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Yes, Tár Is Real — Real Boring!

The hot topic or mostly joke, on “Film Twitter” (don’t ask) this past week, has been over whether the Todd Field movie Tár, starring Cate Blanchett, is about a real person. The Cut titled their review “No, Lydia Tár Is Not Real,” a nice companion piece for the countless explanations for why you’d have to be an idiot for believing that Lydia Tár was real, facetious jokes claiming she is real, and on and on.

I can understand the impulse — both to wonder if Lydia Tár was a real person, and to play along with the joke. This is a movie that feels like an inside joke by design. It is a bit like a fake biopic, but it also isn’t exactly Pop Star, which dared to have actual jokes. Tár, by contrast, presents milestones in the life of its subject almost exclusively in the form of allusion, supposition, veiled reference, and verbal deflection, making you feel like you’re supposed to know things about this person beyond what the movie is showing you. It’s almost elitist by omission.

The first scene takes the form of a live New Yorker event, in which Adam Gopnik (played by the New Yorker writer, Adam Gopnik) recounts Lydia Tár’s extensive resume — which includes a degree from Harvard, stints conducting orchestras all over the world, a fellowship studying the traditional music of a Peruvian tribe, being the first female conductor of the Berlin Philharmonic, and one of only 15 people ever to complete an EGOT. Gopnik asks her about her life, and she pontificates on subjects like the history of the conductor and the importance of understanding Gustav Mahler’s marriage before conducting his symphonies. On paper, the idea of giving this much weight to a person who gestures with a tiny baton does sound sort of funny; in practice, I felt like I was lost in an impenetrable thicket of esoteric references and vague aphorism. Presumably by design, but also not exactly pleasant.

The next scene is her lunch with Eliot Kaplan (Mark Strong), who manages some kind of charity with which Tár is involved. He peppers her with similar kinds of worshipful questions about music theory and esoterica, and it goes on nearly as long. Together, these two scenes take up almost FORTY-FIVE MINUTES OF SCREEN TIME. Field is clearly world-building here, meticulously constructing a snow globe out of only the most insufferably anodyne NPR segments.

The next scene, undeniably the film’s best, takes place in a class Tár is guest-lecturing at Juilliard. A fidgety student comes up to the stage to volunteer, and his dynamic with Tár gradually evolves from mentor/protege to predator/prey. This after the student, who describes himself as a “BIPOC pansexual” admits that he doesn’t really like Bach because he was a white, cis European. Tár lectures him on not letting identity politics blind him to great art (in so many words) verbally dissecting him like a bug until he finally has had enough and storms off.

Finally, I thought, the movie was getting somewhere. Conflict! Tension! Genuine emotion breaking through the facade! There was a joy to their passive-aggressive sparring, even if their debate was somehow even more arcane and esoteric than you’d imagine an identity politics debate set in the world of music theory to be.

And yet, there’s still something inherently perplexing about the scene; the feeling that Tár is meant to be a send-up of a world that doesn’t exist. Or of a milieu that’s already so minuscule and marginal that parody feels unnecessary. Are there really so many pansexual BIPOC aspiring composers out there being menaced by ruthless lesbian EGOT winners? What do we get out of imagining it? It’s a hat on a hat.

Yet the Juilliard scene is undeniably the best of the film, because at least there’s conflict, and it moves. We get to see Lydia Tár evolve from mentor to predator. The subtext of it is “Lydia Tár is a real piece of work,” which the next almost two hours of movie fail to expand on in any meaningful way. We get mostly allusions and scant references to other reasons Lydia Tár is a real piece of work.

Tár has a sickly long-term partner (Nina Hoss) and an ambiguously-sexual relationship with her assistant (Noemie Merlant, who looks like a younger version of Hoss). There’s a guy at the Berlin philharmonic who she hates and a former student who is angry with her, whom we’re left to infer is a jilted ex, and possibly Tár’s grooming victim. It’s never clear, but because nothing in Tár really is.

The passion for music is something we’re almost never invited to feel. It’s mostly alluded to, a status symbol in the characters’ lives, something they talk and scheme about but so rarely live in. As the old saying goes, “sell the sizzle, not the steak,” and here it feels like Todd Field has filmed the whisper campaign instead of the scandal. I assume people who love this film (many of whom would probably pay to watch Cate Blanchett paint an outhouse, and fair enough) will read this and shout “that’s the point, you dolt!” But to me, it’s emblematic of a movie that’s constantly positioning itself as being different without ever articulating what it is.

Tár‘s final shot, admittedly gorgeous, feels intended to be a crescendo, the final culmination of Lydia Tár’s descent into… obscurity? Artistic irrelevance? Like Mickey Rourke jumping off the top rope into the abyss at the end of The Wrestler. And yet I couldn’t quite enjoy it because I didn’t understand where it was meant to be taking place. What was this event the film so confidently alluded to? Was I meant to know, to understand the cultural significance of it, and how it related to Lydia Tár’s journey as a character?

