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A ‘Peaky Blinders’ Set Went Up In Flames And Sent Over 100 Firefighters Into Action

A frequent shooting location for Peaky Blinders went up in flames on Thursday morning requiring over 100 firefighters to put out the full building blaze. Located in Yorkshire, the historic Dalton Mills was often seen in the BBC One series (Netflix has international distribution rights) and other British productions like Downton Abbey. Video of the blaze quickly started bouncing around social media, and as you can see, the structure was completely engulfed in flames. As of this writing, there has been no word if the mill will be salvageable.

After working for hours to put out the blaze, rescue crews were still advising local residents to steer clear of the area and take precautions against smoke inhalation well into Thursday afternoon. Via People:

A video shared by the West Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Services showed the flames mostly subdued, and streams of water pouring into the building. They advised local residents to close their windows and avoid the area. The latest official update on the emergency website said that crews and specialists were still active at the scene at 7 p.m. GMT. It also listed 23 fire departments who tended the scene, as well as three special units.

The cause of the fire has yet to be determined. According to People, the production of Peaky Blinders had noted on its website that the historic building recently underwent a “clock tower renovation.” Whether that is connected to the full building blaze is unknown.

The Dalton Mills fire marks a series of bad lucks for Netflix. Earlier in the week, the production team for Lupin revealed that it had been targeted in a jewel heist. Some of the jewels stolen were also used The Crown, so again, not the best week for Netflix.

(Via People)

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Dave Drops The Introspective New Single ‘Starlight’ And Announces Full US Tour Dates

Dave might very well be the biggest star in British rap right now. The South London rapper took home the BRIT Award for Best Hip-Hop/Grime Act last month and flexed his versatility playing a guitar that emitted flames in his performance of “In The Fire.” Now, he’s just shared “Starlight,” the first new music he’s put out since last year’s fantastic, chart-topping breakthrough album, We’re All Alone In This Together and it’s more heat from Dave.

Also produced by Dave, “Starlight” is set to a flip of Frank Sinatra’s “Fly Me To The Moon.” On the track, he ruminates on his growing fame, love, and living under a microscope. He has a venerable grip on hip-hop tropes from both sides of the Atlantic and it all comes together on the masterful hook where he raps:

“It’s hard to hate on the truth I’m livin’
Enough man hate with the lies instead
Countin’ cash with the phone to my ear
I feel like Meek on the private jet”

He’s soaring right now and Dave’s star is set to keep rising. He was announced as a Wireless Festival headliner last week and his US tour starts in April, beginning with a stop at Coachella.

Watch the video for “Starlight” above and check out Dave’s full US tour dates below.

04/17 — Indio, CA @ Coachella
04/24 — Indio, CA @ Coachella
04/26 — San Francisco, CA @ The Warfield
04/27 — Vancouver, BC @ Commodore Ballroom
04/29 — Chicago, IL @ Riviera Theatre
05/01 — Washington, D.C. @ The Fillmore Silver Spring
05/03 — Brooklyn, NY @ Brooklyn Steel
05/04 — New York, NY @ Irving Plaza
05/05/ — New York, NY @ Irving Plaza
05/06 — Boston, MA @ House of Blues
05/08 — Atlanta, GA @ Variety Playhouse
05/10 — Montreal, QC @ Corona Theatre
05/12 — Toronto, ON @ History
05/12 — Toronto, ON @ Rebel
05/15 — Philadelphia, PA @ Theatre of the Living Arts
05/17 — Houston, TX @ Warehouse Live
05/18 — Dallas, TX @ Trees
05/20 — Denver, CO @ Cervantes’ Masterpiece Ballroom
05/21 — Seattle, WA @ The Showbox
05/22 — Vancouver, BC @ Vogue Theatre

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Here’s Why The Milwaukee Bucks’ Defense Misses Brook Lopez

Over their last seven games, the Milwaukee Bucks are 3-4 with the league’s 28th-ranked defense. They’ve stayed afloat thanks to a sixth-ranked offense, but a wilting defense isn’t a new issue, nor one that is just now proving concerning for their hopes of repeating as champions.

