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’Black Widow’s David Harbour And ‘Shang-Chi’ Star Simu Liu Are Making The Best Of Their MCU Delays

Wednesday brought the not entirely surprising news that Disney has delayed Black Widow yet again as the pandemic continues to make theatrical releases a risky venture for both public safety and box-office haul. With the Marvel movies being interconnected, Disney can’t just move Black Widow to May 2021 without shifting the MCU movies that follow, and that’s exactly what happened. Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings will now open in July 2021 followed by Eternals in November 2021.

At this point, the MCU has now seen two of its major blockbusters delayed an entire year, and most of its stars seem to be rolling with the punches. Here’s how Shang Chi star Simu Liu reacted to having his big MCU debut being delayed a second time:

As for David Harbour, who’s waiting to makes his MCU debut as Red Guardian in Black Widow, he lamented the fact that fans will now have to wait to drink soda out of his head.

“Sorry,” Harbour wrote on Instagram. “You’re gonna have to wait til May 2021 before you can pop a straw thru my helmeted head and sip your Diet Coke, and marvel (get it, get it) at how the RG packs his whole overly fleshy self into that super suit.”

While Harbor and Liu are having fun with the unprecedented circumstances that are out of their control, Eternals star Kumail Nanjiani took a more serious tact by praising Marvel for doing the right thing.

“Marvel made the right & responsible decision,” Nanjiani tweeted. “There’s a pandemic. Nothing is more important than health & lives. I can’t tell ppl to go to a movie theater until I feel safe going to one. Take care of yourselves. I promise it’ll be worth the wait!”

Nanjiani is also waiting for fans to see his MCU debut as Kingo in Eternals, where he’ll show off his new abs that nearly broke the internet.

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The ‘New Normal’ For Make-Out Scenes On ‘Riverdale’ Is Not Very Romantic

Lili Reinhart feels “like a prisoner” for having to return to work during a pandemic, but she’s not the only Riverdale star who has to adjust to These Unprecedented Times.

KJ Apa, who plays Hot Archie on the CW series, shared a behind-the-scenes video of his preparation for a make-out scene with Camila Mendes (Veronica). It’s not as hot as it sounds. “Our new normal is washing our mouths before every take of a make-out scene,” Apa wrote, along with a video of himself and Mendes taking a shot of mouthwash and swishing it around their mouths for an awkwardly long amount of time. Be sure to stick around for the Ziplock bags full of minty spit (acting is so glamorous).

“That shit burns,” Reinhart commented on the post, while Bernadette Beck (Peaches ‘N Cream) added, “Can this become the new standard for make-out scenes?” (not a bad idea!) and Skeet Ulrich (Jughead’s dad) wrote, “Spit don’t swallow.” I’d expect better from a guy named Skeet.

Anyway, Riverdale is one of many in-production television shows and films with new on-set restrictions due to the coronavirus pandemic. “The producers estimated that safety measures cost as much as 10 percent of their production budget, and resulted in additional shooting days,” Variety wrote while visiting the set of the indie horror film The Knocking. “Talent and artisans are also increasingly isolated, they told me, as the busy life of the film set has been replaced by video conferences and solitary meals in cars.”

At least they don’t have to deal with Skeet Ulrich making oral sex jokes (probably?).

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Arnold Schwarzenegger says he’ll pay to reopen polling centers across America so everyone can vote

There are very few people who have had quite as memorable a life as Arnold Schwarzenegger. His adult life has played out in four acts, with each one arguably more consequential than the last.

And now Schwarzenegger wants to play a role in helping America, his adopted home, ensure that our 2020 election is safe, secure and available to everyone willing and able to vote.

Shortly after immigrating to America, Schwarzenegger rose up to become the most famous bodybuilder in history, turning what was largely a sideshow attraction into a legitimate sport. He then pivoted to an acting career, becoming Hollywood’s highest paid star in a run that spanned three decades.


In the early 2000s, Schwarzenegger’s life and career took a major u-turn when he decided to run for governor of California …. and won. Sure, Schwarzenegger had a mixed bag as governor, no matter what your political leanings are. And after his second term, he quietly returned to lesser roles in movies and navigated personal setbacks like the dissolution of his marriage. Everyone kind of expected Schwarzenegger to drift into the sunset as a curious footnote of the modern era.

