On Feb. 19, 2023, “Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood,” turned 55 years old. And the internet was feeling feelings over it.
After premiering on Canadian TV in 1963, Fred Rogers’ beloved children’s program debuted in the U.S. in 1968, inspiring generations of kids across North America to be more thoughtful, kinder neighbors.
One person feeling the feels on the show’s anniversary was model, author, and Twitter goddess Chrissy Teigen.
Teigen tweeted the most delightful anecdote about why Rogers would often announce that he was feeding the fish during the show.
Mister Rogers would narrate himself feeding the fish each episode with u201cIu2019m feeding the fishu201d because of a letter he received from a young blind girl who was worried the fish were hungry. Love you, Mister Rogers.https://twitter.com/pbsds/status/965596450733228032u00a0u2026
“Mister Rogers would narrate himself feeding the fish each episode with, ‘I’m feeding the fish,’ because of a letter he received from a young blind girl who was worried the fish were hungry,” she wrote. “Love you, Mister Rogers.”
Aaaaaand I’m crying.
Rogers included the text of the girl’s letter in his book, “Dear Mister Rogers, Does It Ever Rain in Your Neighborhood?” published in 1996.
One girl and her family wrote to tell us there was a special reason why she wanted me to talk about feeding the fish each day.
Dear Mister Rogers,
Please say when you are feeding your fish, because I worry about them. I can’t see if you are feeding them, so please say you are feeding them out loud.
Katie, age 5 (Father’s note: Katie is blind, and she does cry if you don’t say that you have fed the fish.)
This downright adorable clip from the series shows Rogers reassuring little Katie that the fish were always well-fed:
Sylvia Earle brought her underwater microphone to Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood so children could listen to the fish in the aquarium. When the fish don’t make…
“I need to feed the fish right away,” Rogers said in the episode, before shaking the container of food above the tank. “I have some friends who get very concerned when I forget the fish during our visits.”
Aaaaaand I’m ugly crying.
Rogers showed us how simple it often is to be a more compassionate friend.
“I just wanted you to know that even if I forget to feed them when we’re together, I come back later and feed them, so they’re always taken care of,” Rogers concluded. “It’s good to know that fish and animals and children are taken care of by those who can, isn’t it?”
Yes it is, Mister Rogers. The world needs more neighbors like you.
You know that feeling you get when you walk into a classroom and see someone else’s stuff on your desk?
OK, sure, there are no assigned seats, but you’ve been sitting at the same desk since the first day and everyone knows it.
So why does the guy who sits next to you put his phone, his book, his charger, his lunch, and his laptop in the space that’s rightfully yours? It’s annoying.
All you want to do was walk in, sit down, get out your notebook and (try to) pay attention. But now? Now you’ve got to talk to a stranger about moving their stuff and there goes your day, already bogged down with petty annoyances.
Sound familiar? It should.
We’ve all got so much to do these days that interacting with people we see every day — not our friends, but our classmates, fellow commuters, co-workers, the people in line for coffee with us every day — can feel like a burden.
So, when these people do something we perceive as annoying, like putting their stuff on our desks, we don’t have the time or the energy to assume their intentions or think about the lives they’re leading.
But if we stepped out of ourselves for a second, we might just realize that we’re all much more connected than we think, that our preconceived notions of others are usually just that — preconceived. And, often, inaccurate.
That’s why this Twitter story about a guy who learned an important life lesson from a classmate he was frustrated with is going viral.
It’s the perfect example of that “don’t judge a book by its cover” adage we should have all learned in preschool but sometimes forget. And it starts the exact same way as this post — with a college student groaning on the inside as he sees someone’s stuff on his desk.
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If not for this one day running late, McFall may have never realized what his classmate was trying to do. And he may have continued to think of him as annoying, maybe telling others about “the weird guy who was always trying to take up my space”… when all the guy was really trying to do was be kind.
We all misinterpret the actions of others sometimes. It’s easy to do that!
But if there’s one thing this story reminds us, it’s that it’s important to stop and remember that while you’re living your life, other people are living theirs, so assuming best intentions can do us a great favor.
That’s why we should step outside of our bubbles and engage with the world on a regular basis.
You could make a new friend. You might brighten someone’s day.
But most importantly, getting out of your own head, checking your own biases, and giving others the benefit of the doubt will make you a more compassionate person.
You don’t have to engage with everyone you meet, but the next time someone smiles and offers you a high-five?
Maybe just take them up on it.
This article was originally published on April 16, 2018.
When polarization starts to feel like a defining characteristic of humanity, sometimes we need a reminder that people really are capable of coming together as one.
Watching a stadium full of Green Day concertgoers bust out their best “Bohemian Rhapsody” when it came over the loudspeakers is just such a reminder.
As the person who uploaded the concert footage to Reddit noted: “For almost 6 minutes, the equivalent of a small city sang, with one voice, the beautiful song of a man who has been dead for decades. If you can do this, you’re not just a famous person, you’re a legend.”
What could be more palette-cleansing than hearing thousands of people breaking into song together for an entire six minutes? What’s more unifying than a piece of music being so beloved and well-known that a whole stadium knows every note and word and sings it in unison with all their heart?
As one commenter on Reddit wrote, “Ever notice how one crowd singing together always sound the same as other crowds, as in has the same tambre [sic] and sound quality? It’s like the recognizable and familiar voice of humanity. Regardless of how different the people in the crowd are, the crowd always sounds the same. I think the idea that we are listening to humanity’s voice when hearing a crowd sing is a beautiful concept.”
Listen to the voice of humanity. It’s truly a beautiful thing.
No one wants that, especially us. And with Thanksgiving pretty much here, you’re going to want to grab the right bottle of Scotch whisky when you hit the liquor store today — no more procrastinating. Below, I’m calling out 25 bottles of Scotch whisky that all taste great and cost less than $100. I’m covering every facet of the region with peated Islay masterpieces next to subtle unpeated fruity luscious pours next to unique blends.
