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Pumpkin Beers Actually Worth Drinking This Fall, Ranked

Finally spotting pumpkin beers on the shelf or beer cooler is a sure sign that summer is nearing its end. Just like the arrival of Halloween candy, pumpkin beers (even in mid-September) signal that fall is right around the corner. This happens every year. Also, the arrival of these brews is met with a mixture of excitement and dread. There are few beers as divisive as the pumpkin beer.

Haters will say it tastes like a generic, overly sweet pumpkin-spiced mess. Others will tell you that when made well, pumpkin beers are complex, balanced, and carry the flavors of fall. Spices, pumpkin, and other ingredients make it a popular choice for many.

That being said, we found eight of the best pumpkin beers (a mix of lower and higher ABV brews) on the market that are actually worth drinking this fall. We ranked them based on pumpkin flavor, balance, and overall drinkability. Keep scrolling to see how it turned out.

8) Iron Hill Pumpkin Ale

Iron Hill Pumpkin Ale
Iron Hill

ABV: 5.5%

Average Price: $11 for a four-pack of 16-ounce cans

The Beer:

This fall seasonal pumpkin beer from the folks at Iron Hill is known for its balanced flavor profile and recipe that includes pumpkin pie spices and vanilla. The result is a pumpkin ale that literally tastes like a slice of pumpkin pie in beer form.

Tasting Notes:

Right away, the pumpkin aroma hits you. There are also fall spices, and caramel. It’s a very welcoming start. The palate is loaded with more real pumpkin flavor, autumnal spices, toffee, and vanilla. Nothing is over-the-top though. It’s surprisingly easy to drink.

Bottom Line:

This is a good choice for drinkers who want to dip a toe into the pumpkin beer world. It’s lower in ABV than many on the market and less in-your-face in the pumpkin spice department.

7) Southern Tier Pumking

Southern Tier Pumking
Southern

ABV: 8.6%

Average Price: $14 for a four-pack

The Beer:

When it comes to well-known pumpkin beers, it’s tough to beat the appeal of Southern Tier Pumking. This aptly named imperial ale is available from August through October. It’s brewed with 2-row pale malt, Munich Malt, and C60 malts as well as ale yeast, two kinds of hops, pumpkin, and various seasonal spices.

Tasting Notes:

On the nose, you’ll be treated to aromas of vanilla beans, pie crust, cinnamon sugar, and other seasonal spices. The palate begins with pumpkin flavor and moves into toffee, vanilla, allspice, cinnamon, and cloves. It’s sweet, balanced, the perfectly spiced.

Bottom Line:

Another beer that tastes like pumpkin pie in beer form, the best thing about Pumking is that everything tastes fresh and real. No generic tastes here.

6) Cigar City Good Gourd

Cigar City Good Gourd
Cigar City

ABV: 8.8%

Average Price: $12 for a four-pack

The Beer:

This popular imperial pumpkin ale gets its flavor from the addition of allspice, clove, nutmeg, vanilla, and cinnamon. Like many on the market, its recipe was created to taste as close to a pumpkin pie as possible. It definitely does.

Tasting Notes:

Complex aromas of ripe pumpkin, pie crust, cinnamon, clove, and allspice hit your nostrils before your first sip. The palate only expands on this with roasted pumpkin, vanilla beans, toffee, pie crust, more spices, and even some gentle, floral hops at the finish.

Bottom Line:

As pumpkin ales go, Cigar City Good Gourd is surprisingly well-balanced and flavorful. Add it to your fall list immediately.

5) Saint Arnold Pumpkinator

Saint Arnold Pumpkinator
Saint Arnold

ABV: 11.2%

Average Price: $8 for a 22-ounce bottle

The Beer:

This award-winning pumpkin stout is a seasonal can’t-miss for many beer drinkers. First released in 2009, it’s brewed with pale two-row, caramel, and black malts as well as Liberty and Cascade hops. It gets its seasonal flavor from the use of pumpkin, molasses, brown sugar, and spices.

Tasting Notes:

A lot is going on with this beer’s nose. There are underlying notes of roasted malts and coffee as well as pumpkin, pie crust, cinnamon, and other seasonal spices. The palate continues this trend with more robust, roasted malts, chocolate, coffee, pumpkin, molasses, brown sugar, and spices. The finish is dry and gently spicy.

Bottom Line:

This is a very complex beer with a ton of flavors. To find them all, you’d need to sample it multiple times. And you’ll probably want to.

4) AleWerks Pumpkin Ale

AleWerks Pumpkin Ale
AleWerks

ABV: 7.3%

Average Price: $14 for a six-pack

The Beer:

This 7.3% pumpkin ale out of Virginia’s AleWerks is made with fresh, natural ingredients including pumpkin, cinnamon, brown sugar, and even nutmeg. It smells and tastes like pumpkin pie and that’s definitely not a bad thing.

Tasting Notes:

The nose begins with roasted pumpkin, clove, nutmeg, cinnamon, and caramel malts. Drinking it reveals hints of ripe pumpkin, roasted malts, butterscotch, nutmeg, clove, and cinnamon. The finish is dry, spicy, and lingering. It’s a complex memorable beer.

Bottom Line:

Another beer with a lot going on in terms of aroma and flavor. Crack open one of these bad boys on a cool early fall evening and sip it slowly.