These problems have surfaced at various points this season without Brook Lopez, who has missed all but one game due to a back injury and subsequent surgery. On the year, they rank 11th in defense after finishing 10th last regular season, although, their 2020-21 playoff showing suggests they warrant the benefit of the doubt.

After two years of juggernaut performances from October-April (err, August), only to fall short come springtime, they deprioritized regular season games and experimented schematically. Whether it was toggling across ball-screen coverages or generating touches for Giannis Antetokounmpo in diverse ways, that newfound versatility was integral to their title run, when their defensive rating was roughly three points lower than in the regular season (112.1 vs. 108.8).

In 2021-22, the offense remains encouragingly multifaceted and excellent (fourth overall), but entirely trusting the defense to flip a switch again and ignoring all these games feels overly rosy. Lopez’s defensive chops are pivotal to any schemes they employ. Fortunately, he returned to practice last week, though is still not close to readying for game action.

So, why has Milwaukee missed Lopez’s services? What about their approach, his game and the surrounding personnel render him crucial to their ability to field a stifling defense that spearheads a championship-caliber dynamic?

Under head coach Mike Budenholzer, the Bucks’ defensive ethos has centered around packing the paint, walling off the rim, conceding threes above the break and staying risk-averse. During his four years at the helm, they’ve ranked 30th in opposing non-corner three frequency, no worse than sixth in opposing rim frequency (top two in his first three seasons), and no better than 23rd in turnover rate, all via Cleaning The Glass.

The means by which they elicit those numbers are malleable, but those are their resolute pillars. This year, they’ve elected to trap and show on many ball-screens. Bobby Portis has been tremendous for them, but he struggles defending in drop coverage and he’s the one supplanting Lopez as a starter, so they’ve catered to him. However, they’ll still run drop with Giannis or periodically switch with any of their big men.

The drawback, however, is this team simply isn’t very good at trapping. Without Lopez, Giannis is essentially asked to play anchor and roamer. He’s enjoying a masterful defensive season, but he is one man and cannot simultaneously occupy two important, immersive roles.

With any defensive gambit, the intention is to divert an offense away from its primary goal. That’s especially true on trapping, where the defense is designed to force turnovers or delay a ball-handler’s decision-making in advantageous situations. The Bucks don’t consistently achieve either idea. They’re 23rd in opposing turnover rate, not wired to generate takeaways because of the system in place. Too often, the trapping looks like window dressing without the motive to actually fluster the opposition.

Offenses, especially good ones, routinely generate quality looks against them in pick-and-rolls. The coverage doesn’t overwhelm anyone. Watch the Miami Heat trap and watch Milwaukee trap. The gap in effectiveness and execution is stark.

Furthering the issue is the Bucks’ other center options — DeMarcus Cousins, then Serge Ibaka — are very much offensive-minded big men. Cousins’ movement skills are limited, while Ibaka’s physical decline makes him a highly inactive defender, both on switches and in drop.

Miscommunications among weak-side defenders and inattentive off-ball helpers exacerbate these faults, helping to explain why Milwaukee’s defense ranks 23rd against top-10 offenses this season (15th last year), according to Cleaning The Glass (15 games). Making that stat particularly relevant is that, of the nine other play-in or better teams out East, four are top-10 offenses. Another three — Brooklyn, Toronto and Charlotte — are 11th, 12th and 13th. Lopez’s potential return could loom large for this club’s playoff pursuits.

The montage above reveals a wart that transcends scheme. Without Lopez, this team is super small. Giannis is (arguably) the foremost weak-side rim protector in the league, but nobody else on the roster offers reliable rim protection. While they still limit opponents’ shots at the rim (sixth in opposing rim frequency), their capacity to influence those attempts has depreciated.

Before this year, they ranked fourth, first and first in opposing field goal percentage at the basket since 2018-19. This season, they rank 15th. When teams get to the hoop, success is much easier to come by. Rather than Giannis being the primary defender and Lopez playing sweeper or vice versa, it’s typically Portis inhabiting one of those duties and he’s just not equipped to approximate his All-Defensive-caliber courtmates.