Bruichladdich really has fun with peated whisky. This expression keeps the peat phenols in the mid-range, leaning high. The casking is a mix of first and second-fill bourbon barrels and second-fill French wine barrels. That utilization of second-fill oak means there’s a very light touch of wood on this peated whisky.
Tasting Notes:
Nose: Imagine a dark chocolate orange drizzled in salted caramel and served on a wet leaf of seaweed on the nose.
Palate: The smoke kicks in on the palate with those wet seaweed leaves thrown on a smoldering pile of pine to create a massive billow of smoke everywhere, as hints of buttery white wine and strawberry jam-covered scones linger in the background.
Finish: The finish leans into the bready nature of the scones with a dry straw edge that’s followed by a mouthful of seaweed-heavy grey smoke.
Bottom Line:
Let’s start bold AF. This is for the peat lovers in your family and crew. It’s boldly peaty and earthy but wonderfully balanced with sweet fruit, creamy vanilla, and nuttiness. Pour it over a big rock and serve it with the turkey.
24. Benriach The Twelve Speyside Single Malt Scotch Whisky
Dr. Rachel Barrie’s reimaging of BenRiach has been a stellar success. This dram is a marrying of 12-year-old malts that matured in ex-bourbon, ex-sherry, and ex-port casks before vatting, proofing, and bottling.
Tasting Notes:
Nose: This has a bold nose full of apple and pear candy, plenty of blooming heather scrub, and blueberry juice and stems with a hint of dark orange chocolate balls.
Palate: The taste boils everything down to a silken palate of stewed pears with cinnamon sticks, sherry-soaked prunes, freshly milled oats, orange-infused marzipan with dark chocolate frosting, and a slight espresso bean oily bitterness.
Finish: The finish creates a creamy espresso macchiato vibe that’s spiked with that dark orange chocolate note and a final hit of those stewed fruits.
Bottom Line:
This is a lovely and fruity single malt with deep yet almost airy dessert vibes. Serve this one over some rocks or in a cocktail as the pies come out.
This no-age-statement blend leans into that signature Walker marriage of Highland and Speyside whiskies with a small dose of Western Scottish whisky for good measure (both grain and malt whiskies are in the mix). The lion’s share of the whisky involved in this gilded bottle is Clynelish, a Highland whisky that adds a modicum of peat to the mix.
Tasting Notes:
Nose: The nose balances old leather gloves and honeyed oats with meaty sultanas, cinnamon-spiced malts, a hint of anise, and an echo of grilled fruit.
Palate: The palate leans into the grilled fruit with a smoky underbelly and a savory edge (almost papaya) next to a lush vanilla cream and a sharp clove/allspice vibe.
Finish: The finish combines the dried fruit and honey with a twinge of florals as a whisper of earthy peat sneaks in late, kind of like a dry moss slowly growing on a tree.
Bottom Line:
Johnnie Gold is a great subtle peated blend that leans far more into smoked fruits and nuts than earthy dirt or ash. This is just a nice pour and the perfect pre-dinner conversation starter to get everyone loosened up a bit as they arrive for Thanksgiving.
Compass Box is one of the most interesting blenders/bottlers working today. This expression is the perfect example of the craft of whisky blending, with six masterfully married peaty barrels coming together, focusing on Caol Ila and Laphroaig. A touch of Highland malt is added to bring in hints of dark spice to balance all that Islay peat.
Tasting Notes:
Nose: This is peaty but not ridiculously so, thanks to the subtlety of the Caol Ila in the mix.
Palate: There’s a really rich and sweet apple/pear vibe that cuts through the earthy peat while a vanilla cream brings about a velvet mouthfeel.
Finish: The smoke returns but is tied to the fruit — like a bushel of smoked apples, pears, and apricots next to a touch of ashy smoke — on the finish.
Bottom Line:
This is back on the heavily peated train but, again, that peat is attached more to smoked fruit, nuts, and winter spices than asphalt or ash. Use this for balanced smoky cocktails all day and night.
21. Grand Old Parr Aged 18 Years Blended Scotch Whisky
This old-school brand just expanded into 18-year territory for the U.S. market. The whisky is made from malts and grain whiskies mostly pulled from the famed Cragganmore distillery. Those whiskies are vatted/batched, proofed, and bottled in this old-school stubby bottle.
Tasting Notes:
Nose: Dark and meaty dates and figs are countered by a hint of vanilla cream, woody cinnamon, and … I want to say … oyster or clam shell.
Palate: The palate is a classic malty experience with a touch of sage over caramelized root vegetables with a whisper of vanilla cake filled with spicy stewed plums.
Finish: The end has a mild woodiness that’s attached to the spices with a hint of oak and mustiness.
Bottom Line:
This is a stone-cold classic and a great pairing whisky for the seafood course (oysters anyone?) during your Thanksgiving feasting.
20. Glenfarclas Highland Single Malt Scotch Whisky Aged 12 Years
Glenfarclas is a bit of an outlier. The whisky is distilled with old-school fire-heated stills (most stills use steam) to this day, imbuing a hint of smokiness to the juice. The whisky is then aged exclusively in ex-sherry casks for 12 long years.
Tasting Notes:
Nose: There’s a rumminess to the nose that touches on molasses, prunes, nuts, and jam that’s all just touched with a thin line of smoke, kind of like an old sweater after a backyard campfire.
Palate: The taste holds onto that vibe to the point of having an almost spiced rum sweetness and clear notes of holiday spices, plenty of dried fruit, and a roasted almond element.
Finish: The end is long and spicy, leaving you with a warming Speyside hug that hints at smoked plums and apricots with a dash of old honey sweetness.
Bottom Line:
This is another subtly smoky whisky that makes for a great cocktail base or dessert pairing whisky with fruity pies and cakes this Thanksgiving.