3) Whole Hog Pumpkin Ale

Whole Hog Pumpkin Ale
Whole Hog

ABV: 7%

Average Price: $13 for a six-pack

The Beer:

Available from August through October, this 7% ABV, award-winning pumpkin ale is most well-known for its spices. Sure, it starts with real pumpkin like any good pumpkin ale should. But a bit of real cinnamon, nutmeg, and other pumpkin pie spices propel this beer to another level altogether.

Tasting Notes:

The nose is all roasted pumpkin, nutmeg, cloves, and cinnamon. It’s a great sweet, spicy start. Sipping it brings forth more cinnamon, cloves, nutmeg, and pumpkin as well as allspice and sweet vanilla beans. Even with all the spices, it goes down easy with a nice sweet, lightly bitter finish.

Bottom Line:

This is a great example of a pumpkin ale done right. It ticks all the boxes but doesn’t lean too heavily in any direction.

2) Hardywood Farmhouse Pumpkin

Hardywood Farmhouse Pumpkin
Hardywood

ABV: 8.5%

Average Price: $7 for a 22-ounce bottle

The Beer:

This isn’t your average seasonal pumpkin ale. Hardywood’s version is a Wallonian-style farmhouse ale with pumpkin and spices. It’s brewed with sugar pumpkin, whole nutmeg, allspice, clove, and even ginger.

Tasting Notes:

Rustic, yeasty Saison aromas are up front, followed by ripe pumpkin, cinnamon, and spices. The palate is filled with roasted pumpkin, yeast, clove, cinnamon, and a gentle kick of ginger. The finish is a mix of yeast, sweetness, and light seasonal spices. Overall, a unique take on the style.

Bottom Line:

The end of the summer and the beginning of fall is a great time for Saisons — so why not get really into autumn and drink a pumpkin Saison?

1) Avery Rumpkin

Avery Rumpkin
Avery

ABV: 16.9%

Average Price: $14 for a 12-ounce bottle

The Beer:

Fans of Avery Rumpkin look forward to this seasonal beer year after year. This one is different than the others on this list as it begins as a spiced, pumpkin ale brewed with nutmeg, cinnamon, and ginger that’s then aged in rum barrels. The result is a complex, barrel-aged banger that’s not to be missed.

Tasting Notes:

A triumphant nose of roasted pumpkin, cinnamon, ginger, vanilla beans, and sweet, boozy rum greets you right away. Drinking it reveals a warming, boozy flavor profile of caramel candy, pumpkin, cinnamon, vanilla cookies, ginger, and more rum. The finish is dry, warming, and leaves you craving more.

Bottom Line:

This beer is fairly high in alcohol. That being said, it’s surprisingly balanced and complex. Definitely a beer to warm you on a cool fall night.

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Craig Gillespie On ‘Dumb Money’ And Why He Loves An Outsider

Craig Gillespie is an enigma, an opinion I shared with him during this interview. It’s hard to find a through line through his films – narrative, style, or genre – which does see to leave a lot of critics not knowing quite what to do with him. He’s hard to define, in a business that loves defining people. When I bring this up to Gillespie he starts laughing, because he knows it’s true. A hopelessly sweet movie like Lars and the Real Girl doesn’t have a lot in common with, say, the needle-drop rage in I, Tonya or his gritty, stylistic take on a Disney villain with Cruella.

His latest is Dumb Money (which just premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival and is opening limited this weekend), as Gillespie tackles a full-on ensemble movie about how GameStop became the battle line between ordinary people looking to make some money and the financial institutions hell-bent on making sure that doesn’t happen. Keith Gill (Paul Dano) is a little-known YouTube investor who loves GameStop stock partially because he feels it is undervalued because of the amount of financial institutions shorting it, and partially just out of his nostalgia for GameStop. Eventually, his recommendation catches on, becoming a movement against the banks that were shorting the stocks. Now, on paper, Keith is a millionaire as his wife (Shailene Woodley) and brother (Pete Davidson) wonder if he has a plan at all.

Meanwhile, we circle through a number of investors (America Ferrera, Anthony Ramos, Myha’la Herrold) and their thought processes on how long to stay in. We meet the financial titans losing hundreds of millions a day (Seth Rogen, Vincent D’Onofrio, Nick Offerman). And, of course, the two schmucks (Sebastian Stan, Rushi Kota) who founded the Robin Hood app and find themselves way in over their heads, finally leading to the day they take away the option to buy GameStop, which caused the stock to tank and signaled to the world, oh, right, this truly is rigged.

Ahead, Gillespie takes us through why he was very determined to be as faithful to the actual story as possible, and explains how Dane DeHaan wound up in this movie as a GameStop manager with a rat tail. And he comes up with a convenient through-line for his movies. He says it was never intentional, but when you look back at his movies, he does love an outsider.

(I was supposed to speak to Gillespie in Toronto, but we had to reschedule to Zoom because a day before I was supposed to leave for the festival I tested positive for COVID. Something that seemed quite obvious to Gillespie once I tried to speak, as I was still pretty sick. Then, immediately after this, went back to bed.)

Craig Gillespie: Hey there, Mike. How you doing?

It hasn’t been the best week…

Do you have COVID?

Yeah, I do. I was supposed to go to Toronto.

Just to empathize, my family was coming to Toronto with me. My one son, not the son that was involved in this story, but the other son that lives with his girlfriend, they flew in the night before us, on the red eye. He didn’t feel great the next morning, she tested positive. They had to miss the whole premiere. They flew to Toronto and missed it.