Things grow especially hazy when Giannis leaves the floor. Without him, nobody can credibly defend the rim. Teams shoot more than six points better around the hoop when he rests, according to Cleaning The Glass. Even when he’s on the floor but tasked with another defensive duty, the lack of another rim protector like, say, Lopez is evident.

Lopez’s absence has magnified a couple other flaws for the Bucks. Outside of Jrue Holiday, their point-of-attack choices are quite poor. Preventing paint touches and maintaining defensive structure when other dudes are targeted is arduous.

Teams are more willing to attack the paint and set the defense into motion, aware of the fact Lopez and Giannis aren’t both around to eliminate all the pockets of space on lobs, finishes, laydown passes or kickouts. Lopez was a safety blanket that’s been stripped from the roster for nearly 4.5 months, underscoring how he helps patch up his teammates’ breakdowns.

Beyond Giannis’ persistent greatness, the healthy off-ball defenders on this roster fall short. They’ll screw up an X-Out, collapse the paint but fail to track their man, lose a shooter around a screen or be poorly positioned in help.

The pick-and-roll defense shown earlier primarily highlighted issues on the ball. But it also hinted at issues with late-arriving low men as well, which is emblematic of more widespread off-ball problems. A trapping-heavy scheme that directly invites advantage situations for the offense requires shrewd off-ball defenders. That hasn’t transpired.

As it pertains to forward-thinking about the playoffs, the Bucks and their defense deserve considerable leeway. They’ve dealt with an array of injuries and a carousel of rotation players amid a new scheme and defensive environment sans Lopez. Various G League call-ups and players on 10-days have earned notable minutes. Giannis, Khris Middleton and Jrue Holiday have also missed a combined 36 games. Despite all these setbacks, they’re on pace for just three fewer wins than a season ago (on an 82-game schedule).

They displayed last year that ratcheting it up in the postseason is possible and perhaps likely. A lot of their off-ball gaffes feel like low-hanging fruit for improvement. The offense might be better than last year, too.

Yet while acknowledging all this, it’s easy to discern the difference in margin for error that Lopez affords them. A title is absolutely a reasonable expectation without him (or without him at all full strength). But the vision for tying all of this together in a cohesive manner becomes a lot clearer when he’s in the lineup.

The East is the Bucks’ until someone says otherwise and it’s much tougher to say otherwise if Lopez reemerges as the stalwart he’s long been in Milwaukee.

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Pamela Adlon Thinks It’s ‘F*cking Legendary Sh*t, Baby’ That Lenny Kravitz Had A Crush On Her In High School

You should really watch Better Things, Pamela Adlon’s wonderful FX series which returned for its fifth and final season this week. Maybe not when it airs, though.

“Don’t watch it on FX with commercials,” creator and star Adlon told the Hollywood Reporter when asked what viewers can expect from the new episodes. “I’ll throw up. There’s nothing more dehumanizing than watching an episode of my show with commercial breaks. And when they squeeze the title at the end? It’s like taking my balls and ripping them off and throwing them in the garbage can.”

Please do not rip off Adlon’s balls and throw them in the garbage can. Thank you.

Later in the interview, the reporter brought up a recent Washington Post profile where rock star Lenny Kravitz admitted to having a “big crush” on Adlon when they went to the same high school. “What can I say?” she replied. “This is f*cking legendary sh*t, baby.” That was also my reaction to the incident that led to #PenisGate.

Here’s an actual preview of Better Things season five:

Better Things is the story of Sam Fox, a single mother and working actor with no filter, raising her three daughters in Los Angeles. She also looks after her mother, an English expat who lives across the street. Whether she’s earning a living, navigating her daughters’ changing lives, or trying to have one of her own, Sam approaches every challenge with fierce love, raw honesty, and humor.

You can watch the trailer below.

(Via the Hollywood Reporter)

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‘Euphoria’s’ Angus Cloud Makes A Cameo In The Powerful Video For Juice WRLD’s ‘Cigarettes’

Last month marked the official posthumous release of Juice WRLD’s track “Cigarettes.” A song that had seen a slew of bootleg releases when the Chicago rapper was still alive, it sees him meditating on addiction and how it can affect relationships. The initial visualizer came out last month with an anime aesthetic. But the official video dropped today, featuring a cameo from Angus Cloud of Euphoria. It’s really more of a short film that takes a powerful look at how alcohol can destroy someone’s life and how the temptation will always be there.

