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Open Mike Eagle Laces Up His ‘Gold Gloves’ For Battle On Mello Music Group’s New Compilation

Iron sharpens iron. That’s why Open Mike Eagle, Oddisee, and the rest of Mello Music Group are practicing their Bushido on a new compilation album from the independent rap label coming out in April. Featuring production from the likes of Apollo Brown, The Alchemist, L’Orange, The Lasso, and more, and vocal appearances from Homeboy Sandman, Joell Ortiz, Murs, and Stalley, the compilation assembles some of rap’s best underground spitters, with the friendly competition bringing out their best.

Ahead of the release, MMG (heh) has shared a new track featuring Open Mike Eagle and The Lasso titled “Gold Gloves.” The track, produced by The Lasso on “a glitched-out Moog,” finds Open Mike lyrically shadowboxing, describing the process of getting focused for an upcoming fight while reflecting on the toll previous battles have left on him.

The Bushido compilation arrives in Mello Music Group’s tenth year of operation. The description for the project on Bandcamp positions the label as a band of the last samurai in rap, “religiously devoted to the upholding of standards and values.”

Bushido is due 4/2 via Mello Music Group. You can pre-order it here. See the tracklist below.

1. “Iron Steel Samurai” (feat. Quelle Chris & The Alchemist)
2. “Gold Gloves” (feat. Open Mike Eagle & The Lasso)
3. “One of the Last” (feat. Marlowe)
4. “Yours Truly” (feat. Homeboy Sandman & Kensaye Russell)
5. “No Trouble” (feat. Oddisee)
6. “Gwan B Ok” (feat. Zackey Force Funk & The Lasso)
7. “Ta-Nehesi The Vocals” (feat. Skyzoo & L’Orange)
8. “Symbol of Hope” (feat. Open Mike Eagle, Namir Blade & Elaquent)
9. “Never Lived” (feat. Oddisee)
10. “None” (feat. Homeboy Sandman & Iman Omari)
11. “Bane Brain” (feat. James Shahan & Quelle Chris)
12. “Black Rock” (feat. Joell Ortiz, Namir Blade, Stalley & Solemn Brigham) 05:08
13. “Outlast” (feat. Dueling Experts, Joell Ortiz & Apollo Brown)
14. “Black Man” (feat. RJ Payne & Apollo Brown)
15. “Turnt Garveyite” (feat. Murs & Georgia Anne Muldrow)
16. “Nightmare” (feat. Cambatta & Apollo Brown)
17. “Rap” (feat. Homeboy Sandman & Eric Lau)
18. “You To Me” (feat. Oddisee)
19. “ZeroFux” (feat. B-Real, Kool Keith, Joell Ortiz & Nottz)
20. “Banners” (feat. The Perceptionists & !llmind)

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Here Is Your 2021 Men’s NCAA Tournament Betting Guide

While the loss of the 2020 NCAA Tournament wasn’t No. 1 on the list of travesties over the last 12 months, it was excruciating for both die-hard college basketball observers and casual fans that regularly engage with March Madness. As such, there is pent-up demand for the majesty that is the tournament and, in particular, the frenzy that accompanies the first weekend of action.

Some of that energy will be assigned to bracket pools or simple basketball enjoyment. Others will have vested interests in the game-by-game action, though, with the ability to wager on each and every contest from midday until the dead of night.

This space will be dedicated to those will be tracking every single dribble through the handicapping lens, with some futures, leans and genuine plays to unleash in the coming days. Before unveiling our selections, a reminder is probably in order that, well, you don’t have to handicap and/or wager on all 48 games in the first four days. It’s okay to pass a few times.

Anyway, here is our smattering of options as we spray the board with delight.

All odds via DraftKings, though line shopping is encouraged.