19. Glen Scotia Victoriana Single Malt Scotch Whisky
This Campbelltown whisky is a rarity, like most whiskies from the tiny region. After an initial maturation, the whisky spends a final 12 months maturing in 30% Pedro Ximenez sherry butts and 70% heavily charred American oak before bottling truly as-is — no proofing, no filtering, no coloring.
Tasting Notes:
Nose: The nose on this is thick with a lot of savory fruit — figs, squash — next to sweet oranges, overripe pineapple, and robust but fresh florals.
Palate: On the palate, that floral nature takes in a nasturtium vibe with a layer of spice next to a thin line of saltwater taffy wax paper wrappers, rum-soaked cinnamon sticks, and a thin layer of creamy vanilla.
Finish: The end has a vibe that’s kind of like malt-soaked tropical fruit next to spicy vanilla pudding with a whisper of singed apple bark lurking in the background.
Bottom Line:
This is the “other” whisky from Campbeltown (besides Springbank) and it rules as a post-Thanksgiving sipper in a large glass with a large rock.
18. Mortlach Single Malt Scotch Whisky Aged 12 Years
This single malt hails from a tiny yet beloved Speyside distillery. The actual whisky is also made on their smallest still, nicknamed “Wee Witchie.” That juice then goes into ex-bourbon and ex-sherry casks for 12 years. Finally, those whiskies are married, proofed, and bottled.
Tasting Notes:
Nose: This is subtle yet engaging, with a nose of almost burnt toffee next to bright red berries, mild spice, hints of oak, and a bit of cedar.
Palate: The palate leans into the berries by becoming jammy with more of that toffee and a mild sense of spicy tobacco arriving late.
Finish: The end is long-ish with a plummy chew next to that tobacco and malty spice.
Bottom Line:
This is the whisky nerds pour. It’s so easygoing yet deeply hewn with great classic unpeated malt flavors. It also makes a mean cocktail with fall and winter flavors.
Yes, Scotch whisky has celebrity white-labeled brands too. This one comes from Outlander star Sam Heughan. The whisky’s recipe/build is under wraps so there’s not much more to say besides that Sam Heughan is not simply slapping his name on a bottle. He’s fully involved in the process as a deeply caring whisky fan who wants to put something special on the shelf.
Tasting Notes:
Nose: Lemon drops and Almond Joys drive the nose with a hint of honey, bourbon vanilla, and dried apricot.
Palate: That apricot gets leathery on the palate as the malts arrive with plenty of honey and cinnamon-forward spice next to a hint of eggnog nutmeg.
Finish: The finish is concise with a little cinnamon, honey, and almond rounding things out.
Bottom Line:
This is a nice on-the-rocks sipping blend that works as an all-day sipper throughout every part of Thanksgiving. Translation: You can easily make this your house pour throughout the long Thanksgiving weekend.
16. Laphroaig Islay Single Malt Scotch Whisky Càirdeas Warehouse 1
This year’s Càirdeas release celebrates the Friends of Laphroaig and how they keep the brand going. The whisky in the bottle is made from Laphroaig’s high-phenol peated malt right next to the sea on Islay. The hot spirit was then filled in first-fill limited edition single barrel Maker’s Mark bourbon barrels. The barrels were then stored in the famed four-story Warehouse 1 right next to the crashing sea until they were just right and then bottled as-is after vatting.
Tasting Notes:
Nose: The nose opens with a huge note of smoked grainy malts next to an un-opened box of Band-Aids, peppery smoked brisket with plenty of smoked fat, and smoked sea salt counterpointed by vanilla sheet cake with a honey icing and dusted with cinnamon and nutmeg.
Palate: The palate opens with burnt yet buttery toffee next to white wildflowers, dried fennel, and rich and creamy honey smoothness and sweetness.
Finish: The end gets a little woody with a fatty smoked peppery vibe next to more toffee and a dash of seawater-washed granite.
Bottom Line:
This is an unapologetically peated malt with fantastically bold funkiness. It’s perfect for pairing with a seafood course or as an after-dinner palate reawakening after the pie is finished.
15. Lagavulin Islay Single Malt Scotch Whisky Offerman Charred Oak Cask Aged 11 Years
This brand-new release is the third collaboration between Lagavulin and Nick Offerman. This time around, the team at Lagavulin took 11-year-old malt and finished it in heavily charred casks that used to hold bourbon and red wine. Those barrels were then batched and built around flavor notes that pair perfectly with a steak dinner.
Tasting Notes:
Nose: The nose opens with a rich peatiness that’s tied to pecan chocolate clusters and dried cranberries with a dusting of sea salt, burnt orange zest, and fine nutmeg.
Palate: The palate dips those red tart berries in dark salted chocolate with cinnamon bark and clove buds next to espresso cream and a whisper of malty vanilla wafers with fresh honey in between.
Finish: The end has this enigmatic mix of smoked toffee, salted black licorice, and brandied cherries wrapped in cinnamon-laced tobacco and folded into an old cedar box.
Bottom Line:
There are so many great Lagavulins to pour this Thanksgiving. But let’s lean into the Nick Offermann of it all with this red wine-finished easy sipper. Pour this over a big rock and you’ll be set all day and weekend this Thanksgiving. You can also make killer cocktails with this one.
14. Loch Lomond The Glengarry Single Malt Scotch Whisky Aged 12 Years
This single malt from the famed Loch Lomond Distillery is all about the aging process. The hot juice is loaded into ex-bourbon, re-fill bourbon, and re-charred oak barrels for 12 long years. Those barrels are then blended and the whisky is proofed down with Highland spring water.
Tasting Notes:
Nose: The nose is a mix of white summer flowers and a lot of fruit kind of like a fruit salad out of the can.
Palate: The palate really amps up the fruitiness with overripe peaches, bruised pears, and plenty of grilled pineapple next to a rummy spiced cocktail vibe with a little bit of vanilla, allspice, and woody cinnamon.
