Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

Ben Bridwell Reviews Every Band Of Horses Album

Given the state of the world right now, putting out an album called Things Are Great seems like either an irreverent joke or an act of insane optimism. But for Ben Bridwell of Band Of Horses, it’s really just a declaration that he is, after a series of albums marked by compromise, finally doing things his way.

“The rawness of me playing guitar, I think, goes a long way,” he explained in a recent interview. “And not being afraid to play my sloppy, weird style of guitar.”

Things Are Great, which drops on Friday, is a conscious return to the brawny, vision-quest-y rock of Band Of Horses’ mid-aughts era, when they first roared to indie fame on the strength of their 2006 debut, Everything All The Time. Their next album, 2007’s Cease To Begin, continued their winning streak, spawning a hit, the affecting ballad “No One’s Gonna Love You.” After that, Band Of Horses entered the major-label world, signing with Columbia for their third LP, 2010’s Infinite Arms.

The band’s output gets spottier after that, an outcome that the candid and self-effacing Bridwell blames on his own lack of self-confidence. Too often, he says, he’s let other people goad him into artistic decisions he didn’t fully believe in. But that’s changed with Things Are Great, which was previewed last fall with the winning throwback single “Crutch.”

“I feel like I, at least, deserve a shot,” he said. “I, at least, deserve to have my chance to make the record I want. It’s been enough records, at least give me a damn shot to put more of a hand in the production to guide that ship into port. I feel the chickens have come home to roost that way.”

Bridwell talked about the ups and downs of Band Of Horses’ discography — and good-naturedly called me out on a review of one of those albums — in a recent interview.

Everything All The Time (2006)

I was in a fledgling sadcore band that had just broken up. And I didn’t want to stop being in a band, so I just started making songs — not knowing what I was doing, not knowing how to tune the guitar, not knowing how to sing. It seemed very unlikely that anything would really come from it. But then we put out a little self-recorded EP, and Sam of Iron & Wine — who’s a good old friend of mine — came to town and he had me open up for them. And Megan [Jasper] and Jonathan [Poneman] from Sub Pop bought our little demo EP that night. I couldn’t believe they cared.

They had me come in, and they wanted to pair me up with Phil Ek. I already knew Phil a little bit. It all seemed pretty daunting at the time, and even in hindsight, it seems so unlikely. There was a lot of growing pains for that record, just trying to figure out how to work in a studio like that with a producer like Phil, who commands respect and sometimes demands perfection when we were just such, well, novices.

I remember being very surprised when they picked “Funeral” to be the single. I didn’t want that song to even be on the album. I didn’t want to finish it. It seemed too hard. The guitar playing, I couldn’t seem to get it right. And I don’t think I was getting the lyrics correct. I wasn’t finding the right sentiment. I felt it was too trite, maybe. We had some other B-sides — what became B-sides — that I thought were just as good as that song. Sometimes when you’re making stuff, you’re the last to know what’s good or bad to other people. Lo and behold, I’m always wrong when it comes to picking a single anyway, and that continues to this day.

It was surprising when things like commercial licenses were coming up, because at that time, the idea of selling out was such a thing. I remember being a bit worried about what the perception would be there. This was also blog world times — everyone had a blog and there was plenty of anti-sellout sentiment going on.

Cease To Begin (2007)

After we started touring that first record, I made enough money where I could live in my own rental house by myself. By this point, we had moved to South Carolina, so it wasn’t Seattle rent. But I remember thinking, “At least I can keep this going for the length of the lease.” I was also thinking, “I might be able to have a family.” I’d met a girl and I was thinking about becoming an adult.

The second one came pretty quick thereafter. I had some stuff in the tank, like “No One’s Gonna Love You.” I think that that was maybe the second single off that record, but it ended up being a big song, at least for us. I remember being in my apartment in Seattle before committing to writing the words and having to force myself just to write down what I think it should say. I was like, “Oh man, is this too cringey?” But then, I had to remind myself I grew up with a lot of soul music, a lot of Otis Redding and Marvin Gaye and things like that, where the strongest dudes aren’t afraid to be that vulnerable and to say those kind of words. I had to talk myself out of editing what I thought it needed to say and I’m really glad I did.

