Tyler The Creator gave fans a peek behind the creative curtain today, revealing a little bit of his process while promising some exciting news for the days ahead.
“CALL ME IF YOU GET LOST WAS THE FIRST ALBUM I MADE WITH ALOT OF SONGS THAT DIDNT MAKE THE FINAL CUT,” he revealed on Twitter. “SOME OF THOSE SONGS I REALLY LOVE, AND KNEW THEY WOULD NEVER SEE THE LIGHT OF DAY, SO IVE DECIDED TO PUT A FEW OF THEM OUT.” The first is “Dogtooth,” the video for which you can watch above.
CALL ME IF YOU GET LOST WAS THE FIRST ALBUM I MADE WITH ALOT OF SONGS THAT DIDNT MAKE THE FINAL CUT. SOME OF THOSE SONGS I REALLY LOVE, AND KNEW THEY WOULD NEVER SEE THE LIGHT OF DAY, SO IVE DECIDED TO PUT A FEW OF THEM OUT.
In the video, Ty climbs into the cab of a crane, with which he lifts his Rolls Royce Phantom into the air… just a light flex, you know. There’s also a great top-down aerial shot through the sunroof of his classic BMW as the consummate performer does donuts and raps to the camera overhead. Lyrically, it’s all straight-up braggadocio, with lines like “my girl look like Zazie Beetz and Kelis” punctuating a relaxed flow over a glittery, Neptunes-ish beat.
The infobox on the YouTube for “Dogtooth” bears the more exciting notice: Call Me If You Get Lost: The Estate Sale — billed as “a collection of songs that didnt make the original album” — will be out on 3/31 via Columbia Records.
Yellowjackets fans likely suspected cannibalism was on the menu when the Showtime hit returned this weekend but no one could’ve predicted that WTF ending of the season two premiere.
The death of Jackie (Ella Purnell) hit everyone hard, but her best friend Shauna (Sophie Nelisse) had the most questionable method of processing her grief. While the rest of the team seemed to stay huddled inside the cabin for most of the episode, Shauna lounged in the meat shed where they’d been storing Jackie’s frozen corpse until the ground thaws, so they can give her a proper burial. A grieving, pregnant Shauna spent the season two premiere chatting and gossiping with a hallucination of her best friend as the rest of the girls worried over her deteriorating mental state.
By the end of the episode, Shauna had pocketed an errant ear that had broken off Jackie’s corpse after the two girls got into an “argument.” As the music played, Shauna hastily stuffed the appendage into her mouth. Naturally, witnessing the teen mom-to-be eat her best friend left Twitter in shambles.
Some found the whole idea that Shauna was carrying on conversations with an ice mummy unsettling (to say the least).
the first cut to corpse jackie so abruptly while shauna’s casually carrying on the conversation will haunt me forever that’s genuinely so unsettling pic.twitter.com/8oDp3agUm0
it’s so funny that they’ve just let shauna talk to jackie’s corpse for 2 months and no one’s been like we need to stop this. instead they are all just like pic.twitter.com/74Ptt474ig
— kaycey / yellowjackets spoilers (@dykellisto) March 24, 2023
shauna has been going to the taylor’s for jackie’s birthday every year for 23 years knowing she ate their dead daughter’s ear for a snackpic.twitter.com/hoGv8spFn7
While others perceptively pointed out that the whole cannibalism thing was just Shauna’s guilt manifesting in the worst way possible.
im sorry but it’s very funny to me how the first act of cannibalism in the show wasn’t started by lottie and her visions about the gods of the wilderness but bc shauna’s gay traumatised ass wanted to keep jackie with her forever pic.twitter.com/LWidM5qSR3
But this comment brought up a point we were wondering about all episode. The pregnant girl on your high school soccer team barricaded herself in the meat shed in the dead of winter to have a kiki with her popsicle-ized best friend, and not one of these teens had the urge to eavesdrop on those conversations? This might be the most unbelievable plotline of Yellowjackets thus far.
The Kid Laroi has kept relatively quiet about his upcoming debut album, The First Time, but he has enough hits under his belt for a promising tour. Last week, the Australian rapper and singer kicked off his Bleed For You tour.
So far during the Bleed For You tour, The Kid Laroi has performed several songs from his F*ck Love mixtape series, as well as songs from the upcoming album. Among the songs performed are the viral TikTok hits “Without You” and “Stay,” as well as some of the newer songs, like “Kids Are Growing Up” and “I Can’t Go Back To The Way It Was (Intro).”