Finish: The finish keeps it easy with more canned fruit syrup, a hint of sweetgrass, and a bit of malty spice.
Bottom Line:
This is a slightly more niche pour but a great one for fruity desserts. Pour this over some ice between the turkey and pies and you’ll be all set.
13. The Balvenie Caribbean Cask Single Malt Scotch Whiskey Aged 14 Years
The Balvenie is renowned for doing everything in-house from grain to glass and for being the distillery that spearheaded the whole “finishing whisky in a different cask” movement. In this case, the juice spends 14 years maturing in ex-bourbon barrels. The whisky is then batched and transferred to barrels that The Balvenie aged their own blend of West Indies rum.
Tasting Notes:
Nose: There’s a welcoming rush of buttery toffee up top with hints of brown spices, bright red berries, and a touch of sweet malts next to floral malts and deep holiday vibes.
Palate: The palate brings around creamy vanilla dotted with sweet and slightly tart red berries next to a very soft winter spice barks, marzipan, and whispers of tobacco.
Finish: The finish is full of soft wood, vanilla cream, and a touch of that winter spice with hints of leather and cedar-twinged tobacco.
The Bottom Line:
This is another great dessert pairing pour. I’d also argue it’s one of the better cocktail bases for replacing bourbon in your favorite concoctions.
12. Glenkinchie Single Malt Scotch Whisky Distillers Edition
This limited edition expression from last year’s Diageo Distiller’s Editions is expertly crafted Lowland whisky. The malt is finished in a specially made barrel that is constructed from used and new American oak that’s then filled with Amontillado sherry for a month. Once that fortified wine is dumped, the whisky goes in for its final maturation.
Tasting Notes:
Nose: The nose is a soft mix of cedar, red berry, and vanilla pods next to a bowl of fruity candy with a hint of caramel and raisin.
Palate: The palate starts off watery but then explodes with flavor — black pepper, brie rinds, sour candy, a dirt cellar floor, smooth malts, and a hint of sour apple tobacco all make appearances.
Finish: The finish continues to build with a cheese cellar vibe next to fresh cream touched with winter spices, dried red fruits, soft cedar, and vanilla on the back end.
Bottom Line:
This is a beautifully subtle and sweet/funky pour of whisky. This is a real crowd-pleaser. I’d serve this with a cheese course and let it sing on a single rock or neat.
11. Glen Moray Single Malt Scotch Whisky Elgin Limited Edition Aged 10 Years
This limited edition whiskey is made from 10-year-old Glen Elgin. The twist here is that this batch was finished in Chardonnay casks and then bottled as-is with a dash of proofing water.
Tasting Notes:
Nose: The nose opens with a lush lemon creaminess next to stone fruits and stewed apple with a hint of spiced oak.
Palate: The palate leans into the spicy apple with a cider vibe before the stone fruit sweetness and the spiced oak leans into vanilla and light leather.
Finish: The end has a spiced nut holiday cake vibe with candied lemon and orange peels and a hint of rum raisin.
Bottom Line:
The white wine vibe makes this a great pour for the meal. It’s light but fully formed and has a deep sense of lush fruitiness that’s a great counterpoint to savory foods.
10. Caol Ila Islay Single Malt Scotch Whisky Aged 12 Years
Caol Ila is a tiny Islay distillery that is more familiar to hardcore whisky fans than the casual drinker. This expression is the distillery’s entry-point whisky that highlights the subtle peatiness, gentle aging, and the soft lapping of the sea against the distillery’s outer white walls.
Tasting Notes:
Nose: There’s a matrix of dried roses soaked in water touched by orange oils, almonds, and a trace of classic Listerine buzziness.
Palate: The sip has a savoriness that feels like olive oil speckled with coarse sea salt next to a distant billow of briny smoke, all counterpointed by sweet malts and fruits.
Finish: The finish sweetens the smokiness with a fruity-yet-spicy tobacco edge while the end fades towards an almost salty-sour hint of citrus.
Bottom Line:
Okay, let’s get into the “wow” bottles. This Caol Ila is for the whisky nuts. It’s a maritime-forward pour of peated goodness that you should pour over raw oyster shooters or serve with smoked salmon.
9. The Macallan Double Cask Highland Single Malt Scotch Whisky 12 Years Old
Where many scotches spend time in ex-bourbon and then ex-sherry casks or some combination therein, this expression spends all 12 years of its maturation just in sherry casks. The barrels are imported from Jerez, Spain, and hand-selected for their excellence to mature this much-beloved whisky. Then the whisky goes into another sherry cask for one more maturation run before bottling.
Tasting Notes:
Nose: Apple cider with a cut of cinnamon and clove in the juice greets you with a clear sense of vanilla, nuts, and plums on the nose.
Palate: The palate opens as those plums turn into prunes as orange peels mingle with sweet oak and a hint of tobacco spice.
Finish: The end is long, full of that sherry, dried fruit, and sweetness, and returns back to the chewy tobacco spice.
Bottom Line:
The Macallan has the hype that almost makes it crazy not to have a bottle on hand during Thanksgiving. So grab a bottle for free pours throughout the whole weekend.
8. Longrow Peated Campbeltown Single Malt Scotch Whisky
This Campbeltown whisky is distilled at the iconic Springbank Distillery. The whisky is a no-age-statement release that leans into the peatier end of the Springbank offerings. The whisky is bottled with a bit of water added to cut the proof down but without filtration or added color.
Tasting Notes:
Nose: Vanilla pudding mingles with a line of smoke from a smoldering backyard firepit while a savory herb garden grows nearby and then the nose veers toward singed marshmallows and burning fruitwood.
Palate: The palate leans into that burning fruity wood before creamy vanilla leads to a brand new Ace Bandage.