In the video, a young guy’s life is falling apart because of alcoholism. He has trouble staying sober at work, he stays out late at the bar instead of going home to his girlfriend, and he’s just spiraling out of control. His life effectively falls apart and he enters a treatment program. We get a flash forward to 999 days later and he’s riding in a convertible with three friends, the main one played by Cloud. They enjoy the breeze while cruising and then go to a club, before the story climaxes and the main character faces a decision based on what he’s been through over the past few years. Directed by Steve Cannon, it’s a very realistic story about addiction and recovery that, considering Juice WRLD died of a drug overdose, hits even harder set to his music.

Watch the video for Juice WRLD’s “Cigarettes” above.

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Camila Cabello Celebrates Her Birthday By Officially Announcing Her Next Album, ‘Familia’

The last time Camila Cabello put out an album, it went pretty well: 2019’s Romance peaked at No. 3 on the Billboard 200 chart and yielded a pair of Platinum-certified singles in “Liar” and “My Oh My.” (The Shawn Mendes collaboration “Señorita” also topped the charts and appeared on Mendes’ self-titled album before popping up on Romance.) Now, Cabello is getting ready to do it all again: Today (which is also the singer’s 25th birthday), she officially announced her next album is called Familia and it’s set to drop on April 8.

She made the reveal on social media today by sharing what appears to be the album cover, a photo of Cabello hugging a smiling young girl (presumably a family member, given the album title). She wrote, “2 facts: it’s my birthday and this album is my whole f*cking heart. FAMILIA. Out April 8.”

There’s no tracklist out there yet, but it very well could include her 2021 single “Don’t Go Yet,” as well as the upcoming Ed Sheeran collaboration “Bam Bam,” which is set to drop tomorrow. She also premiered a new song from the album, “La Buena Vida,” during a 2021 NPR Tiny Desk Concert.

Familia is out 4/8 via Epic. Pre-order it here.

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Trippie Redd Celebrates Signing A $30 Million Record Contract With 10k Projects

Trippie Redd has already had a pretty impressive career so far for someone routinely overlooked by the music industry establishment, but if his latest social media posts turn out to be true, he’s about to have his biggest year ever. The Canton, Ohio rapper posted a pair of Instagram updates celebrating his latest career achievements: raising his performance fee to nearly a half-million dollars and signing a new recording contract allegedly worth millions.

“Just signed to @elliot for 30million,” he wrote in the caption of one post, referring to Elliot Grainge’s 10K Projects. “Now it’s time to start dropping ALLTY5 songs.” “ALLTY5” appears to be an acronym referring to Trippie’s popular mixtape series A Love Letter To You, which has four installments to date. And while that $30 million looked impressive at first glance, some fans were skeptical, prompting Trippie to clarify some of the deal’s terms in the comments. “Prob locked in for 10 years,” one dubious commenter wrote. “3 albums for 3 years,” Trippie replied.

Trippie had previously gloated about his booking fee going up, writing that he currently receives “250k – 400k each show that I’m booked for.” Considering that he hasn’t exactly been a favorite of corporate America, that figure may seem astonishing but it makes sense considering how long he’s been a festival favorite and a fixture of the Rolling Loud scene.

Of course, it’s important to remember that record deals aren’t like NBA contracts; it’s highly unlikely anyone just handed Trippie $30 million. That’s probably just the money the label is willing to invest in recording and promoting his next three albums with the obvious requirement that he recoup whatever’s he’s advanced in order to get paid on the backend. Still, that’s a surefire sign of the label’s confidence in Trippie — which makes sense, considering he’s 10k’s best-established artist.

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Taika Waititi And Rhys Darby Tell Us About The Real-Life Pirates And Itchy High Seas Cosplay Of ‘Our Flag Means Death’

Taika Waititi is easily distracted by stray cats.