My reaction to it was a lot like my reaction to much of the rest of the movie: I didn’t get it. Tár feels like a thing that exists solely to be unlike other things. Yet, in the end, it repudiates convention less than it repudiates the sense of joy those conventions evolved to produce. It’s understated to the point that it’s not stating much at all. Or maybe it’s just doing so very quietly and I couldn’t quite hear. It’s the cinematic equivalent of a low talker: you often don’t catch what it’s saying and it’s designed to make you afraid to ask.

‘Tár’ is playing now in theaters nationwide. Vince Mancini is on Twitter. You can read more of his reviews here.

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Yes, Tár Is Real — Real Boring!

The hot topic or mostly joke, on “Film Twitter” (don’t ask) this past week, has been over whether the Todd Field movie Tár, starring Cate Blanchett, is about a real person. The Cut titled their review “No, Lydia Tár Is Not Real,” a nice companion piece for the countless explanations for why you’d have to be an idiot for believing that Lydia Tár was real, facetious jokes claiming she is real, and on and on.

I can understand the impulse — both to wonder if Lydia Tár was a real person, and to play along with the joke. This is a movie that feels like an inside joke by design. It is a bit like a fake biopic, but it also isn’t exactly Pop Star, which dared to have actual jokes. Tár, by contrast, presents milestones in the life of its subject almost exclusively in the form of allusion, supposition, veiled reference, and verbal deflection, making you feel like you’re supposed to know things about this person beyond what the movie is showing you. It’s almost elitist by omission.

The first scene takes the form of a live New Yorker event, in which Adam Gopnik (played by the New Yorker writer, Adam Gopnik) recounts Lydia Tár’s extensive resume — which includes a degree from Harvard, stints conducting orchestras all over the world, a fellowship studying the traditional music of a Peruvian tribe, being the first female conductor of the Berlin Philharmonic, and one of only 15 people ever to complete an EGOT. Gopnik asks her about her life, and she pontificates on subjects like the history of the conductor and the importance of understanding Gustav Mahler’s marriage before conducting his symphonies. On paper, the idea of giving this much weight to a person who gestures with a tiny baton does sound sort of funny; in practice, I felt like I was lost in an impenetrable thicket of esoteric references and vague aphorism. Presumably by design, but also not exactly pleasant.

The next scene is her lunch with Eliot Kaplan (Mark Strong), who manages some kind of charity with which Tár is involved. He peppers her with similar kinds of worshipful questions about music theory and esoterica, and it goes on nearly as long. Together, these two scenes take up almost FORTY-FIVE MINUTES OF SCREEN TIME. Field is clearly world-building here, meticulously constructing a snow globe out of only the most insufferably anodyne NPR segments.

The next scene, undeniably the film’s best, takes place in a class Tár is guest-lecturing at Juilliard. A fidgety student comes up to the stage to volunteer, and his dynamic with Tár gradually evolves from mentor/protege to predator/prey. This after the student, who describes himself as a “BIPOC pansexual” admits that he doesn’t really like Bach because he was a white, cis European. Tár lectures him on not letting identity politics blind him to great art (in so many words) verbally dissecting him like a bug until he finally has had enough and storms off.

Finally, I thought, the movie was getting somewhere. Conflict! Tension! Genuine emotion breaking through the facade! There was a joy to their passive-aggressive sparring, even if their debate was somehow even more arcane and esoteric than you’d imagine an identity politics debate set in the world of music theory to be.

And yet, there’s still something inherently perplexing about the scene; the feeling that Tár is meant to be a send-up of a world that doesn’t exist. Or of a milieu that’s already so minuscule and marginal that parody feels unnecessary. Are there really so many pansexual BIPOC aspiring composers out there being menaced by ruthless lesbian EGOT winners? What do we get out of imagining it? It’s a hat on a hat.

Yet the Juilliard scene is undeniably the best of the film, because at least there’s conflict, and it moves. We get to see Lydia Tár evolve from mentor to predator. The subtext of it is “Lydia Tár is a real piece of work,” which the next almost two hours of movie fail to expand on in any meaningful way. We get mostly allusions and scant references to other reasons Lydia Tár is a real piece of work.

Tár has a sickly long-term partner (Nina Hoss) and an ambiguously-sexual relationship with her assistant (Noemie Merlant, who looks like a younger version of Hoss). There’s a guy at the Berlin philharmonic who she hates and a former student who is angry with her, whom we’re left to infer is a jilted ex, and possibly Tár’s grooming victim. It’s never clear, but because nothing in Tár really is.

