Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

Jon M. Chu On Why ‘In The Heights’ Is ‘The Vaccine For The Soul’

Little did Jon M. Chu realize when he was making In the Heights – based on the 2008 Broadway smash by Quiara Alegría Hudes and Lin-Manuel Miranda – what this movie would truly mean. Of course there was always going to be meaning in what it means to the communities who live in Washington Heights (for those not familiar with New York City, that would refer to a neighborhood in the upper west corner of Manhattan), but there’s been, let’s say, an expansion of meaning.

After over a year of countless declarations that New York City was dead (and, look, I speak from experience, there were some pretty dicey moments) here comes In the Heights, a movie that is so full of life, featuring countless people dancing in the streets, that I do believe it could single-handedly bring New York City back all on its own. Hyperbole aside, there is something to be said about this movie coming out at this time. At the very least, as vaccination rates increase and infection rates plummet, it does look like a prelude to what this summer has in store for us all.

Oh course, Chu didn’t know he was making that kind of movie. Nor would he wanted to have known that, but ahead, he explains how this once Broadway hit about a “slice of life,” up in the heights, is now poised to make us all feel like dancing in the streets. Or, as he puts it: a vaccine for the soul. And Chu, who directed G.I. Joe: Retaliation, tells us what he said to Henry Golding after Chu’s Crazy Rich Asians star was cast as Snake-Eyes, and what that means in the big picture.

There’s no way you could’ve known while you were making it, but now In the Heights feels like a movie that’s welcoming back this city that went through a pretty tough year, if that makes sense.

It makes total sense. We went in there to make a movie about surviving, and healing, and moving forward. To try to communicate what it feels like to have grown up there, like Lin and Quiara. To understand what it feels like to feel powerless. And who you turn to but your community and your family? Cut to the pandemic and it feels like the world caught up with Washington Heights – what it feels like to feel powerless. Who do you turn to when God unplugs the electricity? You turn to your closest people and you take care of each other.

But at the same time, how do you get back up? This movie, it’s the vaccine for the soul, as we say. But I think healing, now, doesn’t just resonate as a way to communicate a specific neighborhood, but it communicates to us all that this was all essential human feelings that we could have all felt in any situation. We just all had to go through it in a pandemic.

It’s interesting what you just said about community, because back in March of 2020, when things were starting to go downhill really quickly in New York, we decided to stay here to at least support local places. And it probably didn’t have much impact that just two people stayed, but that really hit me with this movie…

Totally. And in a way Usnavi says it to Vanessa when everything’s shut down, “With all the things that have been going down, I’ve been thinking about the people that I care about the most, and I thought about you.” I think we all just went through that.

What was your feeling when it got delayed? Were you thinking it might only be a couple of months?

Yeah, well, we knew it was a summer movie. You’ve got to watch this, be outdoors, and be with your friends, and strangers, and all that stuff. When it got pushed, we were like, well, where did we push it? Do we do a streaming? Do we not? Here’s where I thought a lot about this, and I banged my head against the wall a lot. But at the end of the day, I remember in Crazy Rich Asians, by releasing in the movie theater, what it meant. It meant there was a whole bunch of money that a giant corporation was spending to market these actors. To market this community and say they’re worth your time and your money. Yes, you have to pay for it. Yes, you have to go find parking. Yes, you have to go sit in the dark with strangers. But guess what: You’re going to appreciate the people, you’re going to love these people, you’re going to root for them, you’re going to want that food, you’re going to listen to that music.

We saw what happened with the actors of Crazy Rich Asians, that they then starred in other movies and became bigger stars, because they had lanes to go in. To me, the big impact of making movie stars, it wasn’t just about a movie. That’s what I would have missed in this. But by pushing it a year, we didn’t know where it was going to end up, so we knew, we just threw the dice, we’d get that opportunity. Who knows if it’s actually going to happen? But I know that the actors are ready, they are stars, they are going to lead on whole new lanes.

