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Rosalia Shines Through Performances Of ‘Chicken Teriyaki’ And ‘La Fama’ On ‘SNL’

After going a little over three years without an album, Rosalia is gearing up to release her third opus, Motomami, next week. So far, she’s released three singles: “Saoko,” “La Fama” with The Weeknd, and “Chicken Teriyaki.” With just a few days left until the album arrives, Rosalia brought her talents to Saturday Night Live for a pair of performances, delivering bright performances of “Chicken Teriyaki” and “La Fama.” It also marks her solo debut on the show, as she joined Bad Bunny for a performance at the beginning of 2021.

Rosalia’s SNL appearance comes after she revealed the cover art for Motomami. It shows her nearly naked with a helmet on and her hair flowing around while she lays in front of a white backdrop. As for the album itself, it’s been described as conceptual and experimental, while Rosalia calls it her “most personal and confessional and sexy album so far.” In addition to performing on Saturday Night Live, Rosalia has also scored a radio station in Grand Theft Auto Online: The Contract.

In addition to the songs from the Motomami, Rosalia previously teamed up with Oneohtrix Point Never for their long-awaited collaboration “Nothing’s Special.”

You can watch Rosalia’s SNL performances in the videos above.

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‘The Power Of The Dog’ Director Jane Campion Called Sam Elliott A Certain Word Over His Comments About Her Film

For the first time in his life, Sam Elliott has pissed off a lot of people. The legendary actor recently appeared on WTF with Marc Maron, during which he took some time to slam The Power of the Dog, the revisionist Western that’s been Hoovering up one award after another. His comments have in turn been commented on by some of its stars, including Benedict Cumberbatch and Kodi Smit-McPhee. Now it’s the film’s director’s turn.

Jane Campion was attending the DGA Awards when she was inevitably asked, by a Variety reporter, what she thought about Elliott’s comments, which found him criticizing its homosexual content, claiming that Campion, born in New Zealand, knows little about the American West, and calling it a “piece of s*it.”

“I’m sorry, he was being a little bit of a B-I-T-C-H. He’s not a cowboy; he’s an actor,” Campion told Variety . “The West is a mythic space and there’s a lot of room on the range. I think it’s a little bit sexist.”

Then Campion went on to win Best Director, yet another trophy for a film that currently has 12 Oscar nominations.

Elliott did not hold back when Maron asked him about Campion’s film, which he did not enjoy. “I mean, Cumberbatch never got out of his f*cking chaps. He had two pairs of chaps — a woolly pair and a leather pair. And every f*cking time he would walk in from somewhere — he never was on a horse, maybe once — he’d walk into the f*cking house, storm up the fucking stairs, go lay in his bed in his chaps and play his banjo,” Elliott told Maron. “It’s like, what the f*ck?”

But clearly the makers of The Power of the Dog are having the last laugh.

(Via Variety)

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Paul Dano Joined ‘The Batman’ Colleague Zoë Kravitz For An ‘SNL’ Sketch Where They Keep Losing A Cat

There was a lot of cats on the SNL hosted by Zoë Kravitz, and for good reason. After all, she plays Catwoman in The Batman. Her opening monologue found her interrupted by multiple cat people, including Katt Williams. And in one of the episode’s pre-taped sketches, the actress joined “Please Don’t Destroy,” the trio of SNL writers known for such segments, as well as her co-star Paul Dano for a bit in which they keep losing a cat.

The sketch finds Kravitz behind-the-scenes, meeting with writers/performer Ben Marshall, John Higgins and Martin Herlihy. They’ve decided to do something nice for her: They’ve gotten her a cat. A nice, cute, small, very fast cat. When Kravitz enters the room, the feline has already gone missing, prompting a mad dash from everyone to tear apart the room, looking for the AWOL animal.

Eventually they turn up no less than Dano, who plays the a serial killer take on the Riddler opposite Kravitz’s Selena Kyle. What’s Paul Dano doing there, hiding under a couch? He’s researching a role, of course. “It’s about you guys,” Dano tells Marshall, Higgins, and Herlihy, holding up a poster for the project, entitled The Boring Writers.