I wanted to see it again in Toronto with that crowd because I knew it would play well, and apparently it did. I’m sad I missed it but I’m glad you got to experience that.

Yes, I did. I was very happy I got to experience it.

I’m just going to go say, I bet it was more important that you were there than I was there.

[Laughs] I was sitting there and being like, “Where’s Mike?”

Last time I spoke to you was for Cruella. When the GameStop stuff was happening, were you finishing that up?

I was definitely on the tail end of that, and was starting to gear up for another film that I was developing. I was living it with my son and in the thick of COVID. It was this slow burn because he was in the early on Wall Street Bets, so he’d be talking about it and talking about it rising. I think a lot of people turned to the internet to just start to look for outlets while COVID was on. And it just had this slow build to it. So it started to get intense. I was getting the blow-by-blow. And then it started getting really intense, coming up to that final day. And literally that conversation that Keith has with his parents when he announces how much he’s up and he’s not selling, it was not dissimilar to when our son the night before, it was like he was up this much and we’re like, “What are you doing? You going to sell? What’s going on?” Not nearly the same kind of numbers, but for him, very impactful. And watching him the next morning, every three minutes, getting up at six for the pre-market, every three minutes checking, when’s he going to get out? It’s in the stress levels trying to find that moment. When’s he going to stop? When’s too far? And he did get out with his option. He timed it perfectly, and then the market crashed the next day with the Robin Hood freeze.

Oh wow. So right before that?

Yeah, it was the day before. And then living that outrage and that incredible frustration and anger and what felt like a system rigged against them – and how you could tank the stock, and trying to figure out what happened, and seeing Elon Musk interviewing Vlad Tenev and being like, “So what’s the deal?” We try to say as true as possible: how the events happened, what actually happened, what we know about what we’ve discovered since the congressional hearings. All of that stuff we tried to embed in the film.

I didn’t know much about Keith Gill. I remember when this was happening, the media just talked about “Redditors are doing this.”

And obviously it’s these things. It’s this confluence of events that made this happen. It’s like you couldn’t orchestrate this in a vacuum. It was a perfect storm, and it turned out that the guy who had been talking about it for a year was Keith Gill.

By the way – and I know you knew it was funny because you showed it like five times – but every time Paul Dano is staring at the cat and then looks at the camera and smiles, I laughed out loud. At the end, you show the real one, but I still think Paul Dano’s is funnier for some reason.

[Laughs] Well, he’s a professional actor.

Okay, good point.

But yeah, we tried to stay so faithful. And even to the point where we have Pete Davidson playing Kevin Gill, and I’d looked at some of his social postings and it felt like a great fit. And he was.

Yeah, he’s great in this.

And the actual person does do DoorDash. He supposedly got a car – we’re not entirely sure – but it seems to be he got a car from his brother after all this happened. And then it’s like, I want to have the scene between the two of them because we know the press was trying to approach him as well. And Rebecca Angelo and Lauren Schuker Blum went back and did some research and found out that he ran the track mile naked in college in a thunderstorm, and so they wrote a scene around that. So we’re always constantly looking for the facts and drawing from those.

How worried are you about audiences picking up jargon? Do audiences know what shorting even means? I remember I learned that from the end of Trading Places and that movie doesn’t explain what they’re doing at all. So I had to look it up.

[Laughs[ We should put a Trading Place meme in there, huh? Just to explain it. Interesting thing. It’s like this is something you’ve seen in films forever and ever. It’s like even you watch The Big Short and do you really understand exactly what happens?

Well, the whole premise of that movie is the banks don’t want you to understand it.

In fact, even as much as you have Margot Robbie explaining, it still doesn’t seem to get explained.

Right, the people who run finance don’t want normal people to understand…

Exactly. But it’s a very complicated thing, like Apollo 13, do we understand exactly what they’re doing to get the spacecraft down to earth? But there was just this very basic situation happening here, which was, the big banks want the stocks to go down. The Reddit users want the stocks to go up to screw over the banks. But within that, and something that I think is incredibly tangible is they’re dealing with finance. They’re dealing with money that’s going to change their lives. When you see America Ferrera’s character and she’s up half a million dollars. The change, the impact that would have on her life is astronomical. And she can relate immediately and in a nanosecond, she can lose it all.

So, Dane DeHaan. That was incredible. I was not expecting that.

I got an incoming call from Dane that he liked to be in the movie. I love Dane DeHaan as an actor. He’s such a beautifully complex guy. And honestly, I felt awkward about it. We got on the Zoom and I’m like, “Dane, we’ve pretty much cast the film. I would love to work with you.” I said, “The only thing I have is I’ve got the manager that plays opposite of Anthony Ramos.” And he’s like, “I’ll do that.”

Oh, that’s great.

Yeah. He’s like, “I’d love to do that.” And I was like, “Are you sure?” He’s like, “Yeah, it’d be fun.” Literally, an hour later he texts me, “Hey, what if I had adult braces in a rat tail?” So immediately he started bringing stuff to that character. “I don’t think I should reveal the braces until later in the film.” And so it’s just the thing, when you’re working with great actors, they just say they’re so addicted to the process and they’re bringing ideas and they’re bringing depth to their characters. And so the complexity with which he could do those scenes, which on the page could be really simple – the insecurities, the disconnect between the common person and what they’re struggling with – it resonated. When you sit with an audience, it resonates so quickly and so strongly. It has to do very little.

