilling, aging processes, and blending practices in Japan represent a wholly unique subset of whisky-making.

The main barrier to getting into Japanese whisky — especially living in the U.S. — is the price. Like scotch, the juice has to travel across oceans to land in the United States, where it’s then tariffed. That adds to the costs of production and the final sticker price. None of which is to imply you can’t get quality, inexpensive bottles of Japanese whisky. But it’s certainly harder than finding a solid bourbon on the cheap.

To help you take your first steps into the world of Japanese whisky, we thought we’d call out a few expressions we love. This list isn’t meant to be comprehensive. Think of it as a starter course. An overview so that you can get a taste of the blends, the single malts, and the special casks. Plus some of the pricey stuff thrown in at the end for good measure.

Hatozaki Japanese Blended Whisky

Drizly

ABV: 40%
Distillery: Kaikyo Distillery
Average Price: $40

The Whisky:

This whisky is named after the oldest lighthouse in Japan, which dates back to the 1600s. The juice is a blend of single malt and grain whiskies from Japan and abroad that are aged in ex-bourbon, ex-sherry, and Mizunara oak.

Tasting Notes:

You’re immediately met with floral notes and cherry next to a hint of lemon and orange. The sip has a real malt underbelly with a honey sweetness next to a whisper of oak that leads towards the finish. The malt sustains through the end as a hint of pear next to peach arrives late.

Bottom Line:

I enjoy sipping this one in a highball. It’s super fruity and works well as a late-summer thirst quencher. It also makes for a nice break from the headier (and heavier) American whiskeys out there.

Tenjaku Blended Whisky

Tenjaku

ABV: 40%
Distillery: Sourced Blend
Average Price: $45

The Whisky:

This is a fascinating blend that utilizes corn and barley with ex-bourbon barrels for aging. It’s not a bourbon by any stretch but uses that as an interesting touchstone.

Tasting Notes:

There’s a bit of a “blended” quality upfront on the warm nose next to hints of pear and dried fruits with a wisp of smoke. There’s a creaminess in the mix, too — with a stone fruit supporting note that leads towards a mild oakiness. That oak carries on as the fruit and cream fade out quickly.

Bottom Line:

This is definitely a highball whisky that works well with hard and very fizzy mineral water.

Nikka Coffey Grain Whisky

Nikka

ABV: 45%
Distillery: Nikka Whisky Distilling
Average Price: $70

The Whisky:

We’re already getting into the pricier side of things. But, we’d argue that this one is well worth the price tag. The “Coffey Grain” in this whisky refers to the Scottish Coffey stills and the corn “grain” mash bill.

Tasting Notes:

There’s a hint of bourbon vanilla on this nose but it’s a ghost. The real star of the show is the fruit — mango, banana, orange — next to a hint of sweet corn. The sip leans into the fruit with undercurrents of citrus followed by a bit of toffee. Finally, that hint of vanilla returns alongside the orange and toffee with a nice rush of oak on the semi-long end.

Bottom Line:

I love this one on the rocks. Though, a single rock in a dram works well, too.

Kamiki Cedar Cask Japanese Whisky

Kamiki

ABV: 48%
Distillery: Sourced Blend
Average Price: $70

The Whisky:

This is a fascinating dram. The blend is comprised of single malts from around Japan and hand-selected international single malts. The juice is then finished in yoshino-sugi barrels — that’s a Japanese cedar that imparts a big flavor profile into the whisky.

Tasting Notes:

This sip opens with a note of peat next to spicy baked apples cut with orange zest. More floral orange notes and stone fruit wind towards a mossy cedar forest on a rainy day. The oak kicks in late with a bit more of that initial spice as the wood becomes resinous and dry on the long finish.

Bottom Line:

This is an easy sipper with a rock or a little water. It’s also kind of magical in a cocktail with few ingredients.

Ohishi Whisky

Ohishi

ABV: 45%
Distillery: Ohishi Distillery
Average Price: $75

The Whisky:

In another departure, this single malt whisky is made from malted and unmalted rice. The mash bill is 30 percent gohyakumanishi rice that’s grown in the distillery’s own fields. The rest is Kumamoto mochi rice. The juice is then aged in ex-sherry casks. The final blend is a marrying of the 27-year-old, ten-year-old, and seven-year-old whiskies.

Tasting Notes:

There’s a definite rice liquor note up top next to a floral essence and an almost molasses sweetness. Those florals give way to nuttiness and a spicy edge that hints at salted black licorice. The end is longish with the spice hints lasting the longest.