Futures/Props

  • Big Ten OVER 5.5 teams to the Round of 32 (excluding NJ teams, i.e. Rutgers) — The Big Ten enters with four teams (Michigan, Illinois, Iowa and Ohio State) that are pretty large favorites as top-two seeds. From there, you need two more teams to win their openers to get home for this bet. Purdue is the biggest remaining favorite as a 4-seed and, if they can hold serve, you only need one more. Wisconsin is a coin flip against North Carolina, and I might even lean to the Badgers. We can’t use Rutgers (New Jersey!), but Michigan State has a tangible chance to win both its First Four matchup and its next game to advance. Finally, Maryland is a small dog, but certainly is in a winnable spot. I think the right side is on the Over, and seven teams isn’t out of the question.
  • Will a No. 13 seed win a game in the Round of 64? NO (+145) — I wouldn’t like this at even money, but we’re getting some positive juice. I like this crop of No. 4 seeds, almost more than the No. 3 group. Oklahoma State has arguably the best player in the tournament in Cade Cunningham. Virginia is Virginia. Florida State may be under-seeded, and I think Purdue holds serve.
  • USC to make Sweet 16 (+150) — KenPom has USC at 41.0 percent to make the second weekend. If that number is accurate, this is great value, and I buy it. USC’s first round matchup is pretty soft against either Drake or Wichita State, and they’re likely to play a short-handed Kansas team in round two. I wouldn’t bet this at even money, and value matters, but this is a good price.
  • Houston to make the Elite 8 (-134) — I think Houston is being underrated because they aren’t from a major conference. I’m not a buyer of Rutgers or Clemson in round two and, while West Virginia and San Diego State are both fully capable of toppling Houston, the Cougars are No. 6 in KenPom and will a solid favorite over either opponent. Give me Kelvin Sampson’s team.
  • Gonzaga to win the title (+205) — Yes, this is as square as square gets. I also think this is a good price. At +205, the Zags have implied odds of 32.79% to win the title. That might seem high, but I’d put it closer to 40 percent. They are very, very good, and their draw to the Final Four is soft enough to make this even more appealing.

Five leans

  • Grand Canyon (+15) over Iowa — Grand Canyon isn’t great on offense, and that’s the concern here. Iowa is going to score. They score on everyone. This is still a lot of points for the Hawkeyes to be laying against a pretty competent No. 15 seed, and Iowa also might pedal off late.
  • Abilene Christian (+9.5) over Texas — Texas should win this game, and I’m not saying otherwise. I think this line is a touch high, though, in part because Abilene Christian is a legitimately good defensive team. The Wildcats lead the country in turnover creation, with a top-15 mark in effective field goal percentage allowed, and this is a substantial number for the Longhorns to cover.
  • Oral Roberts (+15.5) over Ohio State — Oral Roberts can, and will, get buckets. This isn’t going to be a fun sweat because Oral Roberts also can’t get stops. However, a deeper look at Ohio State’s profile is enough to send me to the other side, even against a one-sided opponent.
  • Wisconsin (+1.5) over North Carolina — Has anyone picked against North Carolina here? Let me be the first. Wisconsin isn’t a lot of fun to watch, and this game is a serious stylistic clash, but the Badgers will take care of the ball, maximize possessions and make things difficult on the Heels.
  • Colorado (-5) over Georgetown — The Hoyas are an awesome story led by Patrick Ewing, and they are VERY trendy here. I’ll just remind you that Georgetown was quite mediocre this season, and Colorado is a darling of analytical models. This is a pretty small number.

Five plays

  • Drake (PK) over Wichita State — Drake hasn’t been fantastic lately, and Wichita State is the bigger name brand. This line is off as a result. Drake also has one of its best players returning in Shanquan Hemphill, and the Bulldogs should be favored. This isn’t as juicy as it was earlier in the week when +2 was available, but it’s still the right side.
  • Tennessee (-7.5) over Oregon State — I don’t like to bet favorites. I’ll admit that. Tennessee is the side in this game. The Vols have been pretty disappointing and Oregon State is “hot” after winning the Pac-12. This number should be 10, and Tennessee has considerably more talent all over the floor.
  • Villanova (-6) over Winthrop — I promise. I don’t like favorites. This is another “line too low” spot, and it is because of how Villanova has fared without Collin Gillespie. That is certainly a concern, but Villanova is 10 or 11-point favorite in terms of a raw power rating, and Winthrop is exceptionally trendy. This is a rare public underdog, and I’ll take the other side.
  • St. Bonaventure (+1.5) over LSU — Everyone saw LSU take Alabama to the final buzzer in the SEC title game. Everyone also knows that LSU is the more talented team, with a bunch of high-major recruits. The Bonnies are the better team statistically, though, and it also appeals to me that no one in the world is on them. This one’s for Woj and Tim Bontemps.
  • UC Santa Barbara (+7) over Creighton — Most of the analysis of this game, at least on the side that we’re on, is focused on fading Creighton. That doesn’t hurt, but UCSB is 18-1 in the last 19 games. This is a good, balanced basketball team, and this line should probably be about 4.5 or 5.
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Zack Snyder Has Revealed How Jared Leto Ad-Libbed His Infamous Line From The ‘Snyder Cut’ Trailer

(SPOILERS for Zack Snyder’s Justice League cut will be found below.)