It’s a note I make twice during our 20-minute Zoom interview. The first time his attention wanes to the feline intruder on my screen’s background it completely derails our interview. We’d been talking about his new workplace comedy Our Flag Means Death, landing on HBO Max March 3rd. The show sees him reuniting with What We Do In The Shadows mate Rhys Darby as the pair plays two of history’s most notorious swashbucklers. (Okay fine, one notorious swashbuckler for Waititi, one high-seas cosplaying aristocrat practically no one’s heard of for Darby.)

Both men – who have been friends for a decade or so – have jumped on a late-in-the-day call to preview a series that feels like if Pirates of the Caribbean met The Office, but they’re thrown off course by house pets. Waititi patiently waits as Darby shows me his own precious ball of fluff – who’s so well-groomed I begin to question my own cat parenting skills – but he draws the line when we begin discussing the concept of “cat strollers” and whether Darby should purchase one.

We’ve got a job to do, after all, and it involves promoting this show. A show that, if all goes well, might single-handedly revive the pirate industry – which is what creator David Jenkins likely intended all along. So, we get back to it, diving into the comedy’s wild premise, why the Kiwi sense of humor is superior, and which man’s pirate costume was more uncomfortable … all before another clawed intruder pops up to commandeer the conversation and toy with Waititi’s sense of reality.

“Jeez, there’s two of them,” he will eventually conclude. “It’s like the Matrix.”

After I spend too much time assuring them both that I do not, in fact, have a horde of cats hidden in my house, we correct course again. Free of future furred rogues, Darby and Waititi explain why they signed onto a pirate show in 2022 and whether a What We Do In The Shadow’s spinoff for Darby’s wolf pack leader will ever happen.

I love a good workplace comedy, but why set one on the high seas?

Taikia Waititi: Well I for one have never seen the… I’m probably making up a word, here, “mundanity”? “Mundane-ness”? You know what, it’s 2022, you can do what you want. No one’s going to police you nowadays. Mundanity. Mundaneness – ness – ness of being a pirate. What happens in the downtime in between the swashbuckling, when you’re washbuckling, and you’re bosh… smuckling? All those kinds of words.

Rhys Darby: You’ve done your swashing now you’re just buckling!

TW: Now you’re buckling the things you’ve swashed! And what happens when you’re talking about the things you’ve swash-buckled and you’re sitting around, scrubbing the deck. On boat life, everything has to be cleaned every day and you’ve got to keep retying these knots and there’s got to be some order.

RD: It’s tiresome.

TW: It’s just not just hanging out, smoking cigars and drinking rum. That was like a very small part of it. There’s not much rum drinking at all actually — they’re all rationed.

RD: It’s 20 minutes on a Friday.

TW: So, is there comedy to be mined within that? Showing that part of that life?

Because this is a comedy, the show could’ve just created a character. It didn’t necessarily have to be based on real-life historical figures, and yet we’ve got Blackbeard and this guy Stede Bonnet – both recognized pirates. Why were these two so interesting?

RD: That was David’s [Jenkins] genius idea. This guy shouldn’t have been a pirate, yet he was. And he’s on the fringe of these well-known pirates. Not many people know of him.

TW: Yeah, the most unlikely of pirates. It’s like why people love stories about a loser who suddenly becomes a hero at the end. No one wants to see a show about just the best pirate in the world, who’s always successful. It’s so boring. We want to see [someone] learning the ropes and figuring it out as he’s going along.

It’s incredible to see Rhys as this character. He broke the three cardinal rules of becoming a pirate. He built his own boat — he was meant to steal one. He hired a crew and paid them a weekly wage — the incentive is to steal stuff, that’s what made pirates be pirates. And he treated them really nicely. He wanted to be the gentleman pirate. You’re supposed to strike fear into the hearts of your enemy — not make them look forward to seeing you.

He’s made a pirate ship a healthy work environment, which feels like something that’s very hard to do.

RD: Totally, and the most amazing thing is, this really happened. This guy had everything, he was a wealthy landowner and he just suddenly snapped at the age of 32, I think it was — he just left his wife and kids, poured a lot of money into a ship, and built a library in his ship, took all his books with him. He was a dreamer and a risk-taker and just decided, “I’m going to get a second chance at life. To hell with it, to hell with this bliss that I’m living in which I’m so bored.” The people that do that kind of thing, it’s courageous because not many people do it, they think it’s absolute stupidity. And he’s the worst scenario of that because he’s going to go pirating. You’re going to die.