The passion for music is something we’re almost never invited to feel. It’s mostly alluded to, a status symbol in the characters’ lives, something they talk and scheme about but so rarely live in. As the old saying goes, “sell the sizzle, not the steak,” and here it feels like Todd Field has filmed the whisper campaign instead of the scandal. I assume people who love this film (many of whom would probably pay to watch Cate Blanchett paint an outhouse, and fair enough) will read this and shout “that’s the point, you dolt!” But to me, it’s emblematic of a movie that’s constantly positioning itself as being different without ever articulating what it is.

Tár‘s final shot, admittedly gorgeous, feels intended to be a crescendo, the final culmination of Lydia Tár’s descent into… obscurity? Artistic irrelevance? Like Mickey Rourke jumping off the top rope into the abyss at the end of The Wrestler. And yet I couldn’t quite enjoy it because I didn’t understand where it was meant to be taking place. What was this event the film so confidently alluded to? Was I meant to know, to understand the cultural significance of it, and how it related to Lydia Tár’s journey as a character?

My reaction to it was a lot like my reaction to much of the rest of the movie: I didn’t get it. Tár feels like a thing that exists solely to be unlike other things. Yet, in the end, it repudiates convention less than it repudiates the sense of joy those conventions evolved to produce. It’s understated to the point that it’s not stating much at all. Or maybe it’s just doing so very quietly and I couldn’t quite hear. It’s the cinematic equivalent of a low talker: you often don’t catch what it’s saying and it’s designed to make you afraid to ask.

‘Tár’ is playing now in theaters nationwide. Vince Mancini is on Twitter. You can read more of his reviews here.

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Taylor Swift Announced ‘The Eras Tour,’ Which She Called ‘A Journey Through The Musical Eras Of My Career’

Finally, Taylor Swift is going on tour again: She just announced The Eras Tour, which will start in 2023. Swift made the announcement on Good Morning America this morning (November 1). She also wrote on social media, “I’m enchanted to announce my next tour: Taylor Swift | The Eras Tour, a journey through the musical eras of my career (past & present!) The first leg of the tour will be in stadiums across the US, with international dates to be announced as soon as we can!”

The currently announced slate of shows runs from March 18 to August 5. The roster of openers is impressive, too, as joining Swift on various dates are Beabadoobee, Gayle, Girl In Red, Gracie Abrams, Haim, Muna, Owenn, Paramore, and Phoebe Bridgers. This will be Swift’s first tour since 2018’s Reputation Stadium Tour.

Find the full list of tour dates so far below and learn more about tickets here.

03/18/2023 — Glendale, AZ @ State Farm Stadium $!
03/25/2023 — Las Vegas, NV @ Allegiant Stadium ~!
04/01/2023 — Arlington, TX @ AT&T Stadium ~%
04/02/2023 — Arlington, TX @ AT&T Stadium ~%
04/15/2023 — Tampa, FL @ Raymond James Stadium ~%
04/22/2023 — Houston, TX @ NRG Stadium ~%
04/28/2023 — Atlanta, GA @ Mercedes-Benz Stadium ~%
04/29/2023 — Atlanta, GA @ Mercedes-Benz Stadium ~%
05/06/2023 — Nashville, TN @ Nissan Stadium &!
05/12/2023 — Philadelphia, PA @ Lincoln Financial Field &!
05/13/2023 — Philadelphia, PA @ Lincoln Financial Field &!
05/19/2023 — Foxborough, MA @ Gillette Stadium &!
05/20/2023 — Foxborough, MA @ Gillette Stadium &!
05/26/2023 — East Rutherford, NJ @ MetLife Stadium &!
05/27/2023 — East Rutherford, NJ @ MetLife Stadium &%
06/02/2023 — Chicago, IL @ Soldier Field #@
06/03/2023 — Chicago, IL @ Soldier Field #@
06/10/2023 — Detroit, MI @ Ford Field #@
06/17/2023 — Pittsburgh, PA @ Acrisure Stadium #@
06/24/2023 — Minneapolis, MN @ U.S. Bank Stadium #@
07/01/2023 — Cincinnati, OH @ Paycor Stadium *%
07/08/2023 — Kansas City, MO @ GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium *%
07/15/2023 — Denver, CO @ Empower Field at Mile High *%
07/22/2023 — Seattle, WA @ Lumen Field ^%
07/29/2023 — Santa Clara, CA @ Levi’s® Stadium ^%
08/04/2023 — Los Angeles, CA @ SoFi Stadium ^@
08/05/2023 — Los Angeles, CA @ SoFi Stadium ^!

~ with Beabadoobee
! with Gayle
# with Girl In Red
% with Gracie Abrams
^ with Haim
* with Muna
@ with Owenn
$ with Paramore
& with Phoebe Bridgers

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News Trending Viral Worldwide

Taylor Swift Announced ‘The Eras Tour,’ Which She Called ‘A Journey Through The Musical Eras Of My Career’

Finally, Taylor Swift is going on tour again: She just announced The Eras Tour, which will start in 2023. Swift made the announcement on Good Morning America this morning (November 1). She also wrote on social media, “I’m enchanted to announce my next tour: Taylor Swift | The Eras Tour, a journey through the musical eras of my career (past & present!) The first leg of the tour will be in stadiums across the US, with international dates to be announced as soon as we can!”