You can watch the sketch in the video above.

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Celebrating The Rise Of ‘Abbott Elementary’s’ Quinta Brunson

Quinta Brunson is a master of reinvention. She’s done it too many times to count during her short-yet-prolific career.

It’s a fact that becomes unavoidable as soon as you try to recommend her new ABC sitcom Abbott Elementary to anyone in your social circle. Once you make your pitch: It’s a workplace comedy shot in a mockumentary style that gives fans a hilarious and surprisingly heartfelt look at the joys and struggles of being an educator in an inner-city school system, the next ask is fairly obvious … “Who’s in it?”

Do you jog their memory of Brunson’s past work by shouting out her brilliance on HBO’s A Black Lady Sketch Show? Do you remind them she used to create viral videos, viewed by millions, for Buzzfeed? Do you point to her acting work in shows like Miracle Workers, Big Mouth, and iZombie? Maybe you mention how she created a Youtube Red series about Black millennial struggles called Broke or you offer a reading rec in the form of her book of essays, or do you steer them to the many (many) memes created in her honor?

If all else fails – or if you’re too indecisive to pick just one standout moment on Brunson’s impressive resume – it’s probably best to just call her the “Girl Who Has Never Been on a Nice Date.”

It was that series of quick, 15-second comedy clips posted to a still-in-its-infancy Instagram that earned Brunson the viral fame she would one day convert into creative prestige. Trading on the kind of accessible and painfully relatable humor she grew up admiring with shows like The Office and Saturday Night Live, Brunson played a woman constantly gobsmacked over her date’s ability to afford everything from dinner at a restaurant to a large popcorn at the movie theater. Those videos would strike a chord amongst the millennial demo big enough to draw the attention of Buzzfeed’s studio arm, which would eventually invite Brunson to start crafting sketches for them.

“I think my experience at BuzzFeed — BuzzFeed was very for everyone, and the stuff I made was made so that anyone could relate to it and share — definitely informed a lot of my love of creating in that way,” Brunson told The Washington Post in January.

It’s that innate understanding of how to package even the most specific experiences so that they have mass appeal that has set Brunson apart, helping her to translate her internet fame into compelling narrative-first work.

Brunson would go on to create pilots with the likes of The Bernie Mac Show creator Larry Wilmore and work on her craft in front of the camera, playing quirky, highly-watchable characters that recurred and guested on some of TV’s cult-favorite shows just long enough to make audiences miss her when she left.

But it was on the aforementioned A Black Lady Sketch Show that Brunson got a chance to challenge the typecasting so many Black women face within the industry. Whether she was playing bit parts in a parody of ballroom culture or stealing scenes as one half of the show’s Shakespearean romance, Rome & Julissa, Brunson and the rest of the cast constantly toyed with expectations and pushed thought boundaries.

Brunson’s always had a knack for mining comedy from her own experiences, paying homage to her roots and inviting audiences of all backgrounds to come along for the ride, which is what makes her latest success story that much more inspiring. In a time when streaming is king and appointment-viewing has all but fossilized, Brunson’s bringing her brand of funny to network TV – and people are actually tuning in.

No one, especially not a promising millennial in the comedy space, is eyeing network sitcom status at the moment. If you want prestige, the thought is you go to HBO and FX, if you want a viral streaming hit, you pop over to Netflix. In many ways, channel surfing feels like a dying pastime, but for Brunson, who created, wrote, and produced Abbott Elementary in partnership with WB and ABC, the communal aspect of television always felt integral to what she was trying to do as a storyteller.

“I loved being able to watch TV with my family, so I wanted to do that for people. I wanted to create a sitcom that had a strong point of view, from the millennial me, but could also span generations,” Brunson once told Time.

With Abbot Elementary, Brunson has no doubt accomplished that, helped by a diverse cast filled with comedy veterans and relative newcomers and a focus on highly relatable issues that often go underrepresented on screen. From the underfunding of public schools to the lack of support for teachers (a timely storyline considering the trials educators faced during the pandemic) to more universal problems, like being trapped in a failing relationship and constantly questioning your life’s purpose.

