While hometown festivals can constitute a great opportunity for artists to connect with some of their earliest supporters, they can also be a lightning rod for backstage shenanigans. The latest example comes from Hot 97 Summer Jam, where a video has surfaced of Bronx native Lil Tjay being restrained by security guards as he apparently tries to attack someone during an altercation backstage.
Tjay, who is only a year removed from a life-threatening situation in which he was shot multiple times during a robbery attempt in nearby New Jersey, is riled up in the video, struggling to get free and repeatedly warning the guards, âYou gonna be fired.â While itâs not clear he has the pull to make that happen â at least in regard to the guards he doesnât directly employ â according to the person filming, heâs attempting to retaliate after the altercation was instigated by the other party. âN**** popped on Lil Tjay, bro,â he says.
Not to be a killjoy or anything, but itâs probably better that Tjay didnât get to escalate the conflict. After all, weâve seen far too many times how these things can go bad in a hurry, and heâs already on his second life. Not for nothing, Tjayâs also been involved in too many run-ins with the law recently; as recently as January, he had no fewer than two arrests for firearm possession. Letâs all hope he can stay out of trouble for the foreseeable future and enjoy the life he very nearly lost less than a year ago.
Despite all the legal trouble surrounding The Flash star Ezra Miller, Warner Bros. Discovery has held strong on delivering the superhero blockbuster to theaters after the film reportedly wowed audiences in test screening. (It probably didnât hurt that Michael Keatonâs Batman is along for the ride.)
With the filmâs release just a little over a week away, critics have finally had a chance to see The Flash and the big question is whether it lives up to the hype thatâs been building over the past few months. The answer⊠kinda.
While most of the reviews are positive, The Flash appears to fall victim to the same problem as virtually every single superhero movie these days: A convoluted, CGI mess of a final act. There are also mixed reactions as to how well The Flash basically offers up DCâs version of Spider-Man: No Way Home and whether audiences really need another multiverse film.
What makes Andy Muschiettiâs The Flash a great movie (written by Christina Hodson, who also wrote Bumblebee, and has a knack for turning big-budget summer movies into stories with heart) is itâs not about saving the universe. Well, it sort of is, but thatâs kind of secondary to Barry just trying to save his mom. Personally, I canât really relate to saving a universe. Itâs such a big thing, it doesnât really matter. But as the movie gets deeper into Barryâs love for his mother, this is something, as humans, we can relate with and turns The Flash into a surprisingly heartfelt and emotional movie.
Director Muschietti handles the action with confidence. But like the conflict between Barryâs superhero exploits and his soulful attempt to mend the broken heart that has suspended him in arrested adolescence, the film often feels torn in two opposing directions. Itâs strongest when its focus remains personal, an aspect embedded in Millerâs deftly layered performance and reflected in the corresponding sadness of Keatonâs Bruce Wayne/Batman. The early word on The Flash calling it one of the greatest superhero movies ever made was pure hyperbole. But in the bumpy recent history of the DC Extended Universe, itâs certainly an above-average entry.
Letâs give credit to director Andy Muschietti and screenwriter Christina Hodson for making what was becoming a worn out movie genre a brand new life with a smart, funny, thrilling, emotional, and altogether swell take on a character that has been around 80+ years, but until now never got the showcase he deserves. And bringing him vividly alive in a rich and dazzlingly dual performance in which he brilliantly plays opposite himself is Ezra Miller, and simply put, better casting you could not imagine. Whatever the well-publicized previous troubles the actor had in his own life simply do not matter here, he is the real deal and a superhero superstar is born.
Viewers who enjoy Millerâs take on the character are thus welcome to a double serving (several scenes in the film consist of this one actor talking to themselves), while those who get easily annoyed by performative eccentricities might find it a lot to take. The upside is that, in the alternate reality created by Barryâs time travel, Michael Keaton is still Batman.