But it’s how Schwarzenegger has returned as a public advocate for the greater good that has truly cemented his legacy as an important global citizen: taking on climate change, promoting plant based diets and squaring off against bullies ranging from your average Twitter troll all the way up (or down) to President Trump himself.

In a Twitter thread that quickly went viral on Wednesday, Schwarzenegger said he was willing to invest his personal fortune in helping to re-open polling centers around America that have been closed because of budget cuts and safety concerns tied to Covid-19.

He went on to challenge those who say it’s not voter suppression but simply a question of how we pay for it:

“I’ve been thinking about this a lot. I’m a fanatic about voting. Most people call closing polls voter suppression. Some say it is “budgetary.” What if I made it easy & solved the budgetary issue? How much would it cost to reopen polling places?”

“This is a serious question. Is closing polling stations about making it harder for minorities to vote, or is it because of budgets? If you say it’s because of your budget, let’s talk.”

And it’s not just talk. Schwarzenegger made it clear, playing off one of his favorite lines, that he’s already taken “action” to put real meaning behind his tweets:

“Today I sent a letter to nearly 6,000 elections officials and county commissioners in states formerly covered by Voting Rights Act Section 5 inviting them to apply for grants, funded by me, to reopen polling centers and improve voting access.”

But it was the next tweet that really showed the personal meaning this has to someone like Schwarzenegger, an immigrant who has truly lived and thrived inside the American dream, the manifestation of everything our country promises to be:

“This country gave me everything, and I truly believe this could be one of the best investments I have ever made. All of us can do our part to give back and fight for equality.”

And he promised to give the grants to any state that can demonstrate a need:

“The grants are completely non-partisan and will be offered to those who demonstrate the greatest need and ability to close gaps in voting access. The process will be run through @GovArnoldUSC.”

It’s still unclear if any states will take up Schwarzenegger’s offer or if it’s even technically legal in all 50 states. Regardless, this is the kind of action taken by someone who truly loves their country. Let people vote and let the votes be counted.

That’s what democracy is all about, empowering citizens to decide what kind of representation they want in their government. America can be a conservative place, a liberal place, or somewhere in between. Most of all, America is supposed to be a free place, where liberty is the guiding principle. Arnold Schwarzenegger gets that and we all owe him a thanks for putting his privilege and power behind those principles.

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Lizzo Thinks Body Positivity Needs A Change

Ever since her rise to fame, Lizzo has spoken out about body positivity and related topics. While that core message is something she believes in, Lizzo has now said that body positivity could use some reconsideration.

In a new Vogue cover story, Lizzo explained her position that the term “body positive” has become commercialized and that it’s no longer accomplishing its initial goal:

“It’s commercialized. Now, you look at the hashtag ‘body positive,’ and you see smaller-framed girls, curvier girls. Lotta white girls. And I feel no ways about that, because inclusivity is what my message is always about. I’m glad that this conversation is being included in the mainstream narrative. What I don’t like is how the people that this term was created for are not benefiting from it. Girls with back fat, girls with bellies that hang, girls with thighs that aren’t separated, that overlap. Girls with stretch marks. You know, girls who are in the 18-plus club. They need to be benefiting from…the mainstream effect of body positivity now. But with everything that goes mainstream, it gets changed. It gets — you know, it gets made acceptable.”

She went on to say that she wants to move beyond body positivity, saying, “I think it’s lazy for me to just say I’m body positive at this point. It’s easy. I would like to be body-normative. I want to normalize my body. And not just be like, ‘Ooh, look at this cool movement. Being fat is body positive.’ No, being fat is normal. I think now, I owe it to the people who started this to not just stop here. We have to make people uncomfortable again, so that we can continue to change. Change is always uncomfortable, right?”

Lizzo was also asked about her next album, but she was tight-lipped beyond expressing confidence in the material: “Oh, girl, I don’t know. I gotta finish the songs. It’s gonna be good, though. I’ll tell you that. It’s gonna be motherf*cking good.”

Read the full feature here.

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

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Gunna Recalls Backstage Shenanigans In His Lively ‘Sun Came Out’ Video

Gunna gets away from his “opps” and enjoys the good life on tour in his lively video for “Sun Came Out.” The Atlanta rapper hasn’t let up on releasing new videos from his May album Wunna yet, even though he’s already put out enough to constitute half the original album. Of course, 2020’s COVID-19 crisis continues to constrain the moves that video crews can make, so instead of shooting new footage, “Sun Came Out” makes use of archival film from Gunna’s last tour.