I’ve been thinking about this for a few days, and keep in mind, I’ve had a fever for a few days, too. So if this makes no sense, that’s why. I’m imagining you at a bar and someone asks what you do for a living. You tell them you’re a director. They ask what kind of movies you make. What’s your answer? I ask this because you’re an enigma to me.

[Laughing]

You’re laughing because you know that’s true.

Oh, it’s absolutely, it’s a very funny comment. And it depends on the person. It’s like, which one of my movies will this person be seeing? It’s like, I don’t think necessarily all of them.

That’s a good point. Probably not.

Sometimes they’ve seen none of them.

Oh, come on.

I can go through the list. “Have you seen I, Tanya?” “No, what’s that?” “Have you seen Cruella?” They say they don’t have kids.

Who doesn’t love Lars than the Real Girl? That is the sweetest movie ever made.

But it didn’t get to a huge audience. So that one is an unusual one. And then, of course, you’ve got to give the logline to that, which doesn’t give you the context of it.

That’s true. People are going to think it’s erotic.

You just have to see it. It’s hard to explain it, but it really, really is a heartfelt film.

Cruella is interesting. At the time, the critical reaction was a lot of hemming and hawing, but now when people talk about it, they seem to love it. It’s considered this movie everyone likes now. Do you notice that?

It’s such a stressful thing. It was also, Cruella came out a very odd time, in the middle of COVID. So that in itself was something. And I guess with Cruella, interesting thing, it’s so not like anything else that was coming out of Disney at the time. In the best sense of it. I’ve got a wonderful relationship with Disney and they really let me run with it.

Last time I talked to you, we both kind of described it as a “dark and gritty” version. And it is.

It is. And it’s not in any negative way, but every time a production head would come in to start working on the movie, on Cruella, I’d stop him and be like, “You’re not making a Disney film. We’re making an independent movie.” That’s how you need to think about it. And it would just dramatically shift everybody’s perspective. So it’s, in some ways, it was always the idea that we’re getting away with it. But it only works if people like it so it seems to be over the course of time, I’d say yeah, it’s definitely resonated.

I guess the bigger point is just, you can do a number of genres you can do a number of styles successfully. I don’t think a lot of people can do that. But at the same time, you don’t get established as someone known for a particular style.

The only two constants for me, probably, are typically it’s about an outsider. I don’t know. That’s something I wasn’t overtly trying to do. But as I look back, it’s definitely a theme.

Oh, I think that’s definitely true. Even in something like the Chris Pine movie, The Finest Hours, he’s kind of an outsider.

Yeah! He’s a marginalized character, the underdog. Nobody expects that he can get out there and do it. And then the dance with tone that I love to have, no matter what the genre, it varies. But even Fright Night has that dance of tone and comedy and horror. It’s more challenging, but it’s more gratifying to me… It’s funny, it’s like life, to me, is the way that we interact as human beings in our relationships within our families, humor is always a part of it. It’s always used. It’s either to connect or to be divisive. And I love to be able to use that in films, too, because it gets you to know the characters in a way that you can relate to. And I think that’s part of why people connect to the characters in the films because they’ve been on this journey with and gotten to know them in a way that feels very familiar.

There was this one quick moment, which is the big fuss in the movie with Anthony Ramos and in every case we’re trying to find a way they have so little real estate, which is a rare thing about this movie because there’s so many characters mingling. So they’ve got three or four scenes to make an impact and to connect with the audience. One of the scenes that’s written for Anthony is him with his family when he shows them he’s got $175,000.

At the dinner table.

At the dinner table. We all land together and meet for the first time in that apartment on location. Anthony’s meeting these actors for the first time. I said, “I would like you guys to speak in Spanish.” Anthony’s saying, “I’m not great with that.” But it’s not uncommon at all, in a bilingual family, people will be speaking Spanish and English at the same time, conversing that way. So we’re like, “Great. The parents can speak in Spanish, you can speak in English.” And then the mother is like, “I would probably switch to English when it gets serious.” It’s great. So it’s sort of this organic approach to it, which I love. But then it gets to the end of the scene and she’s like, “Be careful with this. It can be like a drug.” And it gets very serious and it’s lacking. I’m not quite understanding of the whole relationship there. So I said, “Anthony, when she says that, take the phone and sniff it like a line of coke.” And then she just spontaneously slaps him over the shoulder. I didn’t ask her to, but immediately started to get their relationship.

That’s great.

They can tease each other and be direct with each other and undercut each other. And you understand the family dynamic in a three-second moment.

I’m looking forward to people seeing this in the theater, and I know it’s soon…

Very soon!

It was good to talk to you, thank you for putting up with my voice.

Try and get some rest!

Oh that’s the next thing I’m doing.

‘Dumb Money’ opens in theaters on September 29th. You can contact Mike Ryan directly on Twitter.

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Mitt Romney Says Almost Every GOP Senator Laughed At Trump’s ‘Toddlerlike Psyche’ Behind His Back

With Mitt Romney headed out the door after officially announcing that he will not seek re-election in 2025, the Utah senator is apparently not holding back about what he saw during his time in Washington.