You mentioned your actors becoming stars. Well Henry Golding is now going the G.I. Joe route with Snake Eyes, a franchise you have much experience with. Have you talked to him about that?

Of course, I have a Snake-Eyes skateboard. As soon as he got it, I was like, “Bro, it’s yours now, and don’t mess it up.” How amazing is that? That he’s doing that. And, by the way, Anthony Ramos is now the lead of a Transformers movie. Lorenzo di Bonaventura has taken all my stars! But I love that. That’s the whole goal, is you make a star. Kim Kardashian, she defined the different type of beauty that changed a whole landscape. So, someone who looks like Kim Kardashian at a high school looks like that. You’re like, “Wow, she’s a star.” Same thing with Leo DiCaprio, not the traditional beauty but a lot of people look like that. So, media defines what beauty is. And so Henry Golding, someone who looks like Henry is like, “Wow, that guy’s a stud.” And someone like Anthony Ramos. That’s so powerful, and maybe not change the world, but maybe it changes a couple of people. Maybe it changes a little bit of the language that we’re able to do in a movie.

I’m trying to imagine a scenario where someone told you, while you were making In the Heights, “Hey, this will be one of the first big things after the worst experience earth has gone through in a while. Good luck.”

Yeah, I think that’s a benefit of shooting the moon. We already built a rocket ship, so they’re just trying to get somewhere. You got some engine to take you somewhere, it’s been… Yeah, I’m glad, thank God I didn’t know before. In the end, we were just telling this little story with truthful, big dreams and hopes. That’s timeless, that could be done now, that could be done in ten years and feel relevant.

Did you see In the Heights on Broadway?

I saw it when I went off to do my first movie, Step Up 2, I took a trip over there.

I saw it in previews in March of 2008. I looked at an old email from a friend who saw it off-Broadway who asked if it was “big enough” to make the leap. And now it’s a movie. But I feel you had to make some changes to make this leap.

Yeah, I mean, it’s very different than the Broadway version, but has the same spirit. I hope people don’t fully realize the big changes. Although, I’m sure some will.

Yeah, I’m sure there will be an article or two about that from somebody.

Of course. It’s a different medium, we can get two inches from your face in cinema and see when you’re telling a lie, even though it seems like they’re telling the truth. You recognize that moment. And then you can also go 10,000 feet away and show a giant pool scene, and in a view that you could’ve never seen otherwise. So yeah, we changed a lot of it. But that’s the experience of going to the movie. Credit to Lin, who is a cinephile, who understood that and gave us a lot of room to play in.

Correct me if I’m wrong, but the thing that I noticed you expanded more of Usnavi’s motivations.

Well, the show was definitely more slice of life. I know that for a movie – it’s not the rule for movies – but for me, I like to hook into a character more. Even though we are still a slice of life, we don’t have a villain, we don’t have guns or knives, there’s no big looming threats to everybody. It’s an internal thing. I knew that this was going to be Usnavi’s story ultimately. Usnavi and Vanessa, and what came out of that. So, I had to gear a little bit more towards him – he wasn’t just a storyteller that was guiding us through the neighborhood. He was somebody who had to have real struggles, who had to have a real issues. We had to build all this stuff, these details in. And at the same time show that his dreams are so big, that everybody’s dreams were bigger than the walls can contain.

I had to correct people over and over again. Even our producers had times where they said, “Well, it’s a street musical. Yeah, we can save money. It’s like we’re just doing a musical on the street.” I’m like, this is not a “musical on the street,” stop saying that. This is a musical of the biggest proportion, we’re taking them so far. We’re staying here because you dream in the things that you know. So, I was growing up and dreaming of things happening, but only with advertisements that my parents would show me. And movies, of course. So, that fact, I think changed a lot that I had to… We all had to keep reminding ourselves, this needs more room. Give us more room.

I know this isn’t a question, and I’ve read your reasoning why, having another child, but I wish you were still doing Willow.