Finish: That medicinal note gives way to a wet clay with a nice minerality before the sweet and fruity smoke kicks back in and layers together vanilla, winter spice, and leather on the finish.
Bottom Line:
If you can’t find a killer Springbank (they’re hard to find, we get it), then grab this. It’s a refined and peated masterpiece that’s great as an all-day sipper or cocktail base.
7. Bunnahabhain Islay Single Malt Scotch Whisky Toiteach A Dhà
This smoky Islay peated malt, called “Toiteach A Dhà,” means “smoky two.” The whisky is a peated malt that’s matured in ex-bourbon and ex-sherry casks and then vatted with an eye cast towards the sea and all that sherry wood.
Tasting Notes:
Nose: There’s a clear sense of sweet and stewed plums with a focus on cinnamon sticks and an almost spicy smokiness.
Palate: The palate shifts towards a savory fruit (think pumpkin) with flourishes of dark chocolate next to meaty dates and lightly salted sardines.
Finish: The end leans back into the spicy and very briny smokiness as the malts ebb and flow between sweet and dry with a plummy texture.
Bottom Line:
This is the whisky you pour when you want a thin layer of sweet smoke added to your dessert course. This over a single big rock is delectable.
6. The GlenDronach Revival Aged 15 Years Highland Single Malt Scotch Whisky
Revival 15 takes its sherried nature very seriously. The juice is aged in a combination of Pedro Ximénez and Oloroso sherry casks for 15 long years. Those casks are married and this whisky is brought down to a very easy-drinking 92 proof with that soft Highland water.
Tasting Notes:
Nose: Dark berry brambles with tart and sweet fruit, stems, thorns, and even a little black dirt draw you in on the nose with a hint of walnut shell and cherry pie.
Palate: The palate is a creamy-yet-bitter dark chocolate orange that leads toward a semi-savory fig countered by ripe apricot.
Finish: The chocolate comes back with cinnamon spice and more dark berries and walnut at the end.
Bottom Line:
This is the “welcome to the holiday season” pour. The whisky is all about the holiday vibes with deep sweet and spicy treat vibes. Drink it however you like to drink your whisky, especially if you’re making whisky-forward cocktails.
5. Dalwhinnie Highland Single Malt Scotch Whisky Aged 15 Years
This entry-point bottle to the wider world of Dalwhinnie is a hell of an easy drinker. The whisky is aged in Scotland’s oldest distillery, making the maturation process a severe one. The juice spends 15 years hiding in those barrels as the temperatures dip well below freezing across all those winters, which stops the maturation process, well, cold.
Tasting Notes:
Nose: Imagine a bowl of pear and apple peels sitting next to an open jar of floral summer honey on the nose.
Palate: Dots of citrus oils mingle with that honey as a smooth vanilla character arrives on the back of sweet brown bread bespeckled with smoked walnuts.
Finish: The nuts, sweet bread, and floral honey all converge on the finish as it slowly fades towards a final billow of sweet smoke at the back of your mouth.
Bottom Line:
This whisky is all about nuance. It’s a subtle masterpiece. This is the sort of whisky that converts American whisky drinkers to Scotch.
4. Aberlour A’bunadh Speyside Single Malt Scotch Whisky
A’bunadh (ah-boon-arh) means “the original” in Gaelic and the whisky in this Speyside bottle represents that idea for Aberlour. The whisky is matured in old Oloroso sherry casks exclusively. The whisky then goes into the bottle at cask strength, unfussed with.
Tasting Notes:
Nose: That sherry plumminess is evident right up top, with hints of bright orange oils, clumps of dark chocolate, honey, and nuts, and a hint of oak.
Palate: The taste shines with notes of dark, ripe cherries, prunes, more bright orange zest, dark chocolate, and a good measure of svelte vanilla.
Finish: The slow finish leaves you with a creamy mouthfeel next to bitter chocolate next to sweet cherries and plums, all of which lead towards a warming spice on the tongue at the end.
Bottom Line:
This is another great “welcome to the holidays” pour. It also makes amazing whisky-forward cocktails in place of bourbon or rye. This is pretty much a must-have this holiday season for American whiskey fans looking to really get into malt.
This is a quintessential Islay peaty whisky. The juice is aged in a combination of Pedro Ximénez, charred virgin oak, and ex-bourbon casks before being married and rested again in Ardbeg’s bespoke oak “Gathering Vat,” allowing the whiskies to really meld into a cohesive pour.
Tasting Notes:
Nose: Slow-smoked peaches mingle with soft cherrywood and a bundle of smoky savory herbs — sage, rosemary, ramps — on the nose.
Palate: The palate is soft and buttery with a sweet burnt toffee vibe next to nutmeg, walnut, Earl Grey, and maybe a touch of woody maple syrup.
Finish: The end takes its time and meanders through salted black licorice, wild florals, more singed savory herbs, and a hint of black-pepper-covered brisket fat that’s been heavily smoked over sea-soaked driftwood.
Bottom Line:
This is the whisky you pour for true peated whisky fans. It’s subtle yet bold AF at the same time — it’s kind of a magic trick. This is bold enough to pair with any part of the Thanksgiving meal while also being the perfect pairing for a backyard firepit.
2. Talisker Single Malt Scotch Whisky Aged 10 Years
This is one of the most awarded single malts ever. The juice is matured in ex-bourbon casks in Talisker’s warehouse which is literally feet away from the sea. The subtly peated malts take on a real seaside feel as those years tick past, creating a whisky that will not disappoint.
Tasting Notes:
Nose: The nose opens with this soft sense of pitted orchard fruits next to a thin line of beach campfire smoke far off in the distance with a hint of minerality and bright spiced malts.
Palate: The palate has a hint of an oyster shell that leads to dried pears and apricots with a hint of warmth and spice malt next to dry sweetgrass.