Romney has been a vocal critic of Donald Trump, and according to a new book by McKay Coppins, his disdain for the former president was shared by his Republican colleagues in the Senate “almost without exception.” While most of the GOP “played their parts as Trump loyalists” in public, behind closed doors was a different story.

Via The Atlantic:

But in private, they ridiculed his ignorance, rolled their eyes at his antics, and made incisive observations about his warped, toddler­like psyche. Romney recalled one senior Republican senator frankly admitting, “He has none of the qualities you would want in a president, and all of the qualities you wouldn’t.”

According to another excerpt from Romney’s journal, Trump burst into a Senate caucus lunch in March 2019 to celebrate Robert Mueller’s investigation failing to prove his campaign colluded with Russia. The former president received a “standing ovation fit for a conquering hero” before “rambling” in front of the group and swinging “wildly from one tangent to another.”

After Trump left the room, the GOP senators didn’t even try to hide their reaction. “The Republican caucus burst into laughter,” Romney wrote.

(Via The Atlantic)

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A Hilarious 2K Glitch Has Caused Players To Get Stuck On The Rim And Spin Around Wildly

This past weekend saw the release of NBA 2K24, which is always one of the most highly anticipated sports video game releases of the year alongside Madden. Fans of the game were excited to see if the promised upgrades really delivered improved gameplay, and if the tweaks to the various game modes improved each of those experiences.

However, there is also the excitement to see what glitches will exist at launch. The reality of sports simulation video games is that as they keep adding more movements and variables to the game to make it as lifelike as possible, they increase the possibility for the game to break. As the masses get the game, they’ll run into situations the testers didn’t, and the results can be hysterical (and/or frustrating, depending on how seriously you take the game) until they get patches done to fix things.

This weekend, the best 2K24 glitch to hit social media was, by far, players running into a crazy situation where sometimes guys that went for a dunk would get stuck on the rim and spend multiple possessions flailing about wildly — often until a timeout was called. Sometimes those players would even cause an offensive goaltending because they were spinning around on the rim when a shot went up.

I’m sure the folks at 2K will (or already have) patch this up, but it’s incredibly funny to see guys just spinning around the rim like a helicopter. It’s also a funny paradox that the more lifelike you try to make a video game, the more likely you are to create the least realistic glitches imaginable.

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Atlantic Records 75th Anniversary Vinyl Reissues Of Albums From Cardi B, Led Zeppelin, And More

While 2023 represents the 50th year of hip-hop, it’s also the 75th anniversary of one of the labels that has had a huge hand in making hip-hop the global phenomenon it is today. Today, Atlantic Records announced its plans to celebrate making it three-quarters of a century (especially in an industry that has seen so much upheaval almost from day one), which include a year’s worth of vinyl reissues of classic and contemporary albums that have defined its first 75 years.

The campaign will kick off in October and include 90 albums from the likes of Aretha Franklin, Bad Company, Booker T & The MGs, Bruno Mars, Cardi B, Christina Perri, Coldplay, Foreigner, Gucci Mane, Jack Harlow, Janelle Monáe, John Coltrane, Kehlani, Led Zeppelin, Lupe Fiasco, Matchbox Twenty, Otis Redding, Phil Collins, Ray Charles, Velvet Underground, Willie Nelson, and more. Some will be special pressings; others will be releases that have never been on vinyl before. There’s also exclusive, limited-edition merch, and partnerships with Vinyl Me, Please and Acoustic Sounds.

The collection will be curated by Atlantic Records chairman/CEO Craig Kallman, who’s been working on it for years. “It was stacks of paper making sure we didn’t miss anybody,” he said in a press release. “It was painstakingly done. There was a lot of internal debating… We tried to include records that were culturally significant, that were groundbreaking for the company, that were blowout sales successes. It was about records that defined the label and the culture of the company.”

Kallman had a personal investment in much of that history, joining Atlantic in 1991 after his dance label, Big Beat Records, was acquired by Atlantic. And although he said he thought it’d be cool to limit the run to 75 titles, he found he just couldn’t, resulting in the 90 planned releases (might as well up it to 100, Craig!). From the names of the albums included, it looks like a worthwhile endeavor and we can’t wait for the year ahead.

Atlantic Records and Uproxx are both independent subsidiaries of Warner Music Group.

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Big Thief’s Captivating ‘Born For Loving You’ Is Here Ahead Of Its Vinyl Release

Big Thief and its members seemingly can’t stop releasing music and that’s not a habit they curbed today (September 13) with the release of a new single, “Born For Loving You.” The mid-tempo, country-inspired song features Adrianne Lenker singing about an ever-present and enduring love.

The song, paired with the recent “Vampire Empire,” will be released on a limited 7-inch vinyl on October 20 via 4AD. That can be pre-ordered here.

The band has had the song in their live setlists since earlier this year, and after a March performance, Lenker explained of the song’s origins, saying, “That was a mishear. I heard a lyric in a song that was like, ‘I’m falling in love with you,’ or something, and I was like, ‘Did they say that I was born in love with you?’ And then of course… of course there’s other songs with ‘born for loving you,’ but… then I was also very inspired in Florida by the pop-country coming out of the trucks that are parked on the beach.”

The song follows the group’s 2022 album Dragon New Warm Mountain I Believe In You, as well as Buck Meek’s solo album Haunted Mountain that was just released in August.