The currently announced slate of shows runs from March 18 to August 5. The roster of openers is impressive, too, as joining Swift on various dates are Beabadoobee, Gayle, Girl In Red, Gracie Abrams, Haim, Muna, Owenn, Paramore, and Phoebe Bridgers. This will be Swift’s first tour since 2018’s Reputation Stadium Tour.

Find the full list of tour dates so far below and learn more about tickets here.

03/18/2023 — Glendale, AZ @ State Farm Stadium $!
03/25/2023 — Las Vegas, NV @ Allegiant Stadium ~!
04/01/2023 — Arlington, TX @ AT&T Stadium ~%
04/02/2023 — Arlington, TX @ AT&T Stadium ~%
04/15/2023 — Tampa, FL @ Raymond James Stadium ~%
04/22/2023 — Houston, TX @ NRG Stadium ~%
04/28/2023 — Atlanta, GA @ Mercedes-Benz Stadium ~%
04/29/2023 — Atlanta, GA @ Mercedes-Benz Stadium ~%
05/06/2023 — Nashville, TN @ Nissan Stadium &!
05/12/2023 — Philadelphia, PA @ Lincoln Financial Field &!
05/13/2023 — Philadelphia, PA @ Lincoln Financial Field &!
05/19/2023 — Foxborough, MA @ Gillette Stadium &!
05/20/2023 — Foxborough, MA @ Gillette Stadium &!
05/26/2023 — East Rutherford, NJ @ MetLife Stadium &!
05/27/2023 — East Rutherford, NJ @ MetLife Stadium &%
06/02/2023 — Chicago, IL @ Soldier Field #@
06/03/2023 — Chicago, IL @ Soldier Field #@
06/10/2023 — Detroit, MI @ Ford Field #@
06/17/2023 — Pittsburgh, PA @ Acrisure Stadium #@
06/24/2023 — Minneapolis, MN @ U.S. Bank Stadium #@
07/01/2023 — Cincinnati, OH @ Paycor Stadium *%
07/08/2023 — Kansas City, MO @ GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium *%
07/15/2023 — Denver, CO @ Empower Field at Mile High *%
07/22/2023 — Seattle, WA @ Lumen Field ^%
07/29/2023 — Santa Clara, CA @ Levi’s® Stadium ^%
08/04/2023 — Los Angeles, CA @ SoFi Stadium ^@
08/05/2023 — Los Angeles, CA @ SoFi Stadium ^!

~ with Beabadoobee
! with Gayle
# with Girl In Red
% with Gracie Abrams
^ with Haim
* with Muna
@ with Owenn
$ with Paramore
& with Phoebe Bridgers

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The Music World Reacts To Takeoff’s Tragic Death At 28 Years Old

Early this morning (November 1), Migos member Takeoff died at 28 years old after being fatally shot. Reports indicate the incident took place outside of 810 Billiards & Bowling in Houston, during an altercation spawned from a game of dice. Takeoff was apparently hit in or near the head and was pronounced dead on the scene. Quavo was also present but was reportedly unharmed.

As the news has started to spread, figures from the music world and beyond have shared their thoughts about Takeoff’s passing.

Lloyd Banks tweeted, “Rest In Peace Takeoff my condolences to his family and close friends,very dope artist gone too soon.” Boxer Chris Eubank Jr. also wrote, “I remember @1YoungTakeoff being a very down to earth, cool dude. Cant believe I’m having to say this again about another young black star being killed for no reason, something really has to change in the industry, it’s sickening how easy & often people are dying. RIP Takeoff.”

Takeoff rose to prominence as a member of Migos, with Quavo and Offset. The trio is best known for its hit 2016 No. 1 single “Bad And Boujee” featuring Lil Uzi Vert. Takeoff and Quavo also just dropped a collaborative album, Only Built For Infinity Links, in October.

Check out some other reactions below.

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The Music World Reacts To Takeoff’s Tragic Death At 28 Years Old

Early this morning (November 1), Migos member Takeoff died at 28 years old after being fatally shot. Reports indicate the incident took place outside of 810 Billiards & Bowling in Houston, during an altercation spawned from a game of dice. Takeoff was apparently hit in or near the head and was pronounced dead on the scene. Quavo was also present but was reportedly unharmed.

As the news has started to spread, figures from the music world and beyond have shared their thoughts about Takeoff’s passing.

Lloyd Banks tweeted, “Rest In Peace Takeoff my condolences to his family and close friends,very dope artist gone too soon.” Boxer Chris Eubank Jr. also wrote, “I remember @1YoungTakeoff being a very down to earth, cool dude. Cant believe I’m having to say this again about another young black star being killed for no reason, something really has to change in the industry, it’s sickening how easy & often people are dying. RIP Takeoff.”