When fans finally got their first look at Jared Leto’s new look for the Joker in a trailer for Zack Snyder’s Justice League, they absolutely lost their mind when Leto brought a Joker meme to life by saying the line, “We live in a society.” While it was just assumed that Snyder included the clever nod to internet culture given his prolific use of social media (the director has been a non-stop machine hosting virtual screenings and fan Q&As during the pandemic), Snyder has revealed that it was actually Leto who came up with the idea on the spot.

“We went back and forth a bit, and I’ll give Jared credit for that little ad-lib there, because it was really, really beautiful,” Snyder told The Hollywood Reporter. However, as fans are slowly learning now that the Snyder Cut has finally been released, the “We live in a society” line does not appear in the final film and was only included in the trailer, which makes sense when you think about it. Leto’s Joker appears in a Knightmare scene that takes place in apocalyptic future where Darkseid has successfully invaded Earth and turned Superman evil with the Anti-Life Equation. There’s no longer a society to live in because Darkseid destroyed it.

While Snyder offered a fans their first glimpse of the Knightmare world in Batman V Superman, he had always wanted to include a second trip to that world that included a meet-up between Ben Affleck’s Batman and Leto’s Joker. Snyder was so dead-set on making the scene, that at one point, he was just going to shoot it in his backyard. Via The New York Times:

“Jared and I had a bunch of conversations about it. I had mentioned it to Ben and I was like, Ben, let’s just do it at my house. I could shoot it in the backyard. Don’t tell the studio and I’m not going to pay you guys. I’m just going to shoot it myself.”

Fortunately, Warner Bros. got on board with the Leto scene, and Snyder was able to shoot the Knightmare sequence late last year. However, due to scheduling issues, Leto and Affleck were unable to film together, so their long-awaited meet-up is the work of some very careful editing.

(Via The Hollywood Reporter)

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The Coachella And Stagecoach Festivals Are Reportedly Being Pushed Back To 2022

Coachella is one of the world’s biggest music festivals, but the last time an iteration of the event was actually hosted was April 2019. Since then, the pandemic has forced the fest — along with its country-oriented counterpart Stagecoach — to be postponed multiple times. Now it appears that is happening again: Variety reports that according to “two industry sources with knowledge of the situation,” that Coachella is moving from April 2021 to April 2022. Additionally, Stagecoach, which traditionally takes place the weekend after Coachella’s two weekends, will be similarly postponed.

As Variety notes, if this move is official, this will be the fourth set of dates the festival has had: First April 2020, then October 2020, then April 2021, and now April 2022. There were previously reports that the festival was pushed back to October 2021, although that news was never confirmed by promoters.

So far, most of the news about music festivals has been regarding cancellations and postponements. Events that have changed plans this year include Glastonbury, Boston Calling, and Primavera Sound. There are some silver linings, though. At the start of the year, Governors Ball declared its intention to host its 2021 festival in September. Life Is Beautiful is also set for September and organizers announced this year’s lineup last week.

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Peacock Is Making Every Episode Of ‘The Office’ Available For Free (But Only For A Short Time)

On the first day of the year, The Office moved from its long-time home on Netflix to Peacock, NBCUniversal’s streaming service. The first two seasons (including classic episodes like “The Dundies,” “Office Olympics,” and “Casino Night”) were available for subscribers through a free tier, but the rest of the series was behind a paywall. Meaning, if you wanted to watch “Beach Games,” “Dinner Party,” or “Threat Level Midnight,” you had to sign up for Peacock Premium ($4.99/month) or the ad-free Peacock Premium Plus ($9.99). But for the next week, you can watch every episode for free.

Variety reports that Peacock is “is making all nine seasons of original series — plus special episodes and behind-the-scenes clips — available for free starting March 18, for one week, to users in the U.S. The promo is timed to the 16th anniversary of The Office, which bowed on NBC on March 24, 2005, as a midseason replacement.” It replaced the little-remembered Committed in the Thursday at 9:30 p.m. EST time slot. (NBC’s 2004-2005 schedule was wild: Father of the Pride, Average Joe: The Joes Strike Back, I Want to Be a Hilton — none of which, I assume, are available on Peacock.)