There are simply too many multiverse stories out there, and The Flash falls victim to being the lesser of the Flashpoint stories. A movie that thrives on the nostalgia bait laid out with Michael Keatonâs return as Bruce Wayne, itâs frankly a mid-level watch after seeing something like Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse. And maybe the near-hysteric level of unnecessary hype ruined my viewing experience of it, so temper your expectations and you might have more fun. The Flash is far from the âbest superhero movieâ title that had been thrown around by audiences and critics after CinemaCon. It is, in a way, fineânot âbadâ fine, not âgreatâ fine. Just fine.
Andy Muschietti (âItâ) directs clean, bright, mostly satisfying action sequences, at least up until the filmâs epic finale, which takes place entirely against a backdrop of a beige desert. One canât help but look at this action sequence, which might as well be set in limbo half the time, and remember the immortal words of John Ford at the end of âThe Fabelmans,â as yelled by David Lynch: âWhen the horizonâs in the middle, itâs boring as sh*t.â
Fresh, funny, and fast â The Flash is a good time at the movies. Director Andy Muschettiâs clear love of the character anchors the many refreshingly unique action scenes and twisty time-travel plot, never losing sight of Barry Allenâs powerful emotional journey. Though the story doesnât necessarily justify its excessive fan service and the third act is a bit unwieldy, that doesnât stop The Flash from being an earnest and entertaining superhero film â and one of the better efforts from DC in recent memory.
J. Cole and Lil Durkâs collaborative song âAll My Lifeâ kicked off the rollout of Durkâs new album Almost Healed. The song performed well, peaking at No. 2 on Billboardâs Hot 100 chart. However, fans found themselves hung up on J. Coleâs reported verse fee to appear on the track.
Music blog Raphouse TV is at the head of the financial rumor. The outlet tweeted, âLil Durk reportedly paid J. Cole $978K for his âAll My Lifeâ verse, counting 489 words Cole spat. Cole reportedly charges $2K per word for the feature.â Based on Coleâs star power in the rap game, the price tag would be justifiable if it were real.
Lil Durk reportedly paid J.Cole $978K for his “All My Life” verse, counting 489 words Cole spat Cole reportedly charges $2K per word for the featurepic.twitter.com/n6cJMNNOwF
After gaining over eight million impressions, Coleâs longtime friend and manager Ibrahim âIbâ Hamad took a second to dispute the claim. According to Hamad, Raphouse TV is false or, as he put it, âCap.â
When asked about the songâs reception, Durk admitted to Complex, â[Cole] smoked my ass on that one, for one â barely. That barely happens. But shout out to J. Cole, shout out to [Dr.] Luke, we made it happen.â
In his memoir, Pageboy, Elliot Page discussed his transition, the actor who threatened to have sex with him âto make you realize you arenât gay,â and his secret romance with Kate Mara. The Umbrella Academy star also revealed that he was hooking up with co-star Olivia Thirlby âall the timeâ while making Juno.
âI was taken aback the moment I saw Olivia Thirlby,â Page wrote, according to Page Six. âSexually open, far removed from where I was at the time. But the chemistry was palpable, it pulled me in.â One day while they were in Thirlbyâs hotel room, she told Page, âIâm really attracted to you.â From there, âwe started sucking face,â Page detailed. âIt was on. I had an all-encompassing desire for her, she made me want in a way that was new, hopeful. It was one of the first times someone would make me cum, the first time I would open up.â
The couple began having sex âall the timeâ and everywhere. âHer hotel room, in our trailers at work, once in a tiny, private room in a restaurant⊠We thought we were being subtle. Being intimate with Olivia helped my shame dissipate. I didnât see a glint of it in her eyes and I wanted that â done feeling wretched about who I am.â
Page and Thirlby have another connection, beyond what happened on the Juno set: he was in Inception, while she appears in Christopher Nolanâs next movie, Oppenheimer.