Finish: The end is full of lightly smoked plums with a touch of cardamom and cinnamon next to sea salt and a final whiff of that beach campfire way down the beach somewhere.
Bottom Line:
This is a damn near perfect whisky for pairing with a big meal either as a neat pour or in a cocktail. The best bet is to make oyster shooters with this and go from there this Thanksgiving.
1. Johnnie Walker Green Label Blended Malt Scotch Whisky Aged 15 Years
Johnnie Walker’s Green Label is a solidly crafted whisky that highlights Diageo’s fine stable of distilleries across Scotland. The whisky is a pure malt or blended malt, meaning that only single malt whisky is in the mix (no grain whisky). In this case, the primary whiskies are a minimum of 15 years old, from Talisker, Caol Ila, Cragganmore, and Linkwood.
Tasting Notes:
Nose: Soft notes of cedar dance with hints of black pepper, vanilla pods, and bright fruit — think red berries, fresh pear, and nectarines — with a wisp of singed green grass in the background.
Palate: The palate delivers on that soft cedar woodiness while edging towards a spice-laden tropical fruit brightness with grilled peaches covered in salted caramel, honey malt biscuits, and bitter yet sweet marmalade with a dash of winter spiciness.
Finish: The finish is dialed in with hints of soft cedar bark, singed wild sage, bark-forward winter spice, and stewed stonefruit leading toward a briny billow of smoke at the very end.
Bottom Line:
This should 100% be your house pour from Thanksgiving through New Year’s Eve this year. It suits every event, food, and vibe. Oh… and it’s delicious.
Wednesday is the 60-year anniversary of the last time a sitting American president died in office. On Nov. 22, 1963, John F. Kennedy was shot and killed in Dallas, and in a collection of words that will come as no surprise to anyone who is familiar with his entire schtick, Chris “Mad Dog” Russo has some thoughts about this.
Mad Dog appeared on Wednesday’s edition of First Take and got to do his segment where he screams about whatever he feels like screaming about on that given day. (If you do not watch the show and think this sounds like horrible television, I promise you, it’s extremely good.) Instead of easing into the segment by taking about sports or Thanksgiving or literally anything else, Mad Dog dove head-first into the JFK assassination by giving his take on who actually pulled the trigger on that fateful day in Dealey Plaza.
“If anybody out there thinks that Lee Harvey Oswald did that by himself, they’re taking gummies with me,” Mad Dog said, alluding to the fact that he is a big fan of taking gummies and then watching football. “Lee Harvey Oswald, he, uh, that was not a solo deal with the President of the United States, may I say that?”
You may, Chris. Stephen A. Smith then encouraged him to stop talking about this, but Mad Dog decided to prod.
“Do you agree?” Mad Dog asked.
“Yes, but can we move forward?” Smith replied. “Can we move forward because 90 percent of our audience wasn’t born until 40 years later.”
“THAT’S A MAJOR EVENT,” Mad Dog, accurately, said in response to that request before eventually moving on.
It says a lot about how good First Take‘s producers are that they were able to get things slightly back on track, because my hunch is that Mad Dog would have spent the next hour just asking Stephen A. his thoughts on this. Perhaps Mad Dog can make a cameo on Stephen A.’s YouTube show one of these days so they can go in depth on this.
Even though Joan was pretty unlucky in her love life on Mad Men, Christina Hendricks seems to have found her footing a lot better than her on-screen counterpart. Although it wasn’t Joan’s fault she worked with a bunch of grumpy drunk men.
Hendricks announced that she is marrying her fiance, cameraman George Bianchini, whom she met on the set of Good Girls and began dating in 2020. The wedding will take place in New Orleans.
“It will be very festive, because we love New Orleans,” the Mad Men star told People. Hendricks was born in Tennessee but moved around her entire life. “I’ve gone there for years throughout my life, and I just think it’s one of the greatest American cities. I love that it has its own cuisine, architecture, music and spirit. It’s just a very vibrant and sexy city,” she added. America’s sexiest city Burlington, Vermont could not be reached for comment, but surely Hendricks thought to reach out.
The actress continued, “Love is terrifying — it’s really, really scary,” she admits. “I didn’t want to be apart from him. I realized that as those days were building up, I still wanted to be with him every single day, that I felt safe and loved, and it felt just right to me.”
Lately, Hendricks has been starring in AppleTV’s new soapy regency dramaThe Buccaneers, after starring in the crime comedy Good Girls for four seasons. “I had been doing scenes with guns, shaking out crime, and being in big trash cans. After that, I just wanted to sit somewhere in a corset with a teacup. It felt exactly right,” she told People. It’s a pretty drastic change from her Mad Men character holding a cigarette in every scene.
Cobra Kai proved to be the rare smash-hit in a sea of reboots, most of which have been falling all over themselves. Yet the Netflix (and previously YouTube Red) series has shown an unparalleled ability to effectively harness nostalgia while also crane-kicking the generation gap, and the loyal audience now awaits Season 6 after maintaining the “The Eye Of The Tiger” with Season 5.
Everyone loves the underdogs in this Miyagi-verse (as coined by star Ralph Macchio), so when will we see the beloved (and very much canon) show return? Here’s what we can expect when Cobra Kai returns to the dojo of your living room.
Plot
Are you ready for One Last Fight? The series actually could have logically ended with Season 5, given that good had finally prevailed against the ultimate karate evil, and various romantic pairings seemed to have reached peaceful equilibriums. Still, there are open threads to be mined for potential. That includes a future redemption arc for Kenny as well as an international tournament, which would not be far-fetched for this franchise and likely add up to the promise of “the biggest and baddest” season on the books.
At the moment, there’s a wrinkle that viewers wouldn’t mind further unfurling. The newly announced The Karate Kid movie starring Ralph Macchio and Jackie Chan, has prompted questions about whether the story will cross over into Cobra Kai territory, even without the showrunners involved with the Sony Pictures Entertainment film. The show is, after all, vital to this fanbase and coming from the same studio, so stay tuned for more on that note.