The free streaming content will includes new “Superfan Episodes” that include never-before-seen footage and deleted scenes in extended cuts of the original series, beginning with season three. On Peacock, Dunder Mifflin fans also can access behind-the-scenes footage like bloopers, featurettes, and interviews; curated themed episode collections; and clip playlists chronicling memorable pranks, relationships, teams, and favorite quotes

I’d be curious to see how many Peacock subscribers head straight to the Robert California seasons. “Michael Scott is great and all, but he’s no Lizard King…” I would also be very concerned for anyone who does this.

(Via Variety)

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Britney Spears Will File Yet Another Petition To Try To Get A New Conservator

Britney Spears and her legal team have spent a lot of time in court in recent years as Spears has tried to make it so her father isn’t her sole conservator. Once again, Spears and her team are heading back to court, as it is being reported that her attorney Samuel D. Ingham plans to file a petition to request that Jodi Montgomery, who was previously Spears’ conservator in a temporary capacity, become a full-time conservator for Spears.

In a brief hearing on Wednesday, Ingham told the court he intended to file a petition to bring Montgomery on as a permanent conservator. NBC News notes that “based on the short statement [Ingham] made in court,” the pending petition does not seem intended to remove Spears’ father, Jamie Spears, from his role as conservator, but to make Montgomery a co-conservator. The petition is set to be reviewed in an April 27 hearing.

Since the airing of the recent Framing Britney Spears documentary, Spears has received public messages of support from people like Dua Lipa and Kim Kardashian, the latter of whom related her own negative experiences with fame to Spears’.

Dua Lipa is a Warner Music artist. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

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Zack Snyder’s Four-Hour Justice League Is Still Chasing The Mirage Of The Superhero Team-Up

(Editor’s Note: This post contains what may consider to be spoilers.)

Back in 2017, director Zack Snyder was forced to step down as the director of Justice League during post production after the death of his daughter. Joss Whedon, who had already been working with Snyder on rewrites, took over the project, doing massive reshoots for the film, which was eventually Frankensteined together and released, in 120-minute form, in November 2017.

Even before he left the project, WB was desperate to “lighten the tone” of Snyder’s version after Batman V Superman bombed. Zack Snyder is an occasionally flawed thinker (see: Sucker Punch) but for whatever his faults and tendency to be little overwrought, he could shoot a pretty picture (the JFK assassination sequence in Watchmen still stands out as an all-time great bit of visual exposition). By contrast, Joss Whedon, with his bright, flatly lit superhero sitcoms, seemed like society’s perfect punishment for deciding that we were all getting a little sick of Zack Snyder’s epic grimdark operatic bullshit. “Oh, is this too self-serious for you? Well, what if every character talked like they had a Tumblr blog?

Whedon and Snyder are almost each other’s perfect foils, and in trying to combine both of their contributions in a movie that didn’t run more than two hours, WB initially gave the world something mind-numbingly dull. DC superfans — and just as in politics, comic book movies are dominated by two bland, shitty-in-slightly-different-ways corporate superbrands with their own inexplicably rabid fanbases — have been crying foul ever since.

After years of niche whining via Twitter hashtags, finally, in a coup for… I don’t know… something… WB spent $70 million to complete this week’s new Snyder Cut, aka Zack Snyder’s Justice League, which runs a full four hours, giving “fans” (which these days seems to be used mostly to indicate psychosis) all the superhero action they thought they wanted, with a plot about superheroes rushing around trying to close a portal that was already stale four years ago. If Joss Whedon was society’s punishment for not appreciating Zack Snyder, Zack Snyder’s Justice League is society’s punishment for wanting Zack Snyder’s Justice League.

The original cut of Justice League was so punishingly pointless that watching it felt like standing on the shore while a stranger on a boat played the film on a small television set miles offshore. While I’d love to get deep in the weeds of a discussion of the two versions’ respective merits, I remember about as much of the first as I do my own birth. Even at four hours, this version maintains a level of mildly entertaining that the first never found (unless I blocked it out, which is possible). Still, I prefer DC’s Justice League to Marvel’s The Avengers, on account of there are fewer of them.

Yes, there are still the jarring tone shifts, when scenes that feel heavily-Snyder influenced slam into ones that feel especially Whedon-y. In that context, Whedon’s self-referential quippyness, in which characters deliver observational anti-wit like “Wow… so that just happened” and “okay, I’m guessing that’s the bad guy” does feel like the greater anachronism. The best thing Zack Snyder’s Justice League could do is serve as a requiem for comic book heroes talking like their fans.