WARNING: spoilers for Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse
As with every superhero movie (or Taylor Swift music video) there are bound to be a million easter eggs that represent other things, because itâs not enough to just see a movie anymore, you have to know the lore. But itâs fun to do the Leonardo DiCaprio meme when you see something that others donât so if thatâs your prerogative, then Spider-Man: Across The Spider-Verse is the movie for you!
Among the vibrant animation and critically acclaimed web-slinging, there are numerous easter eggs hiding out in the movie, mostly consisting of various iterations of Spidey and his human counterparts. There are quite literally hundreds of bits of callbacks and references jam-packed into the adventure, but here are some that you might have missed.
J.K. Simmons as J. Jonah Jameson
You probably didnât miss this, but itâs fun to talk about! J.K. Simmons returned to the Daily Bugle as J. Jonah Jameson in multiple different iterations throughout the movie, even with his own little blockhead as a Lego. Maybe he should get his own spinoff about the power of journalism in the Spider-Man universe. They have an incredible photo policy there.
Lego Spider-Man
Speaking of Lego Spidey, an entire Lego Spider-Man sequence was featured as a nod to Chris Miller and Phil Lordâs work on The Lego Movie. Whatâs even cooler is that they added the Lego scene after a clip of the trailer remade as legos went viral, so they reached out to the Twitter user who made it. Turns out he is a 14-year-old who now has a movie credit. Sometimes you donât have to stay in school! Just play with Legos.
Doctor Strange
It seems like the only person who really made a name for himself in the multiverse is Doctor Strange, thanks to his ability to be present in just about every universe out there. At one point, Spider-man 2099 warns Gwen to not âget him started on Doctor Strange and that little nerd back on Earth 199999,â referring to the events in Spider-Man: No Way Home. That little nerd in question is Tom Hollandâs Peter Parker.
Venmon
But wait! You simply cannot have a Spider-Man film without bringing back the best villain we all love to hate: Venom. While several variations of the character and his suit can be seen throughout the film, a live-action Mrs. Chen, who appears alongside Tom Hardy in Venom also makes a small cameo in her store.
âSpider-Manâ For PS4
Milesâ roommate Ganke is seen playing the 2018 Spider-Man game on the PlayStation 4 in the background of one of the scenes. He also makes a joke about not being Milesâ âGuy In The Chair,â which might have been a reference to Peter Parkerâs friend Ned Leeds in the Tom Holland-led Marvel installments.
Donald Gloverâs Prowler
In Spider-Man: Homecoming, Donald Glover appeared as Aaron Davis, who is known in the comics as The Prowler. While Glover only has a small cameo in Homecoming, Glover as The Prowler is seen during the Nueva York segment of Across The Spider-Verse meaning that he might just have a larger part in the next installment.
Mahershala Aliâs Prowler
Is this getting a little confusing for you? It would be weird if it wasnât. Mahershala Ali voiced The Prowler in Into The Spider-Verse and unfortunately met his demise, but since time isnât real and nobody really dies, Aliâs iteration of the villain came back from a brief moment towards the end of the movie.
Doc Oc
Alfred Molina also makes his iconic return (again) after appearing as Doc Oc in Spider-Man: Homecoming. This time, he has a small cameo as a cutout in a training facility while Miles is running from various spider-people.
Bagels!
Sometimes, a bagel is just a bagel. Other times, itâs a clear reference to the multiple multiverses thrown at you from every angle. In one brief moment in the movie, a billboard with a bagel appears as a nod to Everything Everywhere All At Once, the Oscar-winning movie from last year which helped bring the concept of a multiverse to a wider audience by using tax fraud.
One of my favorite Easter Eggs in Spider-Man Across the Spiderverse: the significance of BAGELS to The Spot’s origin as a multiverse threat.
I thought, huh, like Everything Everywhere All At Once!