I remember having a couple good tracks I was working on. I was like, “Let’s just get it going.” I’d gotten my first laptop and was starting to experiment with recording at home — didn’t know what I was doing, still kind of don’t. By this point, we had shed a few band members already and acquired one, an old friend of mine in South Carolina. I was really dead set on a regimented work day, to make sure we could hit this quick because I was afraid that the success that we just experienced would be fleeting. I figured if we could hit them quick, people wouldn’t forget about us and we might be able to carry this on a few more years.

As far as the recording goes, we went to Asheville, North Carolina with Phil Ek, and it was fraught with some tension because Phil’s always been tough on Creighton, my best friend and the drummer in Band of Horses. I knew that we were going to have a pain in our ass with Phil just being tough on him. Also, in that kind of recording situation, you can’t do nothing until the drums are done. We might play the bass and drums at the same time and get lucky, but the pressure was really on Creighton. That’s where some cracks started to appear in that relationship with Phil, because I was going to stand up for my dudes no matter what.

I also remember feeling like we had seven songs that we needed to push to 10 somehow. That’s why you have an instrumental song on there. My first experimentation of recording alone, that’s why it sounds so crappy. We were pushing to find more songs. I had a demo for “Is There a Ghost?” Phil heard that demo and was like, “We can make that into a song, even though it’s only got 12 words.” That ended up being the first single.

Infinite Arms (2010)

We went back to Asheville to Echo Mountain Studios. Phil came with us. It’s a residential studio, so there’s a band house down the road and we’re all in each other’s faces all the time. Those same cracks from before immediately caused some trouble. Creighton’s worried, and Phil’s talking to me behind Creighton’s back, about hiring another drummer. It was aggravating. Just a distasteful vibe going on. Phil was also like, “I might get this Strokes record coming up.” He was being considered for that job, and he was like, “I can’t commit to these dates.” Once we got done with one session out there, we were like, “Let’s do it ourselves.”

Now we’ve got two new guys in the band with Tyler Ramsey and Bill Reynolds, and Rob Hampton had left, but we still got Ryan, Creighton, and me, so now we’re this five-piece. These guys are cats, they can run circles around my ass playing anything. By this point, I have a child, too, so my life’s changed. I moved up to Minnesota for a while, while I was writing this album, had a baby, and then moved back down. The pressure cooker was definitely going now.

We have new management. Our Sub Pop deal is done, so we’re going to be signing a new record contract with somebody. Once we did sign, we had a much bigger budget. This was with Columbia. We’re out in L.A., kind of idle at times, just a totally different vibe. A “lunatics running the asylum” kind of thing.

With “Laredo,” I’ve written that same song so many times, starting with “Weed Party.” Some of it has to do with the weird tunings I use, there’s only so much I can do within them or have figured out how to do within them. But I think it’s all one song in a way.

Mirage Rock (2012)

It got the worst review I’ve ever heard in my fucking life. Don’t you remember? I got it pulled up.

[holds up phone showing a 4.0 review from Pitchfork written by me]

I’ve been waiting for that.

I’m not that crazy about it, either. It was a tough time, too. Who gives a shit about record sales? Well, the record label does. I remember feeling that pressure cooker, for sure. I did, in a way, get pushed around a little bit by the industry at this time. My intentions were not to make that record the way it was made, but that’s cool. I got to hang with Glyn Johns, who’s a friend to this day, and it was an eye-opening experience. I do remember, during the recording of it, feeling like, “This is like a time warp.” We get to be in the studio with Glyn and work the way that he wants to work and create a loose piece of art and maybe it’ll feel like a live record.

In hindsight, though, I don’t think I was writing the best songs. There were lots of songs to choose from, but now you got so many damn people’s voices in your ear, not to mention that pressure cooker ever-heating up and wanting to perform better for the label and not get dropped. I remember thinking it was good when it was done, but quickly thereafter feeling like we didn’t exert our own control over our art enough. We got pushed around and we could have done better and chosen different material. But I look on it fondly, with getting to work with Glyn and I try not to disparage it too much. But I don’t play those songs too much, I can tell you that.

Why Are You OK (2016)

I am friends with Jason Lytle from Grandaddy. I was interested in talking to him about producing a Band Of Horses record, and I knew that he was ready to make a new album. I just knew that he needed to get out and start making music again, so it was kind of a ploy to get him out. I was like, “Oh, there’s a really cool studio, north of Sausalito, that looks beautiful. If you want to hang out for a couple of days and play me some music, we can talk about it then.” We rented this little barrelhouse, like an old water tower thing that’s been converted into an Airbnb.