The video tracks Gunna from the airport, where he and he crew joke that they never see their enemies in Australia or at the bank, to backstage at various festivals, where he excites fans, meets up with Cordae, and basically has himself a ball. He even shows off his hoop skills at a sporting goods store, sinking a jumper while shopping for clothes.

Wunna and its deluxe edition have so far received a steady stream of videos, which most recently includes “Bird Box” with Lil Baby, “200 For Lunch” and “Dirty Diana” in a joint video, “Wunna Flo” with Yak Gotti, and “Dollaz On My Head” with Young Thug, the most high-concept of the videos yet.

Watch Gunna’s “Sun Came Out” video above.

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

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‘Utopia’ Actor Desmin Borges Talks To Us About Conspiracy Bunkers And His Chicago Foodie Tours

Desmin Borges spent five seasons playing the lovable war-vet suffering from PTSD on FX’s criminally underrated You’re The Worst. He’s about to take over your TV as a bunker-dwelling, comic-book-obsessed conspiracy theorist trying to prevent the apocalypse on Amazon Prime Video’s sci-fi thriller Utopia. But Borges’ greatest talent is how he can convincingly string together words like demagoguery and Chicago foodie recs just a few minutes after waking up from a nap, which is when we caught up with him to chat about the new streaming series. (To be fair, Borges has a nine-month-old to keep entertained during quarantine and some of us only have two cats and our ADHD-riddled brains, so he’s obviously more deserving of that sweet, blissful shuteye.)

Utopia comes from author and showrunner Gillian Flynn, who adapted it from a U.K. series by Dennis Kelly. It follows a group of outcasts who believe a prophetic comic book story, written by an unknown author, holds the key to stopping the next apocalyptic event. Borges plays one member of the group, an oddball genius named Wilson Wilson, who gets sucked into a world of corporate espionage and secret assassin networks due to the comic book and its real-life heroine, Jessica Hyde.

If it all sounds weird as hell that’s because it is. It’s also an addictive binge-watch that feels oddly perfect for these strange times. We chatted with Borges about the show’s unique form of escapism, taking castmates like Rainn Wilson and Dan Byrd on food tours of Chicago, and why he’s drawn to flawed characters on TV.

This was shot before the quarantine happened, but how do you think a conspiracy thriller about a global pandemic is going to land right now?

The thing is, I think a lot of people are looking for closure, of any sort, and I don’t think we’re going to get it any time soon in reality, you know? One of the things that Gillian [Flynn] does so well on this show is she takes that sort of dangerous conspiracy thriller and mixes it with a dark comedy. We have a genre mashup going on. So even though we have these moments that are dark and exciting and somewhat close to the world that we live in with the backdrop of a viral pandemic, we also have these moments that are really humorous and tender that kind of weave in and out of the story and give you breaths during those times that might get a little too heavy.

There’s definitely more humor on the show than in real life.

I was talking with Rainn [Wilson] about this a couple of days ago, because we’ve been getting these questions a lot about whether it’s going to hit too close to home. And like the short answer to that is, “Well, it depends on what your experience in this viral pandemic has been like” but I think for most people it won’t hit too close to home because of what we’re dealing with in reality versus what we’re dealing with in our Utopian reality. There is no civil unrest happening in Utopia, even though we’re in the same timeframe of now. There are not active protests happening that are very much needed against police brutality. There’s not a fascination with fascism and demagoguery, which seems to be like a worldwide concept. Everyone in the show believes that science is fact and fact is truth. Now your version of that depends on whose side you’re on, but there’s not like half the country thinking that you shouldn’t wear a mask. We are dealing with those sorts of experiences in our real life but we’re not necessarily discussing those in the world of Utopia. So I think it’ll be a bit of a hopefully engaging break for everybody.

This show is based on a U.K. series. Did you watch that to get a feel for how your character had been played before?

I didn’t want to make choices that had already been made. I wanted to make my own Wilson Wilson and within that, I think we found somebody who resembles what a normal 30-ish person who lives in his parents’ home with seven other family members and may or may not have a bunker in Chicago looks like. I’m originally from there. I know that Midwest family feel. I grew up in a seven flat gray stone in Logan square with my family, so we had a variety of Puerto Ricans, Greeks, and Italians running in and out of our space at any time. I wanted to have that family feel of a loner who was extremely intelligent and at the same time, kind of round him out a little bit. I put on almost 30 pounds for Wilson, which was interesting considering the choice was made to shoot in the dead of summer and Chicago when it was crazy humid. I mean, my beard was four pounds of that 30.