While Spider-Man 2099 is doing a bit of wall-breaking by explaining the concept of canon events, there are scenes from just about every other Spider-Man movie, including Andrew Garfieldâs portrayal and Tobey McGuire. Spider-Ham, Spider-Man Noir, and Peni Parker from the first Into The Spider-Verse also appear, making it a whole family affair.
The only surprising thing about Drew Barrymoreâs rise as a talk show host is that it took so long for this to happen. I feel like Drew could have given us some much needed moments of levityat least a decade ago, but also I can accept that there are times and places for wonderful projects to emerge, and here we are.
Drewâs sense of humor and effusiveness are refreshing, but she knows where to draw the line and call out what isnât funny at all. This includes The Razzies going after the young star of the Firestarter reboot, and now, sheâs taking aim at the tabloids for getting really personal with their falsehoods. Mind you, the tabloids have been all over Drew since shortly after her own Firestarter days and for reasons that she detailed in her first memoir way back in 1990. The âwild childâ coverage was not a great look for the tabs, and theyâre keeping that streak going following Drewâs recent profile with Vulture, in which she clearly expressed that she âcannot waitâ to fully unravel her complicated relationship with her mother, Jaid, while Jaid is still alive:
âAll [my relevant interview subjectsâ] moms are gone, and my momâs not. And Iâm like, Well, I donât have that luxury. But I cannot wait. I donât want to live in a state where I wish someone to be gone sooner than theyâre meant to be so I can grow. I actually want her to be happy and thrive and be healthy. But I have to fâing grow in spite of her being on this planet.â
The tabloids ran with their erroneous ball and completely misrepresented Drewâs words to make it seem like she was eager for Jade to die. Like, what? Well, Drew was not here for these shenanigans. Hereâs how she responded on Instagram: âTo all you tabloids out there, you have been f*cking with my life since I was 13 years old.â She added, âI have never said that I wished my mother was dead. How dare you put those words in my mouth.â
Allison Russell has announced her next album, The Returner, and is treating fans to a glimpse of it by dropping the title track.
Russellâs new album will also feature her âRainbow Coalitionâ band and appearances from Wendy & Lisa, Brandi Carlile, Brandy Clark, and Hozier.
âMy goal with The Returner â sonically, poetically, and spiritually â is a radical reclamation of the present tense, a real time union of body, mind, and soul,â Russell shared in a statement. âThis album is a much deeper articulation of rhythm, groove, and syncopation. Groove as it heralds the self back into the body, groove as it celebrates sensual and sexual agency and flowering, groove as an urgent call to action and political activism.â
âIn just a word, itâs funkier,â she added. âBut as is the history of anything funky, itâs never just a party. It is a multiverse of energies that merges the celebration and the battle cry. For while an embrace of the present tense is a celebration, it is equally an unquestioning leap into battle â cultural, political, environmental.â
Check out Allison Russellâs âThe Returnerâ above. Continue scrolling for the albumâs full tracklist and cover art.
Fantasy Records
1. âSpringtimeâ
2. âThe Returnerâ
3. âAll Without Withinâ
4. âDemonsâ
5. âEve Was Blackâ
6. âStay Right Hereâ
7. âShadowlandsâ
8. âRag Childâ
9. âSnake Lifeâ
10. âRequiemâ
The Returner is out 9/8 via Fantasy Records. Find more information here.
Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.
Mike Pak can take any of his interests and turn them into something bigger than just personal hobbies. Known as the unofficial mayor of LAâs Koreatown (Pakâs personal Instagram handle is @koreatown, he lives and breathes the neighborhood), Pak has made (and continues to make) his stamp on the bustling neighborhood. Nearly a decade ago, he started the Koreatown Run Club along with Guy Nguyen (who gave him the âunofficial mayorâ title), which started as a casual weekly meetup and blossomed into a movement that has garnered attention from Nike, GQ, Runnerâs World, and Therabody.