Me, too. The team was so great. Sometimes in your life there are choices. In a way it ties to In the Heights, because that whole movie came together for me when I had my daughter after doing Crazy Rich Asians. And realizing the greatest story that I have to tell is the world that I paint for my daughter. What is that world that she’s coming into? And how do I want her to see it? Do I want her to be naive to the problems that we have? Or do I want her to face it head on and understand that the hopes and dreams can live there, but it’s going to be hard work to get there?

It really, in a way, informed how we wanted to tell the story. This idea that Usnavi keeps saying the best days of my life are from his past. But in the end, no, the best days are his future. Tag, the next generation’s it, go see things that we can’t see. When Jimmy Smits says, “This is the moment, this is where you see things I can’t see,” that says everything about every generation, and what we’re intended to do, and build. That uncomfortable idea of having different views of the future is natural, and okay.

‘In The Heights’ opens in theaters and streams via HBO Max on June 10th. You can contact Mike Ryan directly on Twitter.

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

Snoop Dogg Takes A Role At Def Jam As Executive Creative Consultant

After 30 years as one of the foremost elder statesmen of the rap game, West Coast godfather Snoop Dogg has joined forces with another storied, foundational entity within hip-hop culture. Today, he announced he is joining Def Jam as executive creative and strategic consultant, according to Variety. In conjunction with Variety‘s report, Snoop also released a short announcement video explaining the move, which again has come nearly thirty years deep into a legendary career.

As Snoop himself puts it, “As a young rapper, Def Jam Records was the Holy Grail of hip-hop… they did all types of sh*t that I wanted to be a part of. Then Death Row Records happened, so I didn’t get a chance to be on Def Jam. But I always had a dream to be on Def Jam and to be in the place where hip-hop was originated.”

According to Variety, Snoop’s new role will see him continuing to be based out of Los Angeles and focusing on A&R and creative development. For those in the know, this is actually great news, as Snoop’s always had an ear for rising talent, lending early co-signs to any number of rising stars from the Golden State, including (but certainly not limited to) The Game, Kendrick Lamar, and Nipsey Hussle. “When I got the opportunity, my main focus on Def Jam was to help the artists and give them love and wisdom and guidance and understanding, teach them some tricks that I learned in the game — to diversify their portfolios to be superstars,” he says in his announcement.

One thing is for sure: Snoop’s presence as a playable character in Def Jam: Fight For NY finally makes sense now. Watch his announcement/explainer above.

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

Joaquin Phoenix Was ‘Full Of Fear’ Before Winning An Oscar For ‘Joker’ And Almost Gave A Much Shorter Speech

At the 2020 Academy Awards, Joaquin Phoenix gave an impassioned speech against injustice after becoming the second actor to win an Oscar for playing the Joker.

“I’ve been thinking a lot about some of the distressing issues that we are facing collectively. I think at times we feel, or we’re made to feel, that we champion different causes,” he said. “But for me, I see commonality. I think, whether we’re talking about gender inequality or racism or queer rights or indigenous rights or animal rights, we’re talking about the fight against injustice. We’re talking about the fight against the belief that one nation, one people, one race, one gender, or one species has the right to dominate, control, and use and exploit another with impunity.” It was less self-congratulatory than the usual Oscar speech, but Phoenix was initially unsure about what he wanted to say — or if he wanted to say anything at all.

“I’ll be honest with you here. I did not want to get up anywhere and do anything. I was not excited about the opportunity. It’s just not who I am. I was full of fear,” he told the Sunday Times. “I was in that situation and there was a part of me that just wanted to say, ‘Thanks so much, great, goodnight.’ But I felt like I had to… If I’m up here, I can’t just thank my mum.” Hey, it worked for Joe Pesci.