As Janine Teagues, one of the youngest elementary educators at the school, Brunson brings to mind a millennial Leslie Knope – all sunshine and optimism and exhausting work ethic. She’s surrounded by coworkers that flirt with but never fully commit, to their respective sitcom tropes.

Janelle James’ incompetent, over-confident Principal Ava Coleman mismanages everything from her teachers’ personalities to the school’s budget with aplomb. Tyler James William’s Gregory’s on-screen chemistry with Brunson shows promise for sitcom fans looking for the next will-they-wont-they TV couple. And the unfairly talented Sheryl Lee Ralph finally gets to stretch her single-cam muscles, playing the no-nonsense veteran Mrs. Howard, an old-timer irritated by the enthusiasm and inexperience of the school’s new crop. For fans of past shows like The Office, Parks And Rec, and so many more, there is something here, but Abbot Elementary is doing it in its own way, walking a path that’ll have fans comparing new shows to it in no time.

Those nods to old favorites are no doubt a result of Brunson’s stated love for TV, but Abbott Elementary is far more than just a collage of throwbacks to TV’s workplace comedy golden era – it’s also a love letter to West Philadelphia (where Brunson grew up), and a semi-biography of her mom, a teacher who dedicated 40 years to mentoring inner-city youth.

“I think a lot of it is based on what I’ve seen in my mom’s years of teaching,” Brunson told PopSugar about certain storylines in the show. “And then we incorporated a lot of the more modern stuff.”

The “more modern stuff” covers everything from Janine’s attempt to use TikTok to raise funds for basic school supplies to Mrs. Howard trying to game the system when new tech must be incorporated into the classroom. In her own way, Brunson is trying to shine a light on not only the struggle teachers face but the incredible fortitude and passion with which they approach their jobs, despite a glaring lack of support. It’s that dual perspective – Brunson’s determination to show both the defeats and the victories of these self-sustaining educators – that feels revolutionary. Especially when you consider the setting of an inner-city school, which conjures memories of TV shows that often fixate on strife and stories of Black suffering, not shows that treat Black characters as individuals, capable of breaking cycles and inspiring change, all while delivering corny jokes to the camera. Brunson seems adamant to change that with this show, presenting Black characters – and Black women specifically – not as a monolith but a spectrum.

“People are so resilient. People find joy. It’s a human thing to do,” she said when discussing some of the show’s heavier subject matter with Pop Sugar. “In this country, Black people are specifically good at finding joy despite the hardships of our living situations, and I thought it was important to be able to show that.”

So that’s what she’s doing — reminding us of network TV’s potential, pushing it to do more than just crime procedurals and reality singing competitions. Whether it’s viral videos, Instagram series, web-comedies, sketch shows, or one of the hottest sitcoms to hit the small screen in quite a while, Brunson has always been challenging audiences to see the world the way she does – a way that reflects a more complete portrait of life, with characters from all backgrounds getting to win, learning to lose, and earning the kind of growth they haven’t always been granted.

And now, she’s charging TV to do the same.

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Zoë Kravitz’s ‘SNL’ Monologue Was Crashed By Multiple Cat People, Plus Katt Williams

Zoë Kravitz is on a hot streak right now. She’s the star of Steven Soderbergh’s recent, acclaimed HBO Max film Kimi. And then there’s The Batman, in which she plays no less than Catwoman. The actress has already gotten support from actresses who’ve played the role before, but when she hosted the most recent episode of SNL, fellow portrayers of the iconic semi-villain did little but get in her way.

“In the movie, I play Catwoman — sorry, the Catwoman,” Kravitz cracked. “To prepare for the role, I watched the movie musical Cats every day for a year, which is actually the same way I heard Joaquin Phoenix prepared to play the Joker.”

Kravitz was soon joined on stage by Kate McKinnon, decked out in the leather get-up Michelle Pfeiffer wore in 1992’s Batman Returns. “Yes, I’m Catwoman from the ’90s, the one with the whip. You know, like cats have,” she joked.

Soon Ego Nwodim crashed the stage as well, dressed as Eartha Kitt from the ‘60s Batman show. Then Aidy Bryant joined her as just a cat lady. Then there was Katt Williams (Chris Redd), who just has that name.