Then, on a whim, Pak and Nguyen decided to get into the world of smash burgers (neither had restaurant experience under their belts), linked up with restauranteur Jimmy Han, and created Love Hour, a pop-up that garnered a whole bunch of attention, turned into a permanent fixture of the neighborhood, and this year took its food to Coachella.
As if his slate wasnât packed enough, Pak has just launched a new venture â a monthly Supper Club series that will enable creatives to get together and interface with one another in a private dinner that celebrates the local businesses around Koreatown. Still in its infancy, itâs anyoneâs guess as to what Supper Club will turn out to be, exactly. But if Pakâs track record is anything to go off of, weâre sure itâll become a fixture of the community.
To get a better sense of the sights, eats, and hang-outs of Koreatown for the uninitiated, we linked up with Pak and he hit us with his favorite local K-Town spots. If youâre visiting LA, K-Town is a must, and who better to guide you than the âunofficial mayor of K-Townâ himself?
Whatâs the first thing someone visiting K-Town should do upon arriving?
The first thing someone visiting K-Town should do is go for a walk and take in the neighborhood. From natural springs to the best diverse cuisine, Koreatown has so much to offer! But get ready for a night of drinking. Beforehand, make sure you drink lots of water and electrolytes. Iâm telling you⊠itâs going to be a long night.
Itâs hard to pick just one spot for the best late eats because there are so many good spots to choose from. But if youâre twisting my arm, Iâd say the best picks that first come to mind are Momâs House on 8th, Sun Nong Dan, BCD Tofu, and Juntong. These are all great spots for traditional Korean late-night food cravings.
Itâs definitely a coin toss between Olympic Cafe and Bistro on the Blvd. Both are mom-and-pop spots that serve up all your breakfast classics. If you want a standard morning after recovery that serves the basics like eggs, bacon, toast, and coffee, look no further.
Best Place to get a good drink and view of the city?
My personal favorite is Apt 503, it has great views and great cocktails which is a major plus. Openaire located inside the Line Hotel on Whileshite is also a fan favorite. If you could put yourself in one of these spots during sunset, you wonât regret it.
The Wiltern Theatre is the best place to see your favorite artists perform. Itâs a two-story, 155-foot Art Deco landmark at the corner of Wilshire Boulevard and Western Avenue. Undoubtedly an iconic building in the neighborhood. Itâs also THE perfect spot for date night.
While there are many spots for good eats and drinks. If you want to unwind and take a pause from the city, you can set up a picnic in front of Radio Korea. Itâs also a great spot to take your pups. Thereâs a huge lawn space to just lay out and relax.
Itâs hard to pick a favorite so Iâll share some K-town favorites of mine. My top list includes Normandie Club, Frank n Hanks, Thai Angel, Monte Carlo, Southland Beer, HMS Bounty, The Prince, Brass Monkey, and of course Love Hour!
When you walk into The Prince itâs like being transported through a Time Machine. With their old school decor no wonder shows like New Girl and Mad Men have filmed there. Lately, Frank n Hanks has been the regular spot to grab quick drinks with the buds. A historic bar with dim lights, pool table, and classic jukebox, the cheap drinks will keep you coming back.
Best place to take in the culture of the neighborhood?
The Food court inside Koreatown Plaza is the best place to capture and soak everything in. It feels like youâve been transported to Seoul on a busy Sunday afternoon. If you visit, invite a solid group of friends, and donât forget to order one dish from each stall for a mini food tasting and gather around the table for a good eats hang.
A night of not making any plans. But if you must have a plan in mind â visit the oldest restaurant in Koreatown by checking out El Cholo off Western. Itâs been there since the 1930s and they were the first spot to introduce Tex-Mex nachos to the world.