Phoenix, as Hollywood’s most outspoken vegan, also discussed whether he plans to pass his no-meat beliefs to his child with actress Rooney Mara. “Well, certainly I would hope that [he is vegan], but I’m not going to impose my belief on my child. I don’t think that’s right,” he said. “I’m going to educate him about the reality. I’m not going to indoctrinate him with the idea that McDonald’s have a Happy Meal because there’s nothing f*cking happy about that meal. And I’m not going to tell him that it’s OK to read books about all the wonderful little farm animals, and they say ‘oink oink oink’ and ‘moo moo moo,’ and not tell him that that’s what a hamburger is. I’m not going to perpetuate the lie, but I’m also not going to force him to be vegan. I’ll support him. That’s my plan.”

The kid will have to build his Joker Happy Meal toy collections in other ways (eBay).

(Via the Sunday Times)

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

The ‘Shang-Chi’ Director Is Teasing How The MCU Film Draws Heavy Inspiration From Jackie Chan Movies And More

As Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings gets ready to kick things up a notch for Marvel Phase 4, director Destin Daniel Cretton has been opening up about the film’s influences and saying that audiences haven’t seen everything the new MCU hero played by Simu Liu has to offer.

In a new interview, Cretton revealed that Shang-Chi will draw heavily from the East Asian action-cinema genre, which ranges from the fast-paced Jackie Chan films to the mystical, high-flying wuxia films. Via Empire:

“Authenticity and respect and staying true to this genre was the main objective from day one,” he tells Empire in the new issue. That meant drawing from the greats. “There’s choreography that’s reminiscent of Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon and other fight scenes are inspired by Jackie Chan. We also had choreographers from mainland China who created some beautiful wuxia-style fight scenes.”

Cretton also revealed that Liu’s characters will be more than just a master of kung fu, and he’ll be able to go toe-to-toe with his MCU counterparts. “Shang-Chi is an incredible martial artist, but he’s so much more than that.”

Interestingly, the director who made his name with the indie film Short Term 12 wasn’t interested in tackling superhero fare, and he even told Marvel head Kevin Feige as much during their first meeting. “That’s usually not the way director meetings start, by saying, ‘You know, I was never interested in doing one of these,’” Feige previously told Entertainment Weekly with a laugh. At the end of the day, Cretton couldn’t resist the opportunity to deliver a superhero that he would loved to have seen during his childhood, which has been sorely lacking in Asian representation.

“Because he had the mask on, I could dress up like Spider-Man for Halloween. I had a handful of other characters that looked like me on screen, but there were maybe two or three that I could choose from, and superheroes were not a part of that,” Cretton said.

(Via Empire)

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

What The Hell Happened To Morgan On ‘Fear The Walking Dead’?

Spoilers for this season of Fear the Walking Dead

The sixth season of Fear the Walking Dead has been good. It has been very good. Part of that has to do with much better writing, and more intimate, self-contained stories. Part of that also has to do with the new attitude of the series’ nominal lead, Morgan Jones. He nearly died at the end of last season and returned as a “new Morgan Jones,” a man who would kill when necessary and refuse to take anyone’s bulls–t.

In this week’s episode, however, Morgan Jones took everyone’s bulls–t. What happened to the New Morgan Jones? Where did he go, and why did he choose to disappear? The penultimate episode of the season, “U.S.S. Pennsylvania,” is also easily the worst episode of the season, and a lot of that has to do with the fact that the old Morgan Jones resurfaced. I don’t want to sound too harsh, but honestly, the old Morgan Jones is a pathetic guy.

This week’s episode takes place largely inside of a nuclear submarine, which is a cool setting, especially given the fact that there are also 100+ zombies inside of an enclosed space. There is one mission: Navigate through the submarine to where Teddy, Riley, and Dakota are and prevent them from launching enough nuclear missiles to essentially destroy the continent. It has all the makings of a cool video game.

The setting, however, does not leave a lot of room to maneuver, so early on in the episode, Morgan decides he needs to go it alone, even if that means sacrificing himself. Strand, however, decides for some inexplicable reason that he refuses to let Morgan play hero by himself. For reasons that aren’t entirely clear, Strand seems hellbent on impressing Alicia (currently locked away by Teddy in a fallout shelter), and he believes that stopping Teddy will put him back in Alicia’s good graces. Strand, therefore, forces himself onto Morgan, but Strand never stops being Strand. At one point, when he and Morgan are blocked by a small horde of zombies, Strand takes Morgan’s ax away and pushes Morgan into the horde, sacrificing his friend so that Strand can escape and be the hero. It’s a move that Strand has pulled before, but never on someone as close to him as Morgan Jones.