Wilson is a hardcore conspiracy theorist. Did any of that rub off on you?

Well, my wife and I did talk about building a bunker on the outskirts of New York somewhere. I mean, I think it would be fun. We keep saying like after every national catastrophe like this is the worst that it’s ever been. How many times are we going to say there before we’re actively prepared for it to really be the worst that it’s ever been?

You’re a Chicago native and this show was filmed in Chicago, so did you take the cast on any good foodie tours of the city?

Dan Byrd and I, we went on many a foodie adventure together because our call times were very much the same so we’re always kind of riding out together and riding in together. I actually took him to the famous Gene & Jude’s. One thing that’s really funny about Gene & Jude’s is that they don’t have ketchup. They don’t put ketchup on the dog, they don’t have ketchup if you want to dip your fries and it’s something that you have to let everyone experience their first time going.

So Dan and I are sitting there, eating our dog, having our fries, drinking our soda and he was like, “Oh man, I need some ketchup.” And I was like, “Mm-hmm.” I just keep taking my bite and he goes up to the counter and you know, Dan Byrd, he’s just so unassuming and such a nice guy. He says, “Hey, can I have some ketchup?” And the guy was like, “What?” And Dan just kind of like looked, and the guy yells, “Hey, Tim, this guy wants some ketchup.” And the guy stopped cooking and he came over and he put his arm around Dan and said, “Boy, we don’t have ketchup here.” That was pretty fun. But other than that, I felt like we were all discovering new places in Chicago because it’s really turned into like this culinary breeding ground. There are all these storefronts that you can get cheaper in Chicago than you can in New York or LA or San Francisco. Steph Izard has Duck Duck Goat, Girl and the Goat, and Little Goat Diner. You’re getting really interesting fashion-forward type of food in a very Chicago style sort of way. So all of us would go out and sample as much as we could while we were there.

I think both this show and You’re The Worst could be described as dark, even bleak comedies. Is that something you’re drawn to, as an actor and a TV fan?

I mean, I just finished Schitt’s Creek, and I absolutely loved it so maybe it’s comedies about not-so-great people turning great or finding that there’s something great within their lack of greatness? I think one of the things that I’ve tried to do my entire career is to give voice to people who feel voiceless. There weren’t a lot of people when I was growing up that looked like me on screen or in film or on stage so when I get the opportunity, I try to emulate those types of people. I think one of the main things about people who feel voiceless is that they’re aware of their flaws, you know? They know that they’re flawed and even despite the flaws, they still try to lead a life worth leading, whatever that may be.

I mean, when it comes down to it, who wants to play just a one-dimensional character? You get to really dig into someone who feels human and has just as many awkward and bad days as they have great and happy days and then you feel like you’re being able to add a part of real-life to this fictional space that sometimes it’s hard to make it seem like it’s real. Not particularly with Utopia. You just kind of fall into it and hope you don’t mess it up. Trying to elevate what they already have on the page, it’s no easy feat. But then they put a really good cast together and have really great directors coming through and I think what we did here in Utopia — we really elevated what was on the page. I think it’s going to be a pretty exciting ride.

Amazon Prime’s ‘Utopia’ streams on September 25.

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Mark Hamill And Patrick Stewart Clash In A Gritty Showdown Over Tomatoes (?) In An Uber Eats Commercial

“Careful Hamill, Daddy’s not here to save you…”

“Oh, I am my daddy…”

A Jedi and a Starfleet captain walk into an empty warehouse, and one of the strangest, most delightful commercials in recent memory happened. The results don’t make much sense (is that an intentionally confusing Darth Vader reference? who knows), but this is downright cinematic, which is a good thing with all those blockbuster movies getting pushed to 2021. That’s right, when you need a break from TV binging, there are always, you know, clever commercials out there. You might even watch this one twice.

Yes, Uber Eats (which is seeing amplified sales during the pandemic) is here with the gritty showdown that no one knew they wanted: Mark Hamill and Patrick Stewart facing off in an empty warehouse while brandishing baseball and cricket bats. Now, everyone must side with the “tomatoes” pronunciation of their choice. May the most vicious man win, and the attention to culinary preferences here is truly striking. We can debate all day over “tuh-may-tos” versus “tuh-mah-toes,” but I’m more focused on the veggie cheeseburger versus ciabatta four-cheese tortellini.