Takeoff rose to prominence as a member of Migos, with Quavo and Offset. The trio is best known for its hit 2016 No. 1 single “Bad And Boujee” featuring Lil Uzi Vert. Takeoff and Quavo also just dropped a collaborative album, Only Built For Infinity Links, in October.

Check out some other reactions below.

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Brewers Tell Us The Beers They Most Look Forward To In November

If October is the spooky, haunted month where we’re focused on outdoing each other with the costume du jour while indulging in more chocolate than our bodies can possibly handle, November is a warm, turkey and gravy-covered hug. It’s the gateway to the holidays with Thanksgiving taking center stage on the third Thursday. It’s also a great month to enjoy beer. Since the changing of the seasons is in full swing in the northern part of the US and it’s at least a little chillier in the southern part, the time is ripe to sip darker, maltier, more warming beers.

With the month kicking off, we figured the time was right to once again see what the professionals were drinking. We asked a handful of brewers and craft beer experts to tell us the beers they’re looking forward to drinking this November as we head into the holiday season. Their tastes run the gamut from Black IPAs, Belgian-style ales, porters, and barrel-aged beers.

MIA Big In Japan

MIA Big In Japan
MIA

Garth E. Beyer, certified Cicerone® and owner and founder of Garth’s Brew Bar in Madison, Wisconsin

ABV: 9%

Average Price: $15.99 for a four-pack

Why This Beer?

Big in Japan by M.I.A is light in color but heavy on the ABV. The sake yeast used on this beer gives it soft notes of rice and pear. The alcohol has a little bite to it, similar to the crispness of a November morning breeze. I look forward to the warming sensation of the alcohol, but the drinkability of a classic ale.

Cabin Boys The Hallows

Cabin Boys The Hallows
Cabin Boys

Jody Valenta, co-president and COO of Roadhouse Brewing in Jackson Hole, Wyoming

ABV: 9%

Average Price: Limited Availability

Why This Beer?

The change in the season calls for a trip down to the beer cellar, where a bottle long anticipated can be pulled and shared with friends. This year, it was The Hallows from Cabin Boys Brewery, a Belgian-style Tripel gleaming with honey and esters and finishing with subtle spice and a lingering and warming 9% alcohol on the breath.

Stone Sublimely Self Righteous

Stone Sublimely Self Righteous
Stone

Daniel Gadala-Maria, brewer at Finback Brewery in Glendale, New York

ABV: 8.7%

Average Price: $17.50 for a six-pack

Why This Beer?

Definitely black IPA (or Cascadian dark ale). It’s not an easy style to nail; balance is key. Deceptive in appearance but just as hoppy as its pale counterpart. Stone Sublimely Self Righteous is a great example. This Black IPA is a nice mix of toasted malts and piney hops. Definitely, a bold, unique fall IPA well-suited for November drinking.

Sierra Nevada Celebration

Sierra Nevada Celebration
Sierra Nevada

Rob Lightner, co-founder of East Brother Brewing in Richmond, California

ABV: 6.8%

Average Price: $11.50 for a six-pack

Why This Beer?

Without a doubt, it’s Sierra Nevada Celebration IPA. We’re big fans of balance over here, and this beer has it in spades: its appeal of course is that it’s fresh-hopped so it has amazing levels of bright hop character – but it’s also pretty malty as well with those roasted malts and amber color. And at 6.8% ABV, it hits the sweet spot between guzzler and sipper.

Counter Weight Fest Bier

Counter Weight Fest Bier
Counter Weight

Phil Markowski, brewmaster at Two Roads Brewing Company in Stratford, Connecticut

ABV: 5.8%

Average Price: $11.99 for a four-pack

Why This Beer?

When the calendar hits November that doesn’t deter me from continuing to drink Octoberfest beers. The weather isn’t cold enough for me to suddenly change course from drinking these exquisite lagers. I try to sample as many of the classic German versions as I can find but one of my local favorites is Counter Weight Fest Bier. It’s brewed less like a Marzen and more like the domestic versions served at the Munich Octoberfest. Bready and malty but not cloying.

Alaskan Smoked Porter

Alaskan Smoked Porter
Alaskan

Aaron Halecky, brewmaster at Great Basin Taps & Tanks in Reno, Nevada

ABV: 6.5%

Average Price: $8.50 for a 22-ounce bottle

Why This Beer?

The Smoked Porter from Alaskan Brewing Company. As a young 21-year-old, this was my first memory of a beer absolutely blowing my mind. The pronounced, but not overbearing smoke flavor compliments the complex malty, roasted, and toasty character of the porter base beer in a way that makes your taste buds say, “Ooh, I get it… I finally get it.” It marked the start of my understanding of what craft beer actually is and everything that it can be. It opened my mind to the endless possibilities of flavors and styles that lie within – it was a game changer.