For now, we will need to guess at the rest of Season 6’s plot points. Obviously, Johnny Lawrence will receive another chance to not be a f*ck-up father, and as Ralph Macchio noted, the “karate soap opera” factor continues. Macchio also previously hinted that the dojo could go international again in a big way:
“They’ve set up the international element of it, they’ve set up the master Kim in Korea. They set up Kreese, and they also set up that everything’s going back to normal and they’ve finally succeeded. But in a soap opera, as Cobra Kai is a karate soap opera, when one door closes, there’s always more that will open. There’s certainly room for that.”
That was the same sentiment expressed to us by Jacob Bertrand (Eli “Hawk” Moskowitz) when he spoke to us. Actually, Bertrand wanted a Kreese-Hawk team up as well as the global tour:
“Oh my god… This is my dream, that I somehow am linked up with Kreese, fresh out of prison. We start some illegal ring of some sort, and I go back to the bad side. I’m kidding, but I think it would be so cool if we got a Season 6, and we actually got to go to some crazy world tournament. And actually go to Brazil or something and not like it have it be, ‘Oh we’re in Brazil! But it’s really just a basement studio in Atlanta’”
Cast
It seems likely that Terry Silver’s days are done with him heading off to jail and losing dojo clout due to that crane kick in the Season 5 finale. Thomas Ian Griffith will be missed, but Martin Kove will probably be back as John Kreese and be exonerated with the truth coming out about Stingray’s assault. So, more Paul Walter Hauser? We shall see.
Otherwise, we will obviously be seeing Ralph Macchio and William Zabka will return as Daniel and Johnny Lawrence. The returning younger generation includes Mary Mouser, Jacob Bertrand, Xolo Maridueña, Tanner Buchanan, Peyton List, Gianni DeCenzo, and Dallas Dupree Young. The show also must get Yuji Okumoto back in as Chosen, perhaps with another butt double in tow.
Release Date
When Season 6 received the formal announcement in January 2023, Netflix dropped a little video that promised “soon,” but of course, this year has been chaos in Hollywood. Now that pens are back up, one can expect the next season to arrive as quick as possible like the rest of the seasons. However, reality is still a thing, so a good guess would be holiday season 2024. The New Year’s Eve/Day release schedule is one favored by this show, so that could be the plan.
Trailer
No trailer exists yet, but here’s a teaser to tide viewers over:
Today, the Osheaga Festival in Montreal unveiled its 2024 headliners. Between August 2 and 4, Noah Kahan, SZA, and Green Day will play the main stage throughout each of the weekend days. The music festival has yet to release the full lineup of performers, but those interested have the chance to grab their tickets right now.
Three-day passes for 2024 are on sale, with a few different price tiers and selections to choose from. General Admission for the 3-Day is $284. The next price tier is the Casino Montreal Gold Ticket at $536, providing access to a premium viewing terrace. The Platinum Ticket is the most extravagant at $1,167, with a concierge available to cater to the guest, a makeup artist, a massage space, exclusive food and drink selections, and lots of other perks.
While there will be single-day passes, as the past years for Osheaga have sold them, it’s unclear when those will be out and available for purchase.
Finally, people planning on attending Osheaga in a group can pick between two packages. The first, Gold Table, is $4,200 for four tickets and a special reserved table on the premium terrace area. The other is a Gold Booth package at $7,440 for six people, as they would get a reserved couch.
For more information on tickets, visit the fest’s official website.
Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.
If you’ve spent any time on social media or YouTube over the past few days, you’re probably well aware that people are incredibly angry at Pokimane and her new cookie brand Myna Snacks. A streamer dropping a cookie brand shouldn’t illicit this much internet chatter and hate but it’s late 2023 and, well, here we are. The cookie drama is at your doorstep.
If you’re not caught up to speed let us fill you in as quickly as we can — trust us, this is the quickest possible summary — and then we’ll get to whether these cookies are even any good:
Popular social media personality, Twitch streamer, and YouTuber Imane Anys, more popularly known as Pokimane, launched a new brand of gluten-free cookies this month and almost instantly people on the internet threw a f*cking fit. There are a lot of levels to this “controversy,” if you want to call it that (that’s what the internet is calling it, so I guess we will too).
Controversy #1 — The Price Point
Myna
Pokimane announced her new snack brand, Myna, on November 13. Myna would offer a “healthy snack alternative” cookie that is gluten-free, made with non-GMO ingredients, and fortified with vitamin D.
Okay, all good so far. As of the launch, the cookies are not currently sold in stores but instead on the Myna website in 4-pack, 8-pack, or 12-pack options. The smallest size is $28, so $7 a bag. Sounds good right, wait no? Wrong? I’m Wrong? What’s the issue here?
A lot of people weren’t happy with this price point. That’s… fair. If you don’t think $7 for a 4oz bag of gluten-free cookies is worth it that’s definitely an opinion you can have, but it’s not that far off from other gluten-free snacks.
Are there cheaper gluten-free snacks? Yes. Are there more expensive gluten-free snacks? Yes. Do you have the free will to just, you know, not buy these cookies if you think they’re too expensive? Yes. How is this a thing anyone cares about?
Controversy # 2 — Are These Cookies Just A Rebrand?
pokimane’s new product is apparently just a rebranded ‘toatzy midnight mini cookie’ which she sells for three times the price. the only difference between the cookies is vitamin D3. $28 vs $9.99 for 400g.
After way too many people got all worked up over the price of these cookies, someone discovered that the cookies bore a resemblance to another snack, Toatzy’s similarly named Midnight Cookies, which share a look, form factor, and nutritional facts (except for the vitamin D).