You can watch Kravitz’s SNL monologue in the video above.

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Joe Biden Seeks TikTokers’ Advice On Ukraine With Chaotic Results In ‘SNL’ Cold Open

It’s been over three weeks since Russia invaded Ukraine, and while things could be worse, they’re not great. While the Ukrainian people have put up a fight, America has struggled to find a way to lend a hand without inciting World War III, with little help from the Republican party. SNL tried to find the funny in this tragic situation, with its latest episode showing President Joe Biden meeting with a most important group: TikTokers.

James Austin Johnson reprised his acclaimed take on the the self-described “landline of presidents” as White House press secretary Jen Psaki (a witheringly sarcastic Kate McKinnon) introduced him to a gaggle of online influencers. One of them, played by Chloe Fineman, suggested poems as a way to combat Russian forces, only to wind up doing a variation on AnnaLynne McCord’s instantly infamous plea to President Vladimir Putin. Another, played by Aidy Bryant, spouted alt-right conspiracy theories. Yet another, played by Kenan Thompson, was the wrong guy — not a TikToker but a roofer from Pittsburgh.

Eventually the day was saved, sort of, by Bowen Yang, who showed up shirtless with a plunger atop his left nipple. “The idea of asking TikTok stars how to fight Russia might sound like a joke, but remember, they said the same thing about the radio in World War II,” Yang told the group. “Never underestimate the importance of new technology and how it reaches young people in ways you can never understand. TikTok isn’t some childish gimmick — it has more power and more influence than the nightly news.”

As it happens, truth is as strange as fiction. The White House really is meeting with TikTokers about messaging, while the Kremlin is doing the same thing, only with misinformation.

You can watch the sketch in the video above.

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Mary Kenney’s ‘Gamer Girls’ Is Finally Telling Gaming’s Biggest Untold Story

Mary Kenney doesn’t really want to well, actually anyone.

The author, educator, and game designer has a fairly gracious understanding when it comes to the misinformation surrounding women’s influence in the gaming world. Her new book, Gamer Girls: 25 Women Who Built the Video Game Industry (which releases in July but is available for pre-order now), is all about dispelling myths surrounding those pesky stereotypes that seem to follow female gamers, no matter what era they live in. But, Kenney’s been intentional about bringing that untold bit of the industry’s history to life in a way that feels accessible, entertaining, and above all, non-judgmental.

“’Isn’t it sad that we haven’t been around very long? But thank goodness we’re here now.’ That’s the biggest [belief] that’s just inaccurate,” Kenney tells UPROXX. “That women are a recent add in the industry. Not to well, actually anybody, but … well, actually, we were here in the ’60s, and we were definitely around in the ’70s and ’80s, and we were all over the ’90s. We’ve been around for a while. We’ve been making games for a while. And we’ve been leading for a while.”

In Gamer Girls, Kenney focuses primarily on those early decades when names like Kazuko Shibuya (who created the artwork for Final Fantasy), Muriel Tramis (the first Black female video game designer), and Mabel Addis Mergardt (the first-ever female game designer responsible for the 1964 release of The Sumerian Game) were pioneering largely in the shadows.

“They were just so excited about the work they got to do,” Kenney explains. “You see that so much in the first women who were hired at Atari and Activision. No one had ever invented what they were trying to create, but they were sure it would be cool, so they just kept pushing ahead.”

It’s that same love of a challenge that inspired Kenney to write her book. Well that, and the sheer disbelief that some form of Gamer Girls didn’t already exist on the shelves.

“My literary agent reached out to me and said, ‘Hey, I think this is a book that should exist. I think you would be a good person to write it,’” Kenney answers when asked what sparked the idea for the project. “And I responded to him with, ‘Eric [Smith], come on. That book definitely already exists. There’s no way it doesn’t.’”

Spoiler: It didn’t.

But as bleakly funny as it was to realize no one had compiled the thoughts of gaming’s female trailblazers from over 60 years, Kenney had a more sobering reason for wanting to write the book too. She’d been invited to speak to a group of high school girls attending a game design camp at Indiana University. There, she gave her “spiel” about what her job at Insomniac Games entailed before answering some audience questions.