Aecht Schlenkerla Helles

Aecht Schlenkerla Helles
Aecht Schlenkerla

Katie Beaucage, brewer at Allagash Brewing in Portland, Maine

ABV: 4.3%

Average Price: $4.99 for a 500ml bottle

Why This Beer?

It’s November and the cooler weather has finally set in. No more unexpected balmy days that come with early fall trickery. As I welcome the crisp, cool weather, I look forward to my usual autumn shenanigans – throwing on my Bean boots and jean jacket, chopping wood (or watching others chop wood while I have a beer and provide emotional support), and building a fire. What better beer to pair with this fun fall activity than Schlenkerla Helles – a beer with the perfect combination of malty sweetness, lager crispiness, and just the right amount of smoke.

Goose Island Bourbon County Coffee Stout

Goose Island Bourbon County Coffee Stout
Goose Island

Enrique Vittorino, brand manager at Wynwood Brewing Co. in Miami

ABV: 14.3%

Average Price: $13.99 for a 16.9-ounce bottle

Why This Beer?

Miami weather in November could be decent enough to enjoy a proper Stout. I’d have to go with Goose Island’s Bourbon County Coffee Stout. In my opinion, Bourbon County is great as it is, but the addition of coffee provides, well, coffee notes that truly speak to me and my palate.

Bell’s Best Brown

Bell’s Best Brown
Bell’s

Ian Brown, head brewer at Biggerstaff Brewing in Atlanta

ABV: 5.8%

Average Price: $11.99 for a six-pack

Why This Beer?

I always look forward to drinking Bell’s Best Brown. It’s one of the best brown ales out there and comes out around this time of year. Just the perfect balance of malt, chocolate, and hop. Love it.

Founders KBS

Founders KBS
Founders

Chris Spinelli, co-founder and brewer at Roc Brewing In Rochester, New York

ABV: 12%

Average Price: $22 for a four-pack

Why This Beer?

I don’t have a specific beer for November. Bourbon County does come out in November, but there is also a glut of other barrel-aged beers well-suited to warm you up on a chilly November night. A great choice is Founder Kentucky Breakfast Stout. This classic, warming beer is barrel-aged in bourbon barrels with coffee and chocolate. What’s not to love?

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What Are The Must-See Shows For November 2022?

The crime underworld rises to the surface this month on TV. This not only includes a show with Sylvester Stallone playing an exiled mafia boss but also a returning AMC series that plunges us deep into London gang warfare where the old-school rules no longer reign. As well, Netflix will bring us some true-crime drama that revolves around a bodybuilding couple in a marriage gone bad. Don’t worry, though; some residual October spookiness will surface with Tim Burton’s Addams Family offshoot series.

We’ve also got royal drama and a sci-fi opera coming with new editions of The Crown and Manifest, respectively speaking. Mythic Quest also makes a grand workplace-comedy comeback, the punchy Dead To Me ladies return with more homicidal intrigue, and Kumail Nanjiani is here to help dudes take it off (also with murder) in a historical Chippendales dramatization. The body count will be steep this month, which will lead us into bingewatching delights while warding off too many Thanksgiving pies.

Here are the must-see shows for November.

Killer Sally (Netflix limited series streaming 11/2)

In the wake of Bad Vegan, Sally McNeil is here to say, “Hold my protein shake.” This limited series arrives in a true-crime heyday for the streaming service, which is riding high upon Jeffrey Dahmer twin shows and will also soon see Joe Berlingers’s Crime Scene: The Texas Killing Fields arrive. In the case of bodybuilder/wrestler Sally, the show explores how she endured a troubling marriage and eventually killed her husband on Valentine’s Day. Don’t expect a standard retelling of events as they occurred because this one has a few tricks up its steroid-pumped sleeves.

Blockbuster: Season 1 (Netflix series streaming on 11/3)

Netflix famously helped bring Blockbuster Video down, so it’s wild that this series even exists. Randall Park portrays an idealistic manager of the world’s final Blockbuster store, and he’s crushed to learn that his beloved store could soon be an analog dinosaur. What follows is a mad dash to keep things together and help people realize that they need the store’s sense of community to maintain some human connection. Walking into a store to sift through sticky rental tapes (ew) is certainly a different experience than bingewatching entire seasons on streaming. It’s gutsy as hell for Netflix to tackle this subject matter, and we’ll see if audiences are here for it.

Manifest: Season 4, Part A (Netflix series streaming 11/2)

This sci-fi soap series never made much sense, but the soap operatics of people vanishing off the face of the earth doesn’t get old. That’s especially the case since these troubled souls returned to loved ones who had understandably moved on to different romantic relationships. Meanwhile, callings are swirling, and the Death Date still looms as Cal is inexplicably five years older than the last time anyone saw him. Flight 828 yields no easy answers, but showrunner Jeff Rake still aims to bring this in for a turbulent landing after Netflix rescued the show from the NBC graveyard.