We end up going out there, and I swear for two or three days we hung out, we toured the studio up the hill, but we didn’t talk about us working together, or I don’t think I played him any demos. We just listened to music that we love. He’s probably playing me ELO, I’m sure, and I’m trying to show him the Dead Kennedys. We’re just riffing and being friends. We get done with the trip and he’s like, “Shit, let’s do it, man.”

Jason works so meticulously. So meticulously. The joke with Jason is he’s going to ask the engineer, “Can I get a keyboard track?” He’s always asking for a keyboard track. All of a sudden, he starts to drive your song a little bit more than maybe you’re comfortable with, so there’s a little bit of friction there, especially because we’re friends, like older brother/younger brother. You don’t want to stand up to your older brother too much, especially when you hold him in such high regard. It ended up being really fun. We went out to Asheville again to do some overdubs and then up to Fredonia, New York with Dave Fridmann,

Dave would mix and Jason and I were just stuck in Dave’s studio house, seething at each other and also walking on eggshells a bit, because I’m with these two absolute studs that I revere, and I’m not sure how much push I can give my own opinions when they have such keen ears.

We had already been dropped from Columbia, so now we’re going to have to shop this record. You want to make it as good as possible. Stylistically, I did want to return more to playing guitar again and to not be too slick, but I think in the end it has a lot of slickness to it, because Jason can fill any crack with delicious sounds. It becomes a bit larger than maybe I saw it. Then, you get Fridmann’s wild ass, the way he mixes things, which is so psychedelic, amazing, and sometimes terrifying.

Things Are Great (2022)

There’s always been a lack of confidence on my part. It comes from never having been a singer, never having been a guitar player or a bandleader or running a business like this that now has crew members and CPAs and shit. I think my lack of confidence has always stayed the same, no matter how big we got. It’s always been easy to get pushed around in the studio setting, especially, because someone is looking over your shoulder.

There was an original album that we scrapped for Things Are Great. We recorded it with Jason Lytle again and mixed it with Dave Fridmann again. I was just like, “I don’t think this is good enough.” I was at that breaking point, where I’m like, “I want to take back control of my band.” No disrespect to them because that version of the record was really cool. It just sounded so much like the last one that I was like, “I’m tired of not being able to get the sound that I want.”

The rawness of me playing guitar, I think, goes a long way. And not being afraid to play my sloppy, weird style of guitar. I don’t mean to disparage it, but it took a good friend to kick me in the pants a bit to say, “Your wack style is a strong point of the band.” Instead of always cleaning things up, let’s let the warts be displayed, if not celebrated. I always think of coming at this as a dirt bag. I want to be safe sometimes and I just forget, again, that self-confidence thing. I start to defer to people, and this dude showed me that we can accentuate those frailties.

I feel like I, at least, deserve a shot. I, at least, deserve to have my chance to make the record I want. It’s been enough records, at least give me a damn shot to put more of a hand in the production to guide that ship into port. I feel the chickens have come home to roost that way.

It’s a breakup record in so many different ways. But definitely lots of hard stuff going on personally and obviously professionally. There’s a lot of sadness that permeates these songs. I really wanted to tell my stories without being too metaphorically slick. I really wanted to get my thoughts out the way I say them, even if it’s saying the words “fuck” and “shit.”

It seems so strange that I would’ve fallen into this thing, whatever it is. It’s not a job, but there’s a lot of work to do. I’m still as wide-eyed and surprised as ever. To go through the catalog, I’m like, “Shit.” It is like a personal timeline, especially thinking about all the stuff that was going on and what informed the records. I tend, though, to be a bit on my heels with all of it still. Some young kid will send me a damn Instagram message asking me if I’ll sing backup on his song that’s going to be on Bandcamp, and I’m like, “Hell yeah.” I’m still innocent, I think. I still feel like a kid in this game and I’ve got plenty more to say.

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

Kanye West Changes Lawyers The Day Before His Divorce Hearing

Throughout Kanye West and Kim Kardashian’s contentious divorce proceedings, Kanye has maintained that he does not want to split from his wife, cycling through a number of attorneys and strategies ahead of the court hearing that would declare the couple legally separated. Yesterday, just a day before that hearing, Kanye changed lawyers again according to Billboard, firing Chris Melcher and replacing him with Samantha Spector, who represented Dr. Dre’s ex-wife Michelle Young in their recent divorce.