Meek recently told Uproxx’s Steven Hyden of what’s next for Big Thief, “The thing about making records is, we really don’t know until we’re there. I will say we have lots of ideas and we’re always working on new songs, especially on the road. […] But the truth is, even we don’t know what’s going to happen. We have all kinds of plans, we have all kinds of ideas, but we don’t know what’s going to happen until we’re actually in the room recording.

Listen to “Born For Loving You” above.

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A Majority Of Young Women Consider Their Partner Listening To Joe Rogan’s Podcast To Be A ‘Red Flag’

It’s official: Joe Rogan is bad for your love life.

A recent Change Research poll, made up of 1,033 registered voters between the ages of 18-34, found that 55 percent of women call their partner listening The Joe Rogan Experience a “red flag.” That’s ranked seventh, behind identifying as MAGA, having no hobbies, saying “All Lives Matter,” believing there are only two genders, never asking for details, and classifying as a communist. Only 35 percent of men have the same red flag about Rogan.

Other potential red flags include a partner refusing to see Greta Gerwig’s Barbie (53 percent for women, 31 percent for men), being really intro astrology (20 percent for women, 41 percent for men), and owning a gun (27 percent for women, 13 percent for men). Common ground was found on sending green texts, with seven percent for women and six percent for men.

As for green flags:

Among women surveyed, top green flags are potential partners who read, research the best deals and rates before buying, and say Black Lives Matter. Other green flags for women include prospective partners who look better in person (51%), take candid pictures (50%), and identify as liberal (39%).

Only seven percent of women consider their partner listening to The Joe Rogan Experience to be a good thing, compared to 25 percent for men. There needs to be this kind of poll for every podcast. Somehow, Doughboys would be a 100 percent red and green flag.

You can see the full findings here.

(Via Teen Vogue)

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The Best Tequila — That Actually Tastes Like Agave — Under $60

When it comes to tequila, forget about words like “smooth,” “smoky,” and “rich.” It’s not that there aren’t tequilas that fit that bill (añejos explore this territory quite well), but the spirit really shines when the flavors of blue Weber agave — the plant tequila is exclusively made from — are at the forefront. A well-crafted, agave-forward bottle of tequila is bright, peppery (green pepper more than black), fruity, earthy, or vegetal, with a nice buttery finish that glides across your palate.

These more earthy-floral-peppery notes are part of the reason why I almost always prefer blancos and reposados over the more aged expressions whether I’m sipping or mixing a cocktail. Don’t get me wrong, añejos are great. But I think whisky tends to cover that smoky, rich, and smooth territory in more interesting ways.

To help get you on board with what I think is tequila’s best quality, we’re shouting out eight bottles that we’re really digging right now that highlight the flavor of blue Weber agave. For variety’s sake, I’ve left off El Tesoro, Fortaleza, and LALO’s blanco tequilas — not because I don’t think they’re great bottles (all three are amazing additive-free tequilas), but I’ve already heavily covered these particular expressions in past lists this year and we want to give some other brands a little shine.

Let’s drink!

EDITOR’S PICK: Siempre — Tequila Plata

Siempre Tequila Plata
Siempre

ABV: 40%

Average Price: $49.99

The Tequila:

The brand’s mantra is “no celebrity required” which… whew, that’s certainly an idea we can get behind. It’s made at NOM: 1438 — a highland and lowland 50-50 agave blend — unaged, and open-air fermented after brick oven roasting. No additives, obviously.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Welcome to green (and a tad bit of black) pepper-ville! That’s the first note but it’s quickly balanced by creamy vanilla. If you jam your nose right in the glass you will get some ethanol warmth but not much.

Palate: Here the order reverses — it’s sweet up front and peppery on the back. There’s also a nice little salt-brine-crushed oyster shell note (without any smokiness).

Finish: The agave is alive on the backend — roasted and deeply enjoyable. I don’t love the term smooth but this does go down silky and easy.

The Bottom Line:

This is “Intro to sipping 101” for those who still want to taste what makes tequila tequila. It’s buttery to the point of needing a tad more potency for my palate — but beginning sippers will appreciate that quality.

This is the bottle for the beginner sipper who wants that

La Caza — Tequila Blanco

Agave Forward
La Caza

ABV: 40%

Average Price: $50.99

The Tequila:

Founded in Austin Texas (but crafted in Jalisco, obviously) it took a bit for La Caza to win me over. The brand cooks and ferments its agave for one hundred hours to the sounds of classic music, which makes me roll my eyes so hard that it hurts my head.

But gimmick aside, this tequila delivers where it should: process and flavor. Produced at NOM 1414, La Caza cooks its agave in stone brick ovens, extracts the juices with a roller mill, and ferments the juice in open-air stainless steel tanks with champagne yeast and pours the results into a nice hand-blown glass bottle.

Does the classical music make a difference? Doubtful, but it’s good so… rock on, I guess!

Tasting Notes:

Nose: The roasted agave jumps out on the nose with some dusty warm citrus character.

Palate: Peppery and spicy with a very green vegetal quality and a hint of jasmine.

Finish: Sweet agave with a buttery finish that goes down with minimal burn.

The Bottom Line:

Plenty of brightness and pepper notes without a ton of burn — another great pick for the new tequila sipper.