Bottom Line:

This is an interesting enough dram to enjoy with a rock or some water. But it’s also really fascinating as a cocktail base with bitter and botanical mixers like Campari and sweet vermouth.

Hibiki Japanese Harmony

Suntory

ABV: 43%
Distillery: Yamazaki & Hakushu Distilleries (Beam Suntory)
Average Price: $90

The Whisky:

This blend marries the single malts from Suntory’s Yamazaki and Hakushu distilleries with a grain whisky from the famed Chita Distillery. The whiskies are aged in five types of oak, including the much-sought-after Mizunara. Finally, master blender Shingo Torii creates a blend that exemplifies Japanese whisky in a single bottle.

Tasting Notes:

That signature fruitiness of Japanese blends is on display from the first whiff with a focus on bright, tart berries and honey-soaked cinnamon apples, and a note of orange marmalade. All of that fruit carries on and adds juicy, sweet peaches before a spiciness kicks up a notch while a creaminess counterbalances the sip. The oak and spice carry on towards the end as a final hint of sweet toffee lingers on the slow fade.

Bottom Line:

This might be my favorite Japanese sipper on the list. Add a rock and watch the world go by.

The Matsui The Peated Single Malt

Matsui

ABV: 48%
Distillery: Kurayoshi Distillery
Average Price: $90

The Whisky:

This is a cool bottle visually (utilizing Hokusai’s “Great Wave”) and in taste. The peated malt is reminiscent of the Port Ellen Islays Scotch single malts with a Japanese essence and a bourbon barrel edge. All of that makes this a very unique dram to taste.

Tasting Notes:

Peat! There’s a very earthy and slightly funky peat note present next to billows of smoke and bready malts on the nose. A dash of bourbon vanilla arrives on the palate next to apples covered in spicy-yet-creamy caramel with plenty of oak and another dose of that peaty smoke. That peat lingers the longest as notes of apple and caramel drop in on the slow fade of this dram.

Bottom Line:

If you love the peat, this is the dram for you. Personally, it’s a little much for me — unless it’s in a highball.

Hakushu Aged 12 Years

Suntory

ABV: 43%
Distillery: Hakushu Distillery (Beam Suntory)
Average Price: $150

The Whisky:

Okay, we had to include one stellar, albeit spendy bottle to cap off this list. Hakushu 12 is a sort of Japanese highland whisky made in the pine forests near the Japanese “Alps.” The juice is a combination of three whiskies produced at Hakushu: A non-peated whisky aged in ex-bourbon, another non-peated whisky aged in ex-sherry, and a peated whisky aged in American oak.

Tasting Notes:

This sip is grassy, nutty, floral, and slightly bitter on the nose. The dram then leans into ripe yet tart fruits, lemon citrus, and a herbal tea note while a wisp of smoke and an undertow of creaminess arrive. A fresh ginger spice arrives with a note of orange zest as the sip quickly fades away with a final floral note.

Bottom Line:

This is a solid once-a-year celebration whisky to have on hand. Pour one for you and a loved one with a little water or ice and enjoy it slowly.

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Tyler The Creator’s Latest Jeni’s Ice Cream Flavor Collaboration Is ‘Pluto Bleu’

Tyler The Creator and Jeni’s Splendid Ice Cream are once again teaming up for a flavor collaboration after the success of their previous collaboration, the two-toned “Snowflake” flavor, in 2019. The new flavor is “Pluto Bleu,” a color-contrasting combination of blood orange and tropical blueberry. The collaboration between Tyler’s Golf Le Fleur and Jeni’s will be available in a pint carton designed by Tyler himself beginning online September 17 at 9am PT and nationwide September 21 at Jeni’s locations. Fans can also purchase Tyler’s Picks, a four-pack of flavors including Pluto Bleu and three of Tyler’s favorite flavors.

Tyler’s 2020 has otherwise been relatively quiet. Aside from remixing La Roux’s “Automatic Driver,” he hasn’t put out much music — although he apparently has been making some, as suggested by Pusha T this spring. Tyler did win big at the 2020 Grammy Awards, taking home a golden grammophone for Best Rap Album, despite calling it a “backhanded compliment” from the Academy.

It seems likely that — like many artists’ plans in 2020 — Tyler’s designs for the year were derailed by the onset of a global pandemic, as well as a wave of social justice uprisings which escalated in some cases to acts of vandalism. Tyler’s own store in Los Angeles was one of those damaged during protests, but Tyler himself didn’t sweat it, saying “this is bigger than getting some glass fixed and buffing spray paint off.” Clearly, working on his new flavor with Jeni’s Splendid Ice Cream helped him keep his cool.