“We got to the Q&A, and every question I got was about Gamergate,” Kenney recalls. “Like everything they were asking. It was stuff like, ‘Have you ever been harassed? Have you been targeted because of Gamergate? How have you not been driven out of the industry yet?’”

Kenney didn’t blame them for their curiosity, but she was discouraged that the narrative around women working in games seemed shackled to this terrible aspect of its history and, sadly, its culture.

“I realized the reason they were asking this was that’s all they had had. That was the only experience they’d really read about women in games,” Kenney says. “They haven’t heard a lot of our successes. There wasn’t a ton of women being asked to take center stage on our award shows. They were just mostly hearing stories of harassment and women deciding to quit — and for a very good reason.”

“That really broke my heart in a big way, because I know there are so many women who do work in games and love it,” Kenney continues. “I’m not saying that it’s an easy path. There are certainly things that we’ve all had to endure that we shouldn’t have had to, but simultaneously, I’ve had some of the best moments of my life as a gamer, interacting with other gamers, and also as a creator, getting to celebrate big wins with my teams — and it didn’t feel like there was enough literature out there celebrating that. [Things] that young women, specifically, could look to.”

Kenney originally created the book, which features stories and interviews from some of gaming’s under-recognized trailblazers, with those young girls at the game design camp in mind. She wanted it to be entertaining, something they could sit down and read in a day or two. But, that kind of accessibility also opens it up to newcomers – people just picking up a controller for the first time or streaming with friends during the pandemic. Kenney breaks down gaming lingo for the uninitiated, compiling a vast amount of the industry’s history in ways that are easy to digest and understand. In essence, she’s trying to do for her subjects what the gaming world hasn’t done for them before: celebrate their accomplishments with as wide and varied an audience as possible.

“I think a lot of people are interested in this topic, and there are so many more gamers than I think even people like me in the industry realize,” Kenney explains. “I want it to be accessible to them, too, and again, the technology has changed so much — even since I got interested in games — that I needed to catch everybody up.”

That inclusivity factor was something Kenney was cognizant of in her research as well. As she puts it, “if white women were not always given credit, women of color certainly weren’t.”

“The women who entered the early game industry were overwhelmingly white like the industry is today,” Kenney explains when the topic of diversity in gaming inevitably comes up. “I can point at statistics and say it’s getting better, but also add: not quickly enough.”

“That said, the women who were there in the early days of the industry featured their experiences in their work,” she continues, listing off Muriel Tramis and her 1988 game Freedom: Rebels in the Darkness as an example of the groundbreaking storytelling these creators have been doing for decades. Tramis’ game told the story of a slave escaping a sugar plantation – a narrative that feels rare, even by today’s industry standards. “She told Wired in 2010 that ‘fugitive slaves, my ancestors, were true warriors that I had to pay tribute to,’” Kenney says. “She’s been honored many times for her work but is relatively unknown among American gamers. I hope the book helps change that, as it does for all of the developers I profiled.”

These women are responsible for some of the more interesting titles the industry’s given us, crafting characters that defy stereotypes, creating artwork that is vibrant and iconic, building studios that give young female designers equal footing from the jump, and scoring themes that live in our heads long after we’ve logged off.

“There’s no one background that you can track every woman’s progress from,” Kenney says. “There are women who had liberal arts degrees. There are women who studied computer science. There are women who worked in business beforehand and then changed to games. They really do come from a variety of backgrounds, and some of them became programmers, some of them became designers, writers, and artists, and others were founding studios. The hope for this book is that girls, younger and older, can see there are reasons that women also love this industry. Here are ways that they thrive, and here are ways that they’ve really shaped the modern industry, as we know it.”

‘Gamer Girls: 25 Women Who Built the Video Game Industry’ is available for pre-order now.