Letâs go all the way back to a month and a half ago and remember the opening round series between the Los Angeles Lakers and the Memphis Grizzlies. You may recall that, after a Lakers win in Game 1, the Grizzlies were able to bounce back in Game 2, which led to former main character of the NBA playoffs Dillon Brooks going at LeBron James a bit. Brooks called James âold,â said âI poke bears,â and made clear âI donât respect someone until he gives me 40.â
Los Angeles would go on to win three out of the next four games to bounce Memphis from the playoffs, with James posting something on Instagram in the aftermath of the series that sure showed that he had Brooksâ comments on his mind. And on the most recent episode of âPodcast P with Paul George,â one of Brooksâ soon-to-be former teammates in Memphis conceded that his comments did put some pep back in the Lakersâ step following the loss.
âIt helped L.A. get around something and get some energy, get some life, and they went in the game with some life,â Jaren Jackson Jr. said at the 41:40 mark of the above video. âBut, he is old, and he kicked our ass. Kicked our ass and heâs old. He dropped 20 and 20. Heâs thinking about retiring. I mean, heâs been playing since 03. Like my dad retiredâŠheâs great like he kicked our ass, he beat us. Heâs not old? I mean, damnâŠHe beat us 4-1. He kicked us and we got to spin the block but I hope we get a chance because I donât know how many more years he wants to do it.â
Georgeâs podcast has become a very interesting place for Brooks chat, as heâs previously compared the way Brooks carried himself in the series against the Lakers to the way Lance Stephenson prodded James when the Indiana Pacers and the Miami Heat would square off in the postseason. Unsurprisingly, that continued to be the case in his conversation with Jackson, as the two talked about how quotes in media availabilities can be turned into bulletin board material.
âAnd thatâs fine but this is the NBA thatâs bulletin board material right there,â George said. âLike coaches tell you that sh*t all the time. Donât say this, donât say that. If thatâs how you feel, cool keep that sh*t to yourself. You know what I mean? Like we gotta play this motherf*cker, keep that sh*t to yourself. You feel me like itâs a team sport and like for Dillon, itâs not like Dillon is shooting 20, 30 shots a night. Itâs not like heâs a 30-point producer. You donât get that same opportunities Bron gets, you know what I mean? Like why would you even try to challenge him on that level?â
âMedia availability, man,â Jackson said. âA lot of podiums, a lot of opportunities. Like, I mean, at that point you know, itâs Dillon. Itâs packed around him, theyâre gonna ask him anything. Heâs there for like 20 minutes. Eventually one of those questions⊠they good.â
I Think You Should Leave Season 3 has barely been available on Netflix for a week, and already, industrious fans have recreated the randomly hilarious âEggman Gameâ from the new batch of sketches. In the comedy short, Tim Robinsonâs character is playing a browser game at work where you simply move eggs into the mouth of an Eggman. However, thereâs seemingly no rhyme or reason to how the game keeps track of eggs.
At one point, Robinsonâs character buys 80 eggs, drops a few in the mouth of Eggman, and the game then tells him he only has 40 eggs left. Baffled by this turn of events, Robinson tries to shove as many eggs into Eggmanâs mouth as he can while ignoring his co-workers whoâve brought an important matter to his attention. Eventually, the sketch ends when itâs revealed that feeding Eggman enough eggs will cause him to, well, show you more of Eggman than youâve ever wanted to see.
Now, you can live that experience for yourself thanks to Matthew Barton and his friend who recreated the browser game.
The fan creation also has a charitable bent, according to Gamespot:
At the top of the screeen is the donate button. It links to two things: the Ruth Ellis Center, a shelter that specializes in âproviding trauma-informed services for LGBTQ+ young people experiencing homelessness, in the child welfare system, and/or experiencing barriers to care.â The other one sends you to I Think You Should Leave actor Biff Wiffâs (Detective Crashmore/Santa, and featured in the Shirt Brother sketch in Season 3) GoFundMe page as he needs assistance with cancer treatment.
Weâve messed around with the home-brewed Eggman game, and it is absolutely has the random egg count down pat. As for the pornographic ending, we havenât been able to recreate that⊠yet.
I Think You Should Leave Season 3 is now streaming on Netflix.
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