Volcan De Mi Tierra — Blanco

Agave Forward
Volcan

ABV: 40%

Average Price: $53.99

The Tequila:

Produced at NOM 1523, Agrotequilera de Jalisco, where it is the only brand in production, Volcan De Mi Tierra is the type of tequila you’re proud to display at your home bar. No, looks are everything, but just look at this bottle! With its lava rock-like look, it’s hard not to fall in love, luckily, the tequila is even better than looks would suggest.

Totally additive-free, Volcan is made from a blend of tequila cooked in stone brick ovens and autoclaves that is extracted via roller mills and a tahona, fermented in stainless steel tanks with champagne yeast, and cold filtered. The result is a bit of a mix of flavors typical of both lowland and highland agave.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Roasted and raw agave combine for an inviting musky vanilla aroma.

Palate: Freshly cracked black pepper with some juicy citrus notes, a kiss of dark cherry, and some minerality.

Finish: Fruity and a touch minty but it leaves the palate a bit too quickly. I wish the flavor would stick around more because I want to savor it, but that can be remedied by another drink.

The Bottom Line:

Pepper and spice are counterbalanced by juicy fruity notes. A great tequila for mixing in cocktails and one that is always interesting to sip and let your palate explore the flavors.

Tres Agaves — Blanco

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Tres Agave

ABV: 40%

Average Price: $27.99

The Tequila:

Our only true budget bottle to hit this list, Tres Agave is produced at NOM 1614, Tequilera Tap, and is made using agave cooked in a high-pressure autoclave that is roller mill extracted and bottled right after distillation with no additives and no aging.

It lacks some of the easy drinkability of the other bottles on this list, but it’s the only bottle for this price that’ll get you palatable agave flavors. It’s a great option for cocktails, but admittedly, you probably don’t want to sip this one.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Citrus zest and roasted agave with a hint of alcohol.

Palate: Bright and sweet with crisp pear flavors and some agave sweetness.

Finish: A bit harsh but not enough to cause you to wince or burn your throat. But it definitely hits back.

The Bottom Line:

A great affordable tequila that tastes like agave without breaking the bank. Reserve this one for cocktails.

Tequila G4— Blanco

Agave Forward
Tres Agave

ABV: 40%

Average Price: $41.99

The Tequila:

Produced by 4th generation master distiller Felipe Camarena, G4 is made at NOM 1579, Destileria El Pandillo, where it is one of six brands in production. The agave here is cooked in stone brick ovens, tahona extracted, and made with natural spring and rainwater with absolutely no additives.

The bottle design and branding are weak but don’t let that dissuade you, this is one of the finest Blanco tequilas in this price point.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Prominent agave notes. It has a warm spikiness to it that tickles the nose like inhaling spices.

Palate: A beautiful mix of roasted agave and warm citrus notes. This tequila is all bright and grassy.

Finish: Warm and nutty with a supple oily mouthfeel.

The Bottom Line:

A strong agave forward tequila that perfectly captures the bright, vegetal and subtly sweet tones of agave.

Tapatio — Reposado

Agave Forward
Tapatio

ABV: 40%

Average Price: $41.99

The Tequila:

Men’s Journal listed Tapatio’s Reposado as one of the “Best Tequilas In The World,” and we’re not going to go that far but… Tapatio is damn good! And a favorite amongst many a tequila snob.

Produced at NOM 1139, the famed La Alteña, Tapatio cooks agave in stone brick ovens, extracts the juice via a roller mill, and ages the liquid in bourbon barrels for a mellow additive-free tequila that still retains some of that characteristic agave bite.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Roasted agave with some warm barrel oak which helps to bring forth the vanilla elements.

Palate: That oak does a lot to mellow out the flavors here. You still get some roasted agave earthiness and vegetal qualities, but it’s backed by sweet vanilla and caramel.

Finish: Buttery and soft with just a touch of zest.

The Bottom Line:

A fine reposado tequila that is perfect for sipping. It’s mellow, but not to the point of masking the natural agave flavors.

Cascahuin — Reposado

Agave Forward
Cascahuin

ABV:40%

Average Price: $58.77

The Tequila:

Hands down our favorite reposado on this list, Cascahuin is a fantastic tequila that highlights the sweetness of agave. Produced at NOM 1123, at Tequila Cascahuin (the distillery’s namesake!), this is another additive-free tequila made from agave cooked in stone brick ovens, roller mill extracted, and aged for 6-8 months in American oak barrels.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Roasted agave kissed with caramel and citrus.

Palate: Warm as soon as it hits the palate, Cascahuin begins sweet with some cinnamon spiciness before hitting you with black pepper and spice.

Finish: A mix of mint and pepper with roasted agave hovering on the backend.

The Bottom Line:

The best agave-forward reposado currently on the market in our opinion. A versatile bottle that is perfect for sipping and mixing.

Siete Leguas — Blanco

Agave Forward
Siete Leguas

ABV: 40%

Average Price: $45.99

The Tequila:

Moving things back into the unaged territory, Siete Leguas’ Blanco tequila is produced at NOM 1120, a distillery of the same name, where it is the only brand in production.

The agave is cooked in stone brick ovens, tahona, and roller mill extracted, and made with natural spring water. The juices are fermented in stainless steel tanks and twice distilled in copper pots with no additives.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Warm inviting agave notes with some wet rock character.

Palate: Earthy and highly vegetal with a strong green grass flavor and some cracked pepper spice.

Finish: Citrusy with a hint of vanilla and some cool mint on the backend.

The Bottom Line:

A highly grassy and vegetal tequila that perfectly captures the bright characteristic of agave.