This is where the controversy becomes especially stupid. It turns out that the reason Toatzy’s Midnight Mini Cookies and Myna’s Midnight Cookies are so similar is that both products are made by the same food company, Creation Foods.
there’s been some confusion about the product i launched, and i’m here to set the record straight pic.twitter.com/kiM6OAky0i
Pokimane addressed how the two products were related on her Twitter account writing:
The batch of Myna cookies we’re currently shipping were made 3 weeks ago… The cookies they are being compared to were also made by our manufacturer, Creation Foods, which specializes in healthy food. The compared cookies had one test batch sold before they were retired. Months later, we partnered with Creation Foods and fell in love with the flavor profile of the midnight cookie. We then decided to work together to refine and improve the formula, and we’re really happy with the final product.
So the Toatzy cookies in question aren’t even on the market anymore. Hating Poki’s cookies for being similar is just silly. Does Pokimane’s alterations justify a price hike for what is essentially a similar product? Debatable. Though adding vitamin D does justify at least…?
How much does vitamin D cost in bulk? Ten dollars?
Again, if you think these cookies are too expensive, just don’t buy them.
Controversy # 3 — Pokimane’s Response To The Criticism
As if things couldn’t get any more obnoxious in this “controversy,” everything was taken to a new level when Pokimane responded to a chatter in her stream to those complaining about the cost of Myna Snacks.
“When people are like, ‘Oh my god, $28 for cookies.’ It’s four bags. That’s $7 a bag. I know I know math is hard when you’re an idiot, but like, if you’re a broke boy just say so.”
It shouldn’t come as a surprise at this point but, sh*t exploded after this. Twitter accounts, TikToks, and entire f*cking YouTube videos were made about this interaction, scolding Pokimane for being mean to her community. Pokimane responded to the backlash:
while what i said was 100% intended to be a joke, i see why it came off as insensitive and i apologize for that.
i also understand the current price of the cookies may be expensive for some, and promise we’ll continue to consider pricing to keep myna as affordable as possible. https://t.co/u0HovPw2Za
“While what I said was 100% intended to be a joke, I see why it came off as insensitive and I apologize for that. I also understand the current price of the cookies may be expensive for some, and promise we’ll continue to consider pricing to keep Myna as affordable as possible.”
Adding that her comment was towards “ONE rude chatter,” and was not a general statement towards her community.
Do you agree with the way Pokimane responded? Who f*cking cares. If you’ve spent any time watching streamers, you’ll know that chats are a toxic environment. She probably could’ve handled this situation better, but also people shouldn’t be so sensitive about such a non-issue. We’ve mentioned this a few times but…
If you don’t want to support Pokimane or buy her cookies. Don’t.
I’m so tired of talking about these cookies because all I want to know is… are they any good? So I paid all $28 dollars for a four-pack just so I could answer that question for you. Let’s eat some damn cookies and pretend this all never happened.
Myna Cookies Taste Test
Dane Rivera
Tasting Notes & Thoughts
I like ‘em. Given all the drama that surrounds these cookies, it’s a little hard to taste them without being underwhelmed but obviously, that’s not Myna Snacks or Pokimane’s fault. Tasting these cookies makes all the controversy seem even more ridiculous.
The closest comparison I can make to a cookie you’ve probably had before is Oreos. The Midnight Cookies have that dark cocoa semi-bitter flavor that is characteristic of the cookie portion of an Oreo, but not nearly as sweet.
Dane Rivera
The cookie does have little chips of a cream-like substance in them, but the ratio of “cream” to cookie leans heavily on the cookie side, so it doesn’t have the intense creamy sweetness that the Oreo filling has and offers a different enough experience to warrant their existence. That’s something!
The aftertaste has a slight hint of salt, and the overall texture is typical of what you’d get out of a gluten-free cookie. It begins crisp but has a sort of soft almost soggy quality once it mixes with your saliva. It tastes, as you might expect, like a pretty good gluten-free cookie.
Whether you like this more or less than an Oreo depends on what you’re looking for, but if you’re ever offered a handful of Midnight Cookies, we say, take em!
The Bottom Line:
If you like Pokimane, are looking to support her, and live on a gluten-free diet, get the cookies. If these cookies are too expensive for you, don’t buy them. If you’re mad about her response to the backlash, don’t buy them.
Overall, they’re pretty good but completely inessential. Like, you know, this entire “controversy” itself.
Last week, Elon Musk continued his well-documented history of problematic posting by openly embracing an antisemitic conspiracy theory, prompting major brands like Apple, Disney, Comcast and more to suspend their advertising on Twitter. You can now add Paris Hilton to the list.
Hilton’s move is surprising considering the tabloid fixture touted a major partnership with Twitter just last month. Under the deal, Hilton’s media company 11:11 would produce live-shopping videos for Twitter, which desperately needed a high-profile campaign as the platform bled advertisers even before Musk’s latest debacle. That campaign is now paused.
The queen of pop culture, music, business, and TV is #Sliving on X. @ParisHilton welcome to the @X family, we’re excited to launch an official partnership with you and your next-gen media company 11:11. Together we’re going to create a launchpad for new initiatives in video and… pic.twitter.com/7ctohyn3Nb
“11:11 Media made the decision to immediately pull the campaign from the platform,” Bruce Gersh, 11:11 Media’s president and chief operating officer, said in a statement to CNN.
The decision by 11:11 Media to pull its advertising campaign from X comes after at least half a dozen brands also paused their ad spending on X last week over concerns about pro-Nazi content and Musk’s embrace of an antisemitic conspiracy theory on the platform.
IBM halted its ad spend on X on Thursday after a report from progressive media watchdog Media Matters showed its ad had run alongside pro-Nazi content on X.
In a potentially bad sign for Twitter, a spokesperson for 11:11 “declined to comment on whether the suspension of 11:11’s ad campaign also meant the end of Hilton’s partnership.”
As usual, Twitter/X did respond to comment, but the company did not send anybody a poop emoji, which still won’t help this situation in any way.
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