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Taco Bell Has A Wine Called Jalepeño Noir That They Want You To Pair With A Chalupa

On Monday, Taco Bell announced that beginning this week the chain would roll out their first official wine, dubbed Jalapeño Noir and — Wait a minute… Really? Is this why the 7-Layer Burrito and the Mexican Pizza had to die, so Taco Bell could throw their hat into the wine space?!

Well… whatever. This year has us absolutely fried anyway.

Jalapeño Noir, which is a 2018 Pinor Noir and not, as the name would suggest, a Jalapeño infused wine, will be releasing exclusively in the Canadian Taco Bell market beginning September 16th, according to Food & Wine, alongside Taco Bell Canada’s Toasted Cheesy Chalupa.

“The rich taste and crunchy texture of the beloved Toasted Cheesy Chalupa complement notes of wild strawberry, cherry, and beetroot in this silky red wine,” a spokesperson for Taco Bell told Insider. The Cheesy Chalupa features melted, aged cheddar cheese toasted on a chalupa shell with seasoned beef, lettuce, tomatoes, cheese, and sour cream. It’s tough to say if it really will taste good alongside a glass of Jalapeño Noir because who in the world would think to try that?

For the most part, Taco Bell fans on the internet seem pretty psyched about the announcement, but remember, they’re still reeling from the loss of the Mexican Pizza.

The Pinot Noir is produced by Ontario Canada’s Queenston Mile Vineyard and will be priced at $25 CAD ($19 USD) and sold with three different labels to encourage collecting. (“Hello fellow wine collector, is that a silver label Jalapeño Noir from 2018? That’s Pandemic Era, m’boy, it’s worth a fortune!”)

To pick up a bottle, hit up the Canadian Taco Bell website or select locations in Canada, or via UberEats.

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Pitchfork Will Livestream The Best Pitchfork Music Festival Performances Of The Last 15 Years

The 2020 edition of the Pitchfork Music Festival may have been one of the casualities of pandemic safety cancelations, but that doesn’t mean we have to miss out on the fest entirely. On Saturday, September 26, Pitchfork will have a special screening of the Best Of Pitchfork Music Festival which will include both a drive-in in Los Angeles and a livestream on Pitchfork’s website and YouTube channel. The performances were selected from 15 years of the festival, with 100% of the proceeds benefitting the Movement For Black Lives. The stream will also feature a button to donate.

Performances will include appearances from Angel Olsen, Big Thief, Blood Orange, Carly Rae Jepsen Charli XCX, Danny Brown, FKA Twigs, Grimes, Jamila Woods, Kamasi Washington, LCD Soundsystem, Mitski, Perfume Genius, Rico Nasty, Robyn, Run the Jewels, Sleater-Kinney, Solange, and Wilco, with a live DJ performance from A-Trak. The flyer also promises surprise guests, which could be just about anyone with this festival’s eclectic history.

Pitchfork

The livestream is set to begin at 7pm ET while the live screenings will take place at Los Angeles’ Hotel Figueroa at 7pm and 9:45pm PT. Masks will be required. Tickets for the screenings can be purchased here. For more information, visit Pitchfork.com.

Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

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‘The Falcon And The Winter Soldier’ Is Filming Again With A ‘Social Distancing’ Photo From Sebastian Stan

Where there’s a will, as they say, there’s gotta be a way. The Disney+ Marvel Cinematic Universe shows are getting back in motion with WandaVision reportedly still on track for the planned December release. Sebastian Stan is also back as Bucky with the Short Hair on the Atlanta set of Falcon and the Winter Soldier. He’s joined (according to set photos posted by JustJared) by Emily Van Camp (as Sharon Carter/Agent 13) and Georges St-Pierre (as returning villain Batroc the Leaper).

Of course, there’s enjoyment to be had on the set amid the pandemic worries. Anthony Mackie’s Falcon has arrived and is doing his cigar-smoking thing. Stan captured this essence while posting a photo of his own exaggerated stance with this caption: “Friends. Social distancing since November ’19.”

The photo has prompted some speculation that Mackie might be wearing new Captain America digs, although that hasn’t been confirmed. The black-and-white nature of this photo doesn’t help much in that department, but it’s definitely noteworthy that Daniel Brühl returns for this show as Baron Zemo, and we’re once again going to see Cap nemesis Baltroc following his appearance in Captain America: The Winter Soldier. The series will be a limited one, planned for six one-hour episodes.

As of now, there’s been no revised release date for The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, but ideally, the rest of production will go off without the kind of hitch that struck Warner Bros.’ The Batman a few weeks ago.