Yet the existence of this movie at all speaks to a broader failure of the cultural imagination. Our imagination, or at least the current structure of the cultural production machine, is so limited that the best we can do is redesign the seating on this train to nowhere. Superhero team-up movies exist for no creative purpose other than to milk their fanbase’s most infantile urges. Most people learn by the age of 10 that combining all the different sodas into one cup creates a sweet but muddled concoction that even to a child lacks the character and nuance of the individual iterations. And for a good ten years it seemed all the best minds and deepest pockets in the entertainment industry were dedicated to discovering the best and tastiest way to mix up this narrative suicide. The biggest question Zack Snyder’s Justice League raises is, can this be the last one? Please?

To put a finer point on it, WB spent $70 million remaking a $300 million flop, which retains almost all of the flaws of the original and of the concept in general. In order for superhuman beings to have to team up to fight for good, there needs to be an evil powerful enough to require it. It’s bloat that attempts to justify further bloat, like the US defense budget.

Just as The Avengers had Thanos, the Justice League has Darkseid, and his minion Steppenwolf, who spends most of the movie magic carpet riding around the Earth in search of “The Mother Boxes” (lol). Which, when combined will, Infinity Stones-like, create something called “The Unity,” ushering in an age of darkness and forever scorching “DON’T FORGET TO DRINK YOUR OVALTINE” onto the surface of the sun or something. The short version is that there’s going to be a big portal and the gang has to destroy it.

It’s incredible that in a multi-verse of infinite possibility we constantly end up with the same thing over and over again. Or maybe it isn’t incredible, maybe it’s perfectly predictable considering the same small handful of guys keep directing all of these movies. JJ Abrams has directed both Star Trek and Star Wars. Joss Whedon has directed both The Avengers and Justice League. Coke, Pepsi, Oreo, Hydrox; let’s call the whole thing off.

Steppenwolf looks like an 80s metal band’s drawing of Satan covered in chrome knives, whose powers and weaknesses seem vague and contradictory. He lacks Thanos’ coherent motive but has the same daddy issues, and Snyder’s battle scenes do have a certain flair for gory visuals (beheadings, impalings, crushed skulls) that the Marvel Universe lacks. Someone even says the F-word at some point. But discussing the relative merits of each feels like falling into the classic team-up superhero movie trap. Don’t make me argue about which one is better, the fact remains: I don’t want this.

Justice League is at its best when I can forget what it actually is. It’s all based on the premise that bigger superhero battles are better, and there’s actually nothing more dull than giant CGI battle scenes. The bigger they get the duller they become, a lesson that should’ve been clear from the diminishing returns of the Lord Of The Rings trilogy. At four hours, there are long stretches of ZSJL that thankfully aren’t that, but we all know what they’re building to and why this movie exists. Death, taxes, giant portals.

Even on a micro-level these movies tend to triangulate into bland sameness. Quicksilver is famously the cyberpunk fast guy in the later X-Men movies (a Marvel character who is part of what used to be the Fox universe of superhero movies, for reasons I’m absolutely not willing to lay out here). Justice League‘s answer to Quicksilver is The Flash, played in a constant nasal-camp whine by Ezra Miller, who stands out as the most miscast of Justice League‘s principals, who are all miscast to varying degrees, with the exception of Jason Momoa’s delightful hard-drinking Polynesian surf bro Aquaman. That was clever casting that allowed for some interesting creative decisions.

There’s also Cyborg, played by Ray Fisher, who on paper is the man-robot hybrid created by a Defense Department scientist from the Mother Box and his dying football star son, but in practice is basically just DC’s Iron Man, complete with rocket hands and transforming face shield. The scientist, incidentally, is played by Joe Morton, who famously tried to stop the machines from becoming self-aware in Terminator 2. He failed, both in that movie and on a meta level.

Where was I? Who even knows. Anyway, there’s a big portal and Superman comes back to life and hordes of faceless evil guys who look like flying mosquitos get slaughtered. The world is saved, but then a bunch of other characters appear, like the Martian Manhunter and Jared Leto’s Joker, the latter appearing in a dream, teasing future tie-ins that with any luck won’t actually ever happen. God willing, this will be the last ever superhero team-up movie. I wouldn’t count on it though. Even when it’s a relative improvement over its predecessor, it’s still pop-culture slurry for babies.