In any respect, Strand leaves Morgan behind and makes his way toward the command center, but before he enters, he’s confronted by Dakota, who is holding a gun to his face. She gives a big long speech, and just as she’s about to shoot Strand, Morgan arrives and knocks her out (Strand is grazed by the bullet, but otherwise unharmed). Does Morgan kill Dakota for what she did to John Dorie, or what she tried to do to Strand? No, he does not. Does Morgan get angry with Strand for throwing him into a horde of zombies? No, not really. “We’ll deal with what you did later,” is all that Morgan Jones can muster. Do we find out how Morgan escapes a horde of zombies? We do not.

The confrontation with Teddy and Riley does not go much better. Morgan manages to prevent them from launching all but one nuclear missile. After that missile launch, however, Teddy gives Morgan another big speech, and then Morgan just … lets him go. “Get out of here,” he says to Riley and Teddy, arguably the most dangerous villain in Fear history, a man hellbent on near-total annihilation of the human species. And then he tells Strand to “leave,” too.

That’s it. That’s the entire episode. Morgan and Strand try to stop Teddy from launching a bunch of nuclear missiles, but Teddy gets one off, and Morgan lets everyone (who tried to kill him in the episode) go. For dramatic reasons, I may understand it — the showrunners may want to save those big deaths until the season finale and hopefully, at least, allow John Dorie, Sr. the satisfaction of killing Teddy. But from a character standpoint, Fear basically assassinates the “New Morgan Jones” and replaces him with the same old “life is precious” Morgan Jones whose inability to kill occasionally cost him the lives of his friends.

Not that it matters. Teddy and Riley suggest that the one missile that got off would fall back down in their general vicinity in Texas, destroying them all, and that’s what the promo for next week’s season finale portends. It looks like everyone will either be searching for a way to avoid being decimated or finding a way to spend their last few minutes together. I don’t expect everyone to live, and that’s not a bad thing, considering how little screentime characters like Charlie, Lucianna, Wes, Sarah, and the Rabbi have gotten this season. It might be time to use a nuclear bomb to pare down the cast.

It does appear, however, that the bomb will land, which will pave the way for a time jump, which may allow Fear the Walking Dead to catch up to The Walking Dead timeline and, potentially, the Rick Grimes movie.

Fear the Walking Dead airs Sunday nights at 9 p.m. on AMC.

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

Ed Sheeran, Elton John, Brandi Carlile, And Courteney Cox Honor Lisa Kudrow With ‘Tiny Dancer’

Ever since the recent premiere of the Friends reunion special, the world has enjoyed having another excuse to look back at one of the most beloved sitcoms of all time. The show has actually been a big moment in the music world, too, and the fun continued over the weekend with a special tribute to Lisa Kudrow, via Courteney Cox, Elton John, Ed Sheeran, and Brandi Carlile.

In a video that Cox shared online yesterday, Sheeran begins by dedicating the video to Kudrow before the show widens to reveal that he’s seated at a piano alongside the aforementioned folks. From there, the quartet performs “Tiny Dancer,” but with the modified “Tony Danza” lyrics from the show, of course.

Shortly after, Kudrow shared a response video, saying while sporting an ultra-wide smile, “That was the most thrilling thing ever. It was so good.” She then got nit-picky about the performance, continuing, “Technically, it’s, ‘Hold me close, young Tony Danza,’ so, but, you know… what you did was great, too, including the original song that you wrote, Sir Elton. That was really good.”

Danza himself also re-shared the original video and noted that he was honored by the performance.

Those who have been keeping up with Sheeran-related Friends news know that this video follows Sheeran and Cox’s re-creation of the show’s epic dance routine from a week ago.