The hearing today will focus on arguments from the two legal teams about whether to officially end Kanye and Kim’s marriage with assets and custody matters to be sorted in a future hearing. Kardashian requested the arrangement, hoping that accelerating their legal split could finally impress upon Kanye that their marriage is over so that they could focus on hashing out the custody of their four children. The couple already had a prenuptial agreement that kept their assets separate, although Kanye tried to argue that the agreement was invalid, hoping to exploit a loophole and delay their divorce.

However, through it all, Kim has maintained that she has no desire to reconcile with Kanye, who has lashed out at her new beau, Pete Davidson, in his music and on social media. It’s not clear what effect he thinks changing lawyers at the eleventh hour will have on the outcome, but come this afternoon, he could very well be single again.

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

The ‘Tinder Swindler’ Is Being Sued By The Real Leviev Diamond Family For Using Their Name

In the Netflix documentary, The Tinder Swindler, a scrupulous Casanova named Simon Leviev (real name: Shimon Hayut) was slapped with detailed accusations of duping multiple women out of thousands of dollars by claiming to be a member of a wealthy diamond tycoon family. After briefly wooing them with lavish dates, Hayut would then concoct elaborate plots about his life being in danger to gain access to the women’s cash and finances.

Since the documentary blew up on the streaming platform, Hayut has been banned from dating apps, and now, he’s being sued by the actual Leviev family, who understandably did not enjoy having their name attached to the Tinder Swindler’s schemes. Via PEOPLE:

The lawsuit, filed in Tel Aviv, Israel, claims that “for a long time, he [Simon Leviev] has been making false representations as being the son of Lev Leviev and receiving numerous benefits (including material ones).”

The family alleges that Hayut has been “cunningly using false words, claiming to be a member of the Leviev Family, and that his family will pay and bear the costs of his benefits.”

The Leviev family lawsuit will almost definitely put a hamper on Hayut’s effort to clean up his name since being the subject of the documentary. In a recent interview, Hayut claimed to be a legitimate businessman who truly is rich thanks to getting in on the ground floor of Bitcoin. He also wants to become a “dating guru,” so he can help others find true love in this digital dating world filled with, well, people like him.

(Via People)

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

Lizzo Declares She’s A ‘Body Icon’ While Discussing Modern Beauty Standards

When Lizzo’s “Truth Hurts” hit No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 2019, her body became the subject of conversation. Often posing nude in her Instagram photos, Lizzo is comfortable in her body, and even proclaimed “I am body goals” on her 2021 Cardi B-assisted single “Rumors.”

In a recent interview with People, Lizzo called herself a “body icon” and expressed hopes to change beauty standards as we know them, saying:

“I think I have a really hot body! I’m a body icon, and I’m embracing that more and more every day. It may not be one person’s ideal body type just like, say, Kim Kardashian might not be someone’s ideal, but she’s a body icon and has created a modern-day beauty standard. And what I’m doing is stepping into my confidence and my power to create my own beauty standard. And one day that will just be the standard.”

In the same interview, Lizzo expressed the desire to be free from stereotypes, including “The funny, fat friend… Or the friend who is gonna beat your ass ’cause she’s big. Or it’s the big girl who’s insecure ’cause she’s big. I don’t think I’m the only kind of fat girl there is. I want us to be freed from that box we’ve been put in.”

This month, Lizzo is set to premiere her reality competition show Watch Out For The Big Grrrls on Amazon Prime Video, in which she searches for other “big grrrls” to join her troupe of background dancers.

Check out the full interview here.

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

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

Badbadnotgood Releases ‘Open Channels’ Alongside A Trippy Video

Last October, Badbadnotgood released Talk Memory, the first album in five years from the psychedelic jazz jazz ensemble/hip-hop instrumentalist trio. While the track “Open Channels” — which sees BBNG sounding like true disciples of Miles Davis’ Bitches Brew — appeared across all physical releases, it was not widely available on streaming services. Today, though, the Canadian band have added the song to the album’s tracklist across all music streaming platforms and have shared a trippy new short film for the track.