Tequila Ocho — Plata

Agave Forward
Tequila Ocho

ABV: 40%

Average Price: $45.49

The Tequila:

I’ve highlighted Tequila Ocho a lot in the past, but until now I haven’t had the chance to sing the praises of its plata expression. Produced at NOM 1474, Cía Tequilera Los Alambiques, where it is one in three brands in production, the agave here is hand harvested between 7-10 years, cooked in stone brick ovens, roller mill extracted and fermented in wood vats before being twice slow-distilled in copper pots.

It has absolutely no additives.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Roasted agave, minimality, and fresh-peeled orange rind.

Palate: Very citrus forward counterbalanced by sweet roasted agave flavors, a bit of pepper, and lots of herbal interest.

Finish: Grassy and bright with a subtle mint and pepper finish. Almost cilantro-like.

The Bottom Line:

Orange citrus zest balanced by sweet agave, Tequila Ocho’s plata is a joy to slow sip and makes a Cointreau margarita come alive.

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‘Watchmen’ Creator Alan Moore Directed His DC Royalties Go To Black Lives Matter, Which Makes One Wonder Why He Disliked HBO’s ‘Watchmen’ So Much

Original Watchmen author Alan Moore seems to famously dislike every project that adapts his work. I’m certain that he must dislike Damon Lindelof’s Lube Man if he dislikes the HBO series in general. Yet I’m still mystified about how, even though Alan Moore is notoriously critical of modern adaptations (like Joker) that also take inspiration from his work, he couldn’t at least appreciate the messaging behind Lindelof’s continuation of Moore’s groundbreaking graphic novel.

The series didn’t even attempt to literally translate the source material because Zack Snyder had already been there and done that. Instead, Lindelof recontextualized the story by launching with an onscreen depiction 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre and kept on running with a skewering of racial injustice by adding texture to the Hooded Justice and Doctor Manhattan characters. This was a transcendent approach that piggybacked upon Moore’s own before-its-time deconstruction of superheroes. And also, the giant squid! That was fun, even as it highlighted a modern character’s trauma alongside other characters’ generational trauma.

Lindelof’s angle of continuation on the original source material makes it an extra head-scratching affair to reconsider that Moore disliked HBO’s Watchmen but has now directed DC to send his royalties to Black Lives Matter.

Moore shared this tidbit with The Telegraph, via Variety:

The Telegraph asked Moore if reports were true about him taking all of the money he makes from film and TV series and dividing it among the writers and other creatives, to which the writer answered: “I no longer wish it to even be shared with them. I don’t really feel, with the recent films, that they have stood by what I assumed were their original principles. So I asked for DC Comics to send all of the money from any future TV series or films to Black Lives Matter.”

He doesn’t really specify which DC-based films currently upset him, but Joker is probably high on that list. And again, only Alan Moore really knows why he hated HBO’s Watchmen, but he previously told GQ that he “had disowned the work in question” and told Lindelof as much before filming began. He further found the idea of another adaptation to be “embarrassing,” and then he was appalled when the show won awards:

When I saw the television industry awards that the Watchmen television show had apparently won, I thought, “Oh, god, perhaps a large part of the public, this is what they think Watchmen was?” They think that it was a dark, gritty, dystopian superhero franchise that was something to do with white supremacism. Did they not understand Watchmen? Watchmen was nearly 40 years ago and was relatively simple in comparison with a lot of my later work. What are the chances that they broadly understood anything since? This tends to make me feel less than fond of those works. They mean a bit less in my heart.

Well, Alan Moore has the right to be upset, of course, but he seems to have thought that people were taking the project as a literal adaptation when it very obviously was not one. Lindelof simply harnessed part of the political spirit of the original graphic novel, and he concluded that “the equivalent of the nuclear standoff between Russia and the U.S.” was “undeniably race and policing in America.” The bigger takeaway here, though, is that Moore wants Black Lives Matter to receive all monies going forward, so perhaps he is more in agreement with Lindelof’s thematic take than he would ever publicly admit.

(Via The Telegraph & Variety)

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Flyana Boss’ ‘Powerpuf Girls’-Inspired ‘You Wish’ Video Cheekily Addresses Their ‘Industry Plant’ Allegations

These days, it seems every new artist who finally catches their big break with a viral hit also tends to catch accusations of being an “industry plant.” Totally aside from this being a delusional way for sourpuss haters to undermine other peoples’ successes, it’s also usually a reflection of a triumphant rollout doing exactly what so many fans say they want: Artist development.

Naturally, Flyana Boss has been the target of exactly those sorts of allegations as a result of the ubiquity of their hit single “You Wish.” They tackle those head-on in the video for the song, which they finally shared today after three months of social media dominance and a remix featuring none other than OG “weird Black girl” Missy Elliott.

Like their newfound mentor, Flyana Boss leans all the way into their geeky inspirations in the colorful video, which references one of their favorite cartoons, The Powerpuff Girls, casting the rappers as kaiju-like monsters demolishing a miniature cardboard city. They also have some fun with those “industry plant” accusations, plopping themselves into a planter marked “industry” and adding an interlude with a DoorDash delivery guy who declares himself the “brand plug” after realizing he’s on a music video set.

It’s a good, funny video that perfectly showcases the girls’ quirky shared sense of humor and dynamic, best-buds chemistry. Enjoy it above.

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