‘Zack Snyder’s Justice League’ hits HBO Max March 18th. Vince Mancini is on Twitter. You can access his archive of reviews here.

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It Seems Billie Eilish Has Been Hiding Her New Blonde Hair For Weeks With A Green Wig

Prior to Billie Eilish’s internet-breaking blonde hair reveal yesterday, there had been theories floating around that Eilish was wearing a green wig to hide her new hair color. Fans pointed to the fact that Eilish has been wearing a lot of headbands, hats, and other hairline-obscuring things in recent appearances, like on The Late Show in February and at the Grammys last weekend. Eilish even said directly back in December that she would be changing her hair soon.

Now it seems Eilish has confirmed the wig rumors in a new TikTok video, in which she lifts a green wig off her head and laughs.

Eilish’s hairstylist Lissa Renn also talked about Eilish’s hair in some new Instagram posts. She wrote in one, “So proud & honored! Billie has been a client of ours 6+ years now, so fun to watch her grow and evolve as an artist and woman. I am incredibly grateful for her trust in me to create her new style & the beginning of a new era!” She added in another now-deleted post that Eilish’s new look has been in the works for weeks, writing, “The process is real when you’re doing it right. 6 weeks to get all the black out of her ends without damaging it, along with her following my strict haircare regime. We actually loved all the stages of lifting the color too but the end result is [fire emojis].”

Eilish’s new hair has certainly made quite the impression. It took just six minutes for her photo of it to reach a million likes on Instagram. As of this post, Eilish’s post has about 17.3 million likes. That makes it the sixth most-liked Instagram post of all time, which is beyond impressive considering it’s been less than 24 hours since Eilish shared the photo.

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Seth Meyers Did An Eerily Good Tucker Carlson Impression While Mocking The Fox News Host For Spreading Anti-Vaxx Misinformation

Jon Stewart called him a “terrible, terrible person.” John Oliver said he “couldn’t be more ethnically white than if he jizzed mayonnaise.” And now it’s Seth Meyers’ turn to make fun of Tucker Carlson. On Wednesday’s episode of Late Night, Meyers took aim at Carlson “leading the anti-vaxx right,” who recently said that it “turns out there are things we don’t know about the effects of this vaccine — and all vaccines, by the way. It’s always a trade-off.” (Oliver recently broke down how good he is at this fake innocence.)

“There seems to be some tension at Fox over whether Trump deserves credit for this miraculous medical breakthrough that will save the world, or whether the vaccines are actually part of a sinister plot to do… something bad, it’s not clear what,” Meyers said. “But don’t worry, Human Catamaran Tucker Carlson is on the case.” After doing an eerily good impression of the Fox News host, Meyers continued, “All these questions have already been answered. You could save yourself the trouble of writing your nightly monologue by just using Google. But maybe he doesn’t know how. That would explain why he always looks like Templeton the rat trying to read Charlotte’s web.”

Meyers called it “necessary to take the vaccine if, say, you’re not Tucker Carlson and you can’t do your cushy TV job from the safety of your studio bubble, where I’m certain no one is allowed within six feet of you even when there isn’t a pandemic because they might accidentally make eye contact with and have their souls devoured.”

You can watch the Late Night with Seth Meyers clip above.

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Jeff Van Gundy Had To Toss His Cat Off Of Him While Calling Clippers-Mavs

Pets have become far more present in the work lives of Americans this year, as the pandemic has forced many to work from home where cats, dogs, and other animals roam and don’t understand the difference between you being at home and off and you being at work on your computer. As such, those pets are rather frequent intruders into the now-ubiquitous video calls many have to be on for work.

Usually, that just means only your coworkers have to hear dogs barking or see a cat stroll across the screen, but when you’re Jeff Van Gundy calling a Clippers-Mavs game from home office and your cat decides it’s time for attention, it means the entire NBA viewing public gets introduced to “Neetzy” (or maybe a mispronounced Nietzsche) — who is a “good boy,” per Van Gundy — before you can quickly try to discard him from your desk.

It was a funny moment and Jeff used it to shoutout all four of his cats, who he apparently is tasked with feeding during halftime to try and prevent such intrusions. The best part is he never broke stride calling the game despite having to toss his cat off the desk, a move of a veteran cat owner who is accustomed to their unwillingness to accept boundaries.