Check out all the videos below

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

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

John Oliver Explains Why ‘The Model Minority Myth’ About Asian Americans Is A ‘Tool Of White Supremacy’

Amid the wave of violence against Asian Americans (following Trump’s “Kung Flu” and “Wuhan virus” remarks), John Oliver previously called out those who embraced (and that includes Meghan McCain) Trump’s rhetoric about the coronavirus. He revisited the theme this week to dig deeper into the long-term discrimination against Asian Americans, and that includes the aggregation of data that groups over 20 different ethnicities into one category under the blanket “Asian American” term.

That large and diverse group of people includes a diverse range (not only Chinese, Japanese, Korean, and Filipinos) of education and poverty-level percentages per ethnicity. The range goes from, say, Indian Americans (75% likely to hold bachelor degrees) to Bhutanese Americans (15%, respectively) to wide-ranging poverty rates (10% overall for Asian Americans but 25% for some specific ethnicities, including Mongolian and Burmese Americans). Oliver ended up using an unlikely but digestible analogy around the 7:30 mark about how useless aggregated data really turns out to be:

“Disaggregating the data can reveal big disparities that you couldn’t see previously… looking at averages for Asian Americans as a whole is like looking at the average of the Hemsworth brothers. It’s very misleading when we know that some Hems are Worth a lot more than other Hems are Worth.”

Chris, of course, would be the prevailing Hems who’s Worth more than Luke and Liam, but more to the point, Oliver moved onto what all Asian American groups do share. That would be “the common experience of racial hostility” and “violence,” which goes back to “laws denying them the possibility of becoming citizens or owning land.” Oliver explained what went down as a result of the 1965 Immigration Act that outwardly favored doctors and engineers but also addressed refugees, and in the end, Oliver condemns the U.S. outlook for the bigotry perpetuated by the “model minority myth,” which he flat-out calls a “tool of white supremacy and a trap.”

That trap, as it turns out, extended even further than the vast range of Asian American ethnicities. “Basically, America prioritized wealthy, more educated Asian immigrants, then turned to Black people who’d been subjugated for centuries and said, ‘See, they’re educated and successful, why aren’t you?’” It’s a pervasive treatment that, as Oliver explains, continues in our current times, and there’s no reason to believe it will disappear unless the American people, starting from the top, adapt their perspective. Watch the entire 27-minute segment above.

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

There’s Still Hope For Another Season Of HBO’s ‘Mare Of Easttown’

Mare of Easttown was such a phenomenon that it literally broke HBO Max. But like HBO’s fellow acclaimed limited series Sharp Objects and Show Me a Hero, there’s no plan for a second season… so far. In an interview with Variety, HBO chief Casey Bloys was asked whether he’s spoken to Mare of Easttown creator Brad Inglesby about having Kate Winslet return to “mythical place” Wawa for seven more episodes.

“If Brad felt like he had a story to tell that felt like it would be at the same level, I think everybody would be open to it,” he said. “Right now, he doesn’t have that story. Who knows? We’ll have to wait to see if they come up with something they’re dying to tell.”

HBO was so impressed with Mare that it has set a three-year exclusive overall deal for TV with Brad Ingelsby, the veteran screenwriter who created the series and served as showrunner. Ingelsby brought the project to HBO with Winslet on board. Bloys hadn’t worked with Ingelsby before but the experience on Mare was so strong that they were eager to keep him in the fold for TV.

Winslet is game for a second season, telling TVLine, “I would absolutely love to play Mare again. I miss her. I really do. It’s the strangest thing. I feel like I’m in mourning. It was an absolutely wonderful role… There’s something very addictive about Mare, because she’s so outrageous and lovable and brilliant and real, you know? I loved playing her.” Maybe we’ll get more Easttown when she’s done filming Avatar 17.