Directed by Sylvain Chaussée, the new clip is largely done in black and white, but with swaths of psychedelic colors soaking into the film. The band trudge through the snow, carrying their instruments, only to settle into an ominous blacked out performance space where only they are lit up. The color splashes flow like a lava lamp, adding detail to the saxophone, drums and bass.

The release comes ahead of Badbadnotgood’s tour, which begins on March 7th at the Varsity Theater in Minneapolis. A slew of March dates through the US will lead into their two Coachella festival performances, which sandwich two nights at The Novo in LA alongside Freddie Gibbs and Madlib. They’ll then embark on two separate stints of European tour dates.

Watch the video for “Open Channels” above and stream Talk Memory here.

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

Hop Aboard The ‘Bullet Train’ Trailer With Brad Pitt As An Assassin On A Train Full Of Assassins

The trailer for Bullet Train begins as all trailers should, with Brian Tyree Henry from Atlanta shushing a bucket hat-wearing Brad Pitt for talking too loudly after pulling a gun on him in the quiet car. From there, there’s a Japanese language cover of “Stayin’ Alive,” elaborate set pieces from Atomic Blonde and Deadpool 2 director David Leitch, and Pitt, doing his own stunts, as an assassin on a train full of assassins.

The rest of the cast includes Joey King, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Hiroyuki Sanada, Michael Shannon, Bad Bunny, Zazie Beetz, and Andrew Koji, who told Entertainment Weekly, “The one thing that I can say, you’re going to see Brad Pitt do something, a kind of performance, that I’ve never seen him do. “I just remember going, wow! He’s done it. I had no idea he was going to do that with this and take it in that way.”

Here’s the official plot synopsis:

An original movie event, Bullet Train is a fun, delirious action-thriller from the director of Deadpool 2, David Leitch. Brad Pitt headlines an ensemble cast of eclectic, diverse assassins – all with connected yet conflicting objectives – set against the backdrop of a non-stop ride through modern-day Japan.

Based on author Kōtarō Isaka’s book Maria Beetle, Bullet Train opens on July 15.

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

Jason Momoa Shed The Vaguest Of Light On His Split From Lisa Bonet At ‘The Batman’ New York Premiere

Early this year, Jason Momoa and Lisa Bonet shocked the world by announcing that love is dead they chose to end their coupling. That meant calling it quits after sixteen years together, including a five year marriage, and they made it clear that they’d grown apart and that their divorce was one more part of these “transformational times” that we’re living in today, and “we free each other.”

Following that announcement, Jason began his bachelor life in a $750,000 RV, and although there have been unsubstantiated reports that he and Lisa were “working” on things (and maybe not splitting after all), Momoa appeared to lend no credence to that hearsay. Here’s what he told Entertainment Tonight on The Batman red carpet in New York City while supporting step-daughter Zoe Kravitz’s turn as Catwoman:

“We’re just so proud,” he said of Kravitz, whom Bonet shares with her ex, Lenny Kravitz. “Lisa couldn’t be here so we’re representing, me and the babies. We’re very excited to just be here. …It’s still family, you know?”

Nearly two months after the Cosby Show star and Aquaman actor shocked fans by announcing their split, a source tells ET that there’s no bad blood between them. “They had a lot of love for each other when they broke up, and obviously still do,” the source says.

Yup, Momoa was in attendance with his two teenage children, Lola (14) and Nakoa-Wolf (13), as they rallied for Zoe. And my gosh, Nakoa-Wolf certainly inherited his father’s style. But yeah, it sure seems like Jason and Lisa are as diplomatic as can be with no confirmation or even an acknowledgement of those reunion rumors.

However, there’s a certain someone that Momoa definitely hasn’t quit yet. That would be Channing Tatum, who’s dating Zoe and who hopped on a plane earlier this week with Momoa, so they could “see our ZOZO.” It’s quite a pairing. Rock on, dudes.

(Via Entertainment Tonight & PEOPLE)

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

People Are Using Online Restaurant Review Forums To Let Russians Know What A Murderous A$$hole Putin Is

While we only need to turn on a TV or hop onto Twitter to see the devastation Vladimir Putin is causing in Ukraine, it can be easy to forget that Russian citizens don’t necessarily have that kind of freedom. For most people, their news comes via state-run media outlets—meaning that Putin and his Kremlin cronies are the ones creating the narrative. While their increasingly unhinged president continues to wage war with Ukraine, most Russians aren’t seeing the devastation he is creating AND they’re being fed lies about the reasons their friends and family members are being sent off to die in a perhaps unwinnable war. To get any sort of anti-Putin sentiment out into the world, protestors have had to get creative. One brilliant way they’ve done that: Leaving five-star restaurant reviews that are all about Russia’s tyrannical leader.