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Anthony Edwards Tried To Start An Airball Chant In Miami After A Kyle Lowry Miss

The Minnesota Timberwolves continued their winning ways on Saturday night by traveling down to Miami and taking down the Heat, 113-104. They did it via a pretty balanced effort, with eight players scoring in double-digits and Jaylen Nowell coming off of the bench and giving the Timberwolves a team-high 16 points en route to a win over the leaders of the Eastern Conference.

Anthony Edwards, meanwhile, had a relatively quiet scoring night by his standards, as he went for 15 points on 4-for-10 shooting and a 3-for-8 clip from behind the three-point line. He still found a number of other ways to stuff the stat sheet, including eight rebounds, five assists, three steals, one block, and one attempted “airball” chant when the game was more or less decided that did not exactly catch on with the road fans.

Kyle Lowry hoisted up a three from way downtown with about 20 seconds left in the game and the Heat down by nine. It didn’t hit anything, and all Minnesota needed to do was inbound the ball and run out the clock. Before that happened, though, Edwards attempted to orchestrate a chant in American Airlines Arena.

It didn’t turn into a stadium-wide chant or anything, but it does sound like a few people went along with Edwards.

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The Already Struggling ‘Let’s Go Brandon’ Cryptocurrency Got Even Worse After Trump Gave It His Blessing

Despite his blustering and self-professed wealth, Donald Trump sometimes seems to be King Midas in reverse. Candidates he’s supported are struggling in the polls. His Twitter clone is a trainwreck. Now a pro-Trump cryptocurrency that was already failing is doing even worse after he gave it his blessing.

As per The Daily Beast, the former president was recently gifted 500 billion “Let’s Go Brandon” tokens, the Ethereum currency inspired by the anti-Biden phrase that was briefly popular late last year. The giftee was James Koutoulas, a diehard Trumpist, hedge funder, and the crypto’s most vocal cheerleader. When he presented the tokens to Trump on a recent podcast, Trump tried to give it his blessing despite not entirely understanding what it was.

“Sounds good to me!” Trump told Katoulas. “I don’t know exactly what it means, but it sounds good to me.”

That should have given the currency a big boost, and it could have used it: Last month, it was reported that it had fallen so hard that it was basically worthless. (Indeed, 500 billion “Let’s Go Brandon” tokens is not very much at all.) Instead, it had the opposite effect. In the days after the interview, it had fallen another 19 percent.

On the podcast in question, host David J. Harris, described by the Beast as a “D-list Trumpworld personality,” vowed to use the currency to help the “Freedom Truckers,” the group of anti-vaccine mandate truckers who’ve repeatedly tried to emulate the protests that occurred last month in Canada and failed each time. But a worthless cryptocurrency that’s somehow gotten worse probably isn’t going to help them either.

(Via The Daily Beast)

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Jim Nantz Will ‘Have Some Nightmares’ After Hearing The ‘Halo’ Music During An Ad Read

It’s conference tournament season and the NCAA Tournament starts next week, which can only mean one thing: Jim Nantz is back calling big time college basketball games. Well, it can mean a lot of things, but for the next few weeks, Nantz is hanging out in the booth for CBS alongside Grant Hill and Bill Raftery.

On Saturday, that meant Nantz was on the call for the Big Ten Tournament semifinal games. The first, Iowa’s win over Indiana, gave us an incredible moment when Hawkeyes guard Jordan Bohannon won the game with a deep three that he banked in right before time expired. The second, Michigan State vs. Purdue, gave us an equally incredible moment when Nantz had to do an ad read for the upcoming Halo series on Paramount+. Nantz has apparently never heard the Halo music before — if I had to guess why, it is because he has had other things to do for the last two-ish decades — and got really freaked out by it while he was reading the ad.

“Can the world’s most advanced super soldier save earth from The Covenant?” Nantz asked. “Find out in the new original series, Halo.

Nantz then got out of his ad read voice and started editorializing a bit, telling the audience, “ya gotta see it, just listen to this music!”

For a moment, Nantz attempted to do the ad read again, but that damn music just had him in a bind.

“Streaming March 24, woah!” Nantz said. “Exclusively on Paramount+. Gonna have some nightmares tonight after that.”

Grant Hill laughed at this, presumably because Jim Nantz being concerned but also captivated by the Halo music is very funny.