TW: The modern-day equivalent is when you hear about lawyers giving their jobs and becoming screenwriters.

RD: I’ve done lawyering, let’s go and do something that’s going to make me no money.

TW: I don’t want to discourage people from becoming screenwriters at any age, but it’s not going to happen for everyone. There are more rock and roll things you can do. Start a cool band with your mate. I’d rather you did that than join the sad, sad world of screenwriters.

[At this point in the conversation, we dive into Blake Snyder’s Save The Cat: The Last Book on Screenwriting, which has become an oft-recommended intro into screenwriting for aspiring creatives. Waititi has never read it. Darby, who can’t recall the book’s title, suggests it’s called “How To Skin A Cat.” Other made-up book names include “The Most Famous Cat In The Room” and “Screenwriting: Who’s A Cat Now.”]

RD: The less you know the better, Taika and I are proof of that. The less you know, the less you look into things, the better because then you’re totally original you’re coming from your own heart and your own soul and no one can fight with that. No one can argue with that.

TW: You’re absolutely right Rhys. I think the message for every person should be living their lives. It’s very difficult to be alive in this day and age and be true to yourself and actually be honest about what you want. A lot of us, we wake up one day, we go, “Is this my fucking life? Where did I go wrong? Or where did I go right?”

RD: In his case, ‘How did I go so right?’

You’re getting paid to dress up as pirates. You went right somewhere. But serious question, whose costume was the most uncomfortable?

TW: Mine.

RD: I can concur, it was uncomfortable. Looked good though.

TW: The costume and the hair and makeup and the beard and everything are exactly molded off how I feel on the inside. Constantly boiling hot, uncomfortable, and angry.

The longer you’re in this business, is it more difficult to find projects like this that excite you? Things that feel original and fresh?

RD: Taika’s doing that. He’s a refreshing person for Hollywood, for entertainment in general because he puts his own spin on everything and that’s why he’s who he is.

TW: I think Rhys is who he is. Rhys has certainly got his unique style. We saw a bunch of people read for this role who, any other casting agent or director would say were super obvious choices. They were good, but not different — not like they made you pay attention and go, “I want to see what happens to this motherfucker on the fucking high seas.” I think there’s a unique thing that we have in New Zealand. It still feels like we’re outsiders.

RD: It still feels like we’re still doing a style that other people aren’t doing.

TW: It’s how we speak and improvise how we would normally do it and then we’ve got our own particularly unique rhythm. I didn’t have to change my accent in [this] show, neither did Rhys. We love to do comedy without having to put on an accent — which would’ve ruined my performance, even a Bristolian accent which was where Blackbeard was from. There’s a better opportunity [now] to be ourselves.

Speaking of original, the What We Do In The Shadows world is expanding and yet, no werewolves spinoffs have happened. What gives?

TW: I know! I really do. I keep saying it and I decided, “You’re not going to say it anymore.” For years I kept promising that Jemaine [Clement] and I were going to work on We Are Wolves for Rhys. I’ve done so many interviews where I’ve said, “Yeah we’re doing it.”

RD: [jokingly] When? When?!

TW: We haven’t written it, but we still want to do it. That’d be the only spinoff, the only thing to do with What We Do In The Shadows that I would do again.

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Magdalena Bay Create An AI Kaleidoscope In Their ‘Dreamcatching’ Video

Magdalena Bay’s visuals have typically explored technology, fantasy realms and explosions of color. Now, in the kaleidoscopic video for “Dreamcatcher,” the Los Angeles electro-pop duo of Mica Tenenbaum and Matthew Lewin have just totally raised the bar.

Part Waking Life and part Robin Williams’ What Dreams May Come, the “Dreamcatching” visual is like sitting in a multi-sensory virtual reality ride. Directed by visual artist Felix Green, it uses AI technology and Generative Adversarial Network (GAN) art to generate moving pictures based on text and images. To translate this geek speak, the video is a reflection of living, breathing artwork, all set to Magdalena Bay’s arresting hyperpop track from their 2021 album Mercurial World.