As The Daily Beast reports, many of Russia’s most popular bars and restaurants have been hit with a wave of five-star reviews via Google and other review sites, in which the “diners” in question skip the appetizer completely and go straight to the main course by sharing the real news of the deadly attacks Putin is masterminding against neighboring Ukraine. If you’re wondering what the specialty is at Moscow hotspot Romantic, for example, The Daily Beast notes you’ll find that “5,800 Russian Soldiers died today, 4,500 yesterday. Stop your aggression, don’t let your kids suffer, if you go to war you will not come back.” (According to some media outlets, Russian mothers are claiming their sons were tricked into military service and didn’t know they were going to war.)

While word of the tactic has spread on social media, and people have encouraged others around the world to let Russia’s citizens know what is really happening, some platforms have caught onto the trend—and are flagging the “reviews.”

Whether via a glowing review of Moscow’s swankiest restaurant or other means, the message is getting through—as evidenced by the number of Russian citizens seen risking their own lives to protest their tyrannical leader. On Sunday, according to Reuters, Russian police arrested more than 2,000 protestors in 48 cities across the country for speaking out publicly against Putin.

(Via The Daily Beast)

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

Billie Eilish Remembers The Exact Moment She Stopped Feeling Comfortable In Public

Fame is a double-edged sword. Having your work appreciated and loved by millions of people around the world has to be a special feeling, but having that level of notoriety can change your relationship with the world and not always for the better. That’s something Billie Eilish has experienced first-hand, and she actually remembers the moment she got too famous to feel comfortable going out in public.

In a new V Magazine feature, Eilish discusses going to therapy in 2020 and reflecting on her life. During the process, Eilish pin-pointed the moment she stopped feeling comfortable out in public due to her fame. It happened when she was 16 years old, going ice skating with a friend in Los Angeles after touring for three months. She noted of the experience:

“It was a nightmare and it scared the living hell out of me, because I was just turned into this prop. I’ve never been so scared. It was like, a huge stampede… in those three months, I’d gotten bigger, but I didn’t know it until I was in that situation. From that day on, I didn’t go anywhere. I didn’t do anything. I was so flipped out by what had happened and how powerless I felt. And I didn’t have security because I didn’t have the money for it. I was the level of fame that needs security, but also the level of fame where you don’t really have the resources.”

Read the full feature here.

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

Benedict Cumberbatch Has Replaced Robert Downey Jr. As The ‘Anchor’ Of The Marvel Cinematic Universe

From 2008 to 2019, the Marvel Cinematic Universe revolved around Robert Downey Jr. Iron Man kicked off the MCU, Tony Stark was the unofficial leader of the Avengers, and even after Tony was killed in Avengers: Endgame (spoiler?), so much of Spider-Man: Far From Home felt like it was all the characters asking, “Where’s Iron Man?”

But now that RDJ has moved on to making Dolittle 2, or whatever, Benedict Cumberbatch has become the new “anchor” of the MCU.

That’s according to Marvel Studios head Kevin Feige, who gave a speech at Cumberbatch’s Hollywood Walk of Fame ceremony on Tuesday. “I remember our very first meeting was set up as a general, and we wanted to pitch him this great character,” he said, “and before we could, he said, ‘So tell me about Doctor Strange,’ because you knew. Because somewhere you knew what this could be and you’ve always seen the tremendous potential in this character. Because of that, you’ve become the anchor of the Marvel Cinematic Universe and the only actor capable of guiding us through the madness of the Multiverse.” He also congratulated Cumberbatch on appearing in “a historic three of the top six films of all time,” those being Avengers: Endgame, Avengers: Infinity War, and Spider-Man: No Way Home.

The big difference between Downey and Cumberbatch is that while the former basically only appeared in Marvel movies for a decade, give or take a random The Judge or Sherlock Holmes sequel, Cumberbatch continues to star in smaller budget films, like The Electrical Life of Louis Wain and The Power of the Dog, which earned him his first Oscar nomination. His next two movies are Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness and The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar, written and directed by Wes Anderson.

(Via ScreenRant)