The Mosquito Coast: Season 2 (Apple TV+ series streaming on 11/4)

Justin Theroux returns for more of this adaptation of the 1981 novel from his uncle, Paul Theroux. The show’s a moderately engrossing study of a brilliant scientist’s descent into insanity. However, this season picks up with his wife (Melissa George) having had enough of his exhausting sh*t. They’re in real danger now, given that they’re deep within the jungle and searching for refuge with an old Allie Fox friend. Man, these kids simply need a normal life, and instead, they’ve got a terrorizing dad and no relief in sight.

The Crown: Season 5 (Netflix series streaming 11/9)

British Royal drama heats up even more than this show is accustomed to doing. The Windsors are steamed about this season, since it makes Charles look even worse and more resentful than the last round. Dominic West picks up with the heir who waits decades longer to be king, and it’s wild that this season will arrive a few months before King Charles III is officially coronated. This officially-“fictionalized” season will see Elizabeth Debicki pick up the Diana role as the marriage fully crumbles, and Dodi Fayed is on the horizon while Camilla Parker Bowles has been there all along. The monarchy’s in utter chaos, which also closely resembles our current times when the “spare” will soon tell his story to the world.

Down To Earth With Zac Efron: Down Under (Netflix series streaming 11/11)

No one can be mad to see more of Zac Efron being the purest lover of science and sustainability on TV. He’s witnessing truly “sick” revelations while having his “mind blown” in Australia. This venue seemed most convenient during the pandemic, given that the Aussies did things better, and Darin Elien is back to cuddle with koalas, too. Also, good food and good people are both good things.

Mythic Quest: Season 3 (Apple TV+ series streaming on 11/11)

Rob McElhenney’s workplace comedy about video game developers returns for a third round after Snoop Dogg got viewers stoned. This batch of episodes picks up with the GrimPop Studios offshoot with David navigating boss territory, and Carol has no idea how to fill her new role. Dana must be the peacemaker, and Brad’s attempting to feel his way through a post-prison life. As always, this show illustrates how achieving workspace harmony can be a trickier task than the actual work at hand.

Tulsa King: Season 1 (Paramount+ series streaming on 11/13)

Sylvester Stallone portrays a mafia capo who’s not swimming with the fishes. However, he might as well be on Mars in this Taylor Sheridan-created series that takes him to Route 66 and the land of the Golden Driller. Tulsa’s experiencing a hotspot-like effect these days in the midst of Reservation Dogs and following Watchmen, but it’s going to be quite pleasurable to see him as the O.G. who’s dropping a “nice little place you got here” in a weed dispensary. This show looks to be full of 1980s-style one-liners that could put the Sly and Arnold movies of yesteryear to shame.

Yellowstone: Season 5 (Paramount+ series streaming on 11/13)

I recently overheard someone brag about being able to sell a horse at an astronomical premium due to this show’s immense popularity, and I kind-of believe it. Kevin Costner is back in his cowboy hat for this show that has already spawned spinoffs and an upcoming prequel starring Helen Mirren and Harrison Ford. Taylor Sheridan created this empire, and boy, is it ever prospering at breakneck speed. Power struggles with livestock on the side against the backdrop of an ever-shifting political landscape: it sounds like Succession in Big Sky Country, and people can’t get enough.

Dead To Me: Season 3 (Netflix series streaming 11/17)

Finally, the black comedy dream team of Christina Applegate and Linda Cardellini is back together, and does James Mardsen live (and die) again? I love that this series showcases the unlikely but incredible friendship between these two messy women, and hopefully, we’ll get more headbanging to Caliban, too. This kind of buddy dark comedy is exactly what we need going into the time of year when people are posting even more face-forward group selfies on social media. In contrast, this duo lets their chaos hang out while not even bothering with the picture-picture perfect falsehoods. Gotta dig it.

Gangs Of London: Season 2 (AMC/AMC+ series returning on 11/17)

If you’re missing the recently departed Peaky Blinders and haven’t yet caught this AMC show, then you’re missing out. Fans of Marty Scorsese’s flicks should be chuffed, too, while this season plunges into even darker power struggles. Warring gangs find themselves in disarray while paramilitary forces are on the scene for one of the more merciless gang leaders. This is a straight-up dictatorship that lacks the courtesy codes of typical gangsters while the soul of London’s underground hangs in the balance. This show’s not only a collective character study but also includes brutally gorgeous choreography during action scenes.

Ziwe: Season 2, Part 2 (Showtime series returning on 11/20)

Chet Haze’s visit with host Ziwe Fumudoh did not go over well when he refused to apologize for his long-running cultural appropriation. This season, expect Ziwe to continue skewering the Karens and have hard-hitting discussions with guests including Drew Barrymore, DeRay Mckesson, Julia Fox, and Michael Che. The former Desus & Mero writer’s show outlasted her former stomping grounds, and she’ll be keeping it real in an unreal world.