Thinking I’d go with the cheeseburger, given the variety of textures, and the fact that Hamill looks pretty vicious with that baseball bat. I wouldn’t want to run into that in a galaxy far, far away. (I will show myself out, have a wonderful day.)

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2 Chainz Pushes Back The Release Date Of His ‘So Help Me God’ Album

Though he was originally planning to release his new album, So Help Me God, this week, it appears that 2 Chainz needs a little more time to complete the project. He announced via Instagram Story that he has delayed the album release in order to work on an interlude and await a pair of sample clearances. Though he confirmed he’d still appear on Family Feud tonight, that would unfortunately be all the 2 Chainz fans would be receiving.

Chainz, who hadn’t updated any of his accounts with cover artwork or tracklists for the upcoming project, explained on his Instagram Story: “I ain’t dropping my album this week either. We will be on Family Feud tonight but I ain’t dropping my album this week. I ain’t finished with it yet. I’m waiting on two samples to get back, information on two samples, and I’m waiting on a skit, believe it or not. It shouldn’t [be more] than a couple of weeks, though.”

The Atlanta rap giant has had an eventful year so far otherwise, appearing in a meme-worthy hit battle with Rick Ross for Swizz Beats’ Verzuz stream, assisting Run The Jewels with their new album RTJ4 and popping up in their video for “Out Of Sight,” and dealing with the COVID-19 crisis as a business owner, re-opening his Escobar restaurant, feeding the homeless, and fending off a lawsuit from Pablo Escobar’s estate.

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Riz Ahmed Is A Metal Drummer Who’s Losing His Hearing In The ‘Sound Of Metal’ Trailer

In the Yankee Hotel Foxtrot standout “Heavy Metal Drummer,” Wilco’s Jeff Tweedy sings, “I sincerely miss those heavy metal bands / I used to go see on the landing in the summer / She fell in love with the drummer.” If you also miss those heavy metal drummers (because live music has shut down until next year, at the earliest) and you want to fall in love with one, check out the trailer for Sound of Metal, where Riz Ahmed plays a drummer in a two-piece metal band who’s losing his sense of hearing. “Your hearing is deteriorating rapidly,” a doctor tells Ruben, played by the Rogue One actor, who must learn to re-build his life at a remote community for the deaf.

Here’s more on Sound of Metal:

Riz Ahmed is a noise metal drummer. Shirtless and full of coiled intensity, he hammers out ferocious sets with his girlfriend and bandmate (Olivia Cooke). But with each show, a persistent ringing in his ears worsens until sound drops out altogether. For a deaf musician and his partner who’ve built their precarious existence doing what they know and love, what happens now? If he can’t recover his hearing, who will he become?

Sound of Metal, which also stars Olivia Cooke, Paul Raci, Lauren Ridloff, and Mathieu Amalric, premieres on Amazon Prime Video on December 4. Also, the next time you go to a concert, please earplugs.

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The Shins Share Two Versions Of ‘The Great Divide,’ Their First New Song Since 2018

Following The Shins’ 2017 album Heartworms and its re-worked version from 2018, The Worm’s Heart, the James Mercer-led group has returned with their first new music since then, a video for “The Great Divide.”

The track contains a blend of The Shins’ classic indie sound with some more contemporary elements, which is essentially what Mercer says of the track: “[It’s] a blend of futurism and nostalgia. We used everything from vintage synthesizers to iPhones, from a sixties Ludwig kit to an 808.” Video director Paul Trillo also said of the visual, “We knew we wanted to craft something as grand as the song; something that was both wildly surreal yet also resonates on a human level. I wanted to place the current state of things, this ‘Great Divide’ we’re going through, within the larger context of the universe.”

The band also shared an alternate version of the song (which is exclusive to Amazon Music), of which Mercer notes:

“When the Shins do a ‘flipped’ version of a song, the goal is always to re-approach the production aesthetic and show a different side to the piece. The idea is that a song properly written can be framed in many different contexts and still remain engaging. Yuuki Matthews, Jon Sortland and I sat down and talked about how we could change things up. The original idea was to treat it like a piano ballad but that soon gave way to Yuuki’s moody post new wave treatment. I immediately loved it and so the direction was established. When we flip a song correctly you should have a hard time picking which version you like best!”

Watch the “The Great Divide” video above, and find the flipped version below.