“‘Dreamcatching’ is about all the places you want to know and all the places you’ll never go,” the band said in a statement. “The video uses AI neural networks to create the landscapes and worlds we long for in the lyrics, a computer’s interpretation of our dreams.”

The duo have also just announced tour support slots for Flume, Porter Robinson, and Charli XCX, along with their already sold-out headlining dates.

Watch the video for “Dreamcatching” above and check out Magdalena Bay’s upcoming tour dates below.

03/23-26 – Boise, ID @ Treefort Music Festival
03/27 – Seattle, WA @ Barboza
03/30 – Portland, OR @ Holocene
04/01 – San Francisco, CA @ Popscene at Rickshaw Stop
04/02 – Morrison, CO @ Red Rocks %
04/22 – New York, NY @ Hammerstein Ballroom*
04/23 – New York, NY @ Hammerstein Ballroom*
04/29 – Chicago, IL @ Byline Lake Aragan Ballroom*
06/03 – Cleveland, OH @ Jacobs Pavilion^
06/04 – Columbus, OH @ Express Live^
06/05 – Pittsburgh, PA @ Stage AE^
06/08 – Barcelona, ES @ Primavera Sound
07/22 – Seattle, WA @ Capitol Hill Block Party
08/27-28 – Pasadena, CA @ This Ain’t No Picnic @ Brookside at the Rose Bowl

* supporting Charli XCX
^ supporting Flume
% supporting Porter Robinson

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

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What Is The Cult-Like Behavior On Display In Netflix’s ‘Bad Vegan?’

(Mild spoilers for Netflix’s Bad Vegan will be found below.)

Netflix’s upcoming Bad Vegan limited series aims to tell the story of of Sarma Melngailis, the so-called “Vegan Bernie Madoff” celebrity restauranteur who became (in the aughts) the toast of New York City’s raw vegan scene. She founded and nurtured both One Lucky Duck and Pure Food and Wine for several years, and then things took a turn. She hooked up with a man named Anthony Strangis (who used the pseudonym of “Shane Fox”), and money started disappearing, and more than once, Sarma’s employees went without pay for a full month. Subsequently, the two ended up going on the lam after defrauding investors, and they became fugitives of the law before their arrest in very unexpected circumstances.

The narrative of the limited series (from executive producer Chris Smith of Tiger King and Fyre: The Greatest Party) is backed by media reports, law enforcement accounts, and interviews with Sarma and those who worked with her or considered her a friend. In the end, Sarma ended up serving four months on Riker’s Island after cutting a plea deal with prosecutors, but this true story had about as many twists as the Julia Garner-starring in Inventing Anna, also recently on Netflix.

With Bad Vegan, it’s hard to initially grasp why the successful Sarma fell so far from grace, to the point where she believed that Strangis would make her beloved pit bull immortal, and that he was encumbered by a “meat suit.” Yet Sarma’s pre-plea defense strategy goes a long way in explaining things. She appears to have fallen into a cult-like mentality with Strangis, who repeatedly convinced her to hand over thousands of dollars (which added up to millions in defrauded sums) in tribute to him. He was gambling this money away, and at some point, Sarma didn’t even resist, perhaps due to some sunk-cost fallacy? Actually, Vanity Fair summed up her legal team’s tactics in 2017:

Melngailis’s legal team had said they were planning on employing a “coercive control” defense, arguing that the only way to understand the bizarre case was to see that, like someone sucked into a cult and brainwashed, Melngailis had been abused mentally, physically, and sexually by Strangis, a con man who convinced her to bankrupt her successful restaurant by sending him money. Prosecutors say Strangis used the money to support his gambling habit. Strangis’s lawyer has denied this version of events and maintained his client is innocent of all charges.

In the end, again, Sarma chose to take the plea deal rather than attempt this as a legal defense for the fraud and larceny charges. She served four months in prison, and Strangis also took a plea that landed him five years on probation. The two did communicate at the end of Bad Vegan, but hopefully, Sarma will stay far away from him while attempting to rebuild her future.

Bad Vegan will stream on March 16.