Welcome to Chippendales: Season (Hulu limited series streaming on 11/22)

The Pam & Tommy creators are all over this one while taking viewers into the bounty and destruction wrought from the 1980s stripper empire. Kumail Nanjiani portrays the group’s founder, Indian immigrant Somen “Steve” Banerjee, who foresees the joy that women felt while flocking to these ridiculous shows. Unfortunately, greed rears its head after The White Lotus great Murray Bartlett seizes attention and (with it) power. Drugs, murder, and drama will rule the day while Juliette Lewis and Annaleigh Ashford also hop on board this excessive ride.

Wednesday (Netflix limited series streaming 11/23)

Yes, it only seems natural that both Rob Zombie and Tim Burton are all up in the Addams Family resurrection, but while Zombie veers into wild kitsch, Burton decided to reinvent his character’s mission a bit while creating a “eight-hour Tim Burton movie.” Call it a passion project, of course, while Catherine Zeta-Jones and Luis Guzmán step in as Morticia and Gomez, respectively, and Jenna Ortega slides into view as the title character. Don’t expect a typical reboot feel. Rather, Wednesday is on some missions here, and the show justifies its existence as a separate entity.

Willow: Season 1 (Disney+ series streaming on 11/30)

Seemingly, every other franchise has been revisited lately, so why not this one? The wild part about this series is that Warwick Davis is returning after 30+ years to play Willow Ufgood once more, so expect a whole new adventure-quest and plenty of trolls and sorcerers, too. The challenge here is to keep things fresh while still banding around the spirit that made the O.G. film so beloved. Expect fans to take this very seriously.

Cara Delevingne Megan Thee Stallion 2022 Billboard Music Awards BBMAs 2022
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Planet Sex With Cara Delevingne: Season (Hulu series streaming on 11/29)

The supermodel with loads of famous friends will (as the title of this series suggests) explore all things related to sexuality and the relationships and dynamics that revolve around it. She recently told Variety that making this series made her feel slightly prudish, if that tells you anything at all. It’ll be sheer, awkward fun.

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Takeoff Is Reportedly Dead At 28 After Being Fatally Shot In Houston

Takeoff (real name Kirshnik Khari Ball) is reportedly dead after being fatally shot in Houston, TMZ reports. He was 28 years old.

Baton Rouge’s WBRZ-TV previously reported that both Takeoff and Quavo were both on the scene, as police officials confirmed, and that one person was dead while two others were injured. Per TMZ, it happened at around 2:30 a.m. today (November 1) at 810 Billiards & Bowling. An altercation apparently broke out during a game of dice and somebody fired shots, including one that hit Takeoff in or near the head. The rapper was pronounced dead on the scene. Quavo was reportedly not injured.

KHOU-11 notes security guards were in the area but they did not see who did the shooting, which happened on a balcony outside of the bowling alley, which is on the third floor of a building on San Jacinto Street and Dallas Street. The Houston Police Department noted they are not releasing the name of the deceased “until his family is notified & ID verified by Harris County Institute of Forensic Sciences.” They also reported the two other shooting victims were transported to the hospital in private vehicles.

Takeoff came to fame as a member of Migos, alongside Quavo and Offset. The group is best known for it’s 2016 No. 1 single “Bad And Boujee” featuring Lil Uzi Vert. Takeoff and Quavo also just released a collaborative album, Only Built For Infinity Links, in early October.

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William Zabka’s ‘Cobra Kai’ Halloween Message Is A Roundhouse Kick Of A ‘The Karate Kid’ Throwback

O.G. The Karate Kid Ralph Macchio has been pulling hard for an announcement from Netflix for a sixth Cobra Kai season. For sure, tons of people will be disappointed if this doesn’t happen, given that the revival series charted 1.74 billion minutes viewed in September. We want more of every character, including Hawk, especially because Macchio revealed that Jacob Bertrand can pull off a feat previously accomplished by Pat Morita. And we definitely need more of still-a-bad-boy Johnny Lawrence, who has big changes coming his way in life.

Speaking of original bad boys, William Zabka had a very special Halloween message that’s a direct throwback and proves that Cobra Kai “will never die.” Sure, Terry Silver is down for the count, but the rebellious dojo’s spirit lives on, as Zabka proves with this caption: “Happy Halloween from the OG Cobras #Halloween2022 #CobraKai.”

In response, Zabka received reminders of the first movie’s skeleton chaos and a crotch-kicking Miyagi.

All because of that menace running around in a shower curtain, right? That’s what some corners of the Internet would like us to believe. The responses soon flooded with themed costumes to honor the franchise, and this pumpkin rules, too.

Hopefully, all of you had a relaxing and still-eventful Halloween. And don’t forget, Cobra Kai is streaming on Netflix.