(Via Variety)

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

One Of T-Pain’s Biggest Hits Actually Started Out As A Joke

In the mid-2000s, T-Pain was an absolute hit machine, with one of his biggest and most memorable being “I’m N Luv (Wit A Stripper).” During a recent appearance on Mike Tyson’s Hotboxin’ podcast, he spoke about how that song actually began its life as a joke among friends.

He told Tyson of the single, “My homeboy was tryna save strippers in the club. The song was a joke. I was literally making fun of him. We was just in the studio f*cking around and Big Boi [was] saying it was dope and I said, ‘Yep.’”

T-Pain has actually told this origin story before. In a 2015 interview with USA Today, for example, he went into greater detail:

“We got one girl to dance on him and he was just automatically trying to take her out of the club, pay for her tuition and do everything. The next couple days in the studio, everybody was still laughing about it. I started playing with GarageBand on my Mac and singing, ‘I’m in love with a stripper,’ and everybody was like, ‘Yo, lay that down and we’ll give it to (him) as a joke.’ Then the label came in and we were going through some songs I had recorded. They heard the ‘joke’ and were like, ‘This is the furthest thing from a joke. We’re putting this out next week.’ [The fact that it became a hit] threw me off. I was literally trying to make a bad song but it didn’t work.”

Watch the full Hotboxin’ episode below.

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

Denver Nuggets At Phoenix Suns Game 1 TV Info, Betting Lines, And Player Scoring Props

The Suns and Nuggets both advanced to the second round of the playoffs with wins in six games over their first round opponents, as Phoenix took down the defending champs in the 7-seeded Lakers and the Nuggets vanquished a familiar foe in the 6-seeded Blazers. As such, both teams enter this series with plenty of confidence and two stars playing tremendously well in Game 6 to get them to this point.

The presumptive MVP of the league this season, Nikola Jokic, was unbelievable against the Blazers in most every game aside from a lopsided loss in Game 4, averaging 33 points, 10.5 rebounds, and 4.5 assists per game on 52.8/42.9/91.7 shooting splits in the six games against Portland. Stopping Jokic isn’t an option, but the Suns will have to decide what their gameplan is going to be against the do-it-all big man, as the Blazers seemingly stumped the Nuggets initially with their “let Jokic score” plan in Game 1, but eventually he started picking them apart. Deandre Ayton, who was dominant against the Lakers, will have a much different test in Jokic and how he handles Jokic not just as a scorer but on the glass will be key.

On the other side, Phoenix has the clear advantage in the backcourt with Devin Booker dominating Game 6 in L.A. and Chris Paul steadily getting more healthy after injuring his shoulder in Game 1 of the first round. Still, the Nuggets managed to beat a lethal backcourt in Portland despite being without three of their top five guards, most notably Jamal Murray and Will Barton, and will look to get continued strong play from Monte Morris to lead their backcourt effort. Like with Jokic, slowing Booker and Paul is a tough task, but forcing them into difficult shots (which they’re certainly capable of making) instead of allowing them to get easy looks at the rim is the first task for any team defending the Suns.

Game 1 will be the nightcap after Bucks-Nets Game 2 on Monday night, and will hopefully set the tone for what looks to be a very fun series.

Game 1 TV Info

Tip Time: Monday, June 7; 10:00 p.m. ET
TV Network: TNT

Game 1 Betting Lines (via DraftKings Sportsbook)

Series Price: Suns -220, Nuggets +175
Point Spread: Suns -5 (-115), Nuggets +5 (-107)
Total: Over 219.5 (-110), Under 219.5 (-110)
Money Line: Suns -225, Nuggets +175

Player Scoring Props (via DraftKings Sportsbook)

Nikola Jokic O/U 30.5 Points (Over -120/Under -107)
Mikal Bridges O/U 11.5 (-113/-113)
Deandre Ayton O/U 13.5 (-118/-108)
Jae Crowder O/U 11.5 (-106/-121)
Michael Porter Jr. O/U 19.5 (-134/+105)
Aaron Gordon O/U 11.5 (-127/+100)
Devin Booker O/U 29.5 (-113/-113)