You can see the setlist (per Setlist.fm) below, as well as the remaining dates of the Bleed For You tour.
Setlist
1. “I Can’t Go Back To The Way It Was (Intro)”
2. “Let Her Go”
3. “Diva”
4. “Same Energy”
5. “Thousand Miles”
6. “Go”
7. “What Just Happened”
8. “Kids Are Growing Up”
9. “So Done”
10. “Tragic”
11. “Wrong”
12. “Tell Me Why”
13. “F*ck You, Goodbye”
14. “Always Do”
15. “Selfish”
16. “Stay”
Remaining tour dates
03/27 — State College, PA @ Bryce Jordan Center
03/28 — Columbus, OH @ Schottenstein Center
03/29 — Ypsilanti, MI @ EMU George Gervin GameAbove Center
03/31 — Lexington, KY @ Rupp Arena*
04/01 — Charlottesville, VA @ John Paul Jones Arena
04/02 — Columbia, SC @ Colonial Life Arena
04/04 — Tallahassee, FL @ Donald L Tucker Civic Center
04/05 — Knoxville, TN @ Thompson-Boling Arena
04/07 — Madison, WI @ Alliant Energy Center
04/08 — Coralville, IA @ Xtream Arena
04/15 — Indio, CA @ Coachella*
04/22 — Indio, CA @ Coachella*
04/26 — Boise, ID @ Extra Mile Arena
04/28 — Loveland, CO @ Budweiser Events Center
04/30 — Oklahoma City, OK @ Paycom Center
05/02 — Springfield, MO @ Great Southern Bank Arena
05/03 — Champaign, IL @ State Farm Center
After months of speculation, Fast X star Brie Larson has confirmed which Fast and Furious character she has a “very strong” connection to.
“Tess is Mr. Nobody’s daughter,” she told Total Film. “She is technically Agency, but she’s kind of a bridge, in a way. She doesn’t go along with the way that the Agency’s headed now that her father isn’t there. She believes in the legacy that her father set up, which is standing with Dom and standing with the Toretto family, and is fighting for that.”
Mr. Nobody is played by Kurt Russell, who may or may not be dead. Not Kurt Russell. I hope Kurt Russell never dies. Mr. Nobody might be dead, which would also be a shame because, as we learned in F9, he helped save Han.
The Oscar-winning actress continued, “Dom knows that she has a strong mind and definitely respects that she’s gone out of her way to talk to him and wants to build trust. What he asks of Tess is a test. Like, if it’s an impossible task, and she can get it done, then that’s family for life.” Not to be confused with Vin Diesel’s actual family, like his daughter who Larson based her character on.
Regardless of what spirits you enjoy drinking, there are big names that dominate advertising and the space at your local liquor store or wherever you buy booze. But for all the big names, there are myriad countless smaller, lesser-known brands flying under the radar. This is true for whiskey, rum, tequila, gin, and definitely vodka. Today, we’re going to take a closer look at the underappreciated and unknown world of that latter spirit.
Part of the appeal of vodka is the belief (inaccurately) that it has no taste. We say appeal because people enjoy using largely flavorless vodkas to use as a base for a cocktail in which other flavors and ingredients will shine. And while this is true that vodka (more than any other spirit) sits back and lets the other ingredients do the heavy lifting, to say that there are no nuanced, well-made, flavorful vodkas is just plain wrong.
To find these proverbial booze-soaked diamonds in the rough, we turned to the experts for help. We asked a handful of well-known bartenders to tell us the best under-the-radar vodkas you should be drinking right now.
Polugar Single Malt Rye Vodka
Polugar
Daniel Beedle, assistant director of food and beverage at The Forum Hotel in Charlottesville, Virginia
Polugar Single Malt Rye Vodka. A true historically tasting vodka. This would be way closer to what you would have had as a vodka before the large modern machinery and distillation techniques were created. This is alembic distillation – the same as you might find with cognac – which allows for the base material to be fully expressed. Very little rectification is needed and as a result, the vodka is very smooth and unctuous. There are no traces of fusel alcohols present as its produced for quality, not quantity – very little of the head and the tail of the distillation process is used.
Tasting Notes:
When you rub some on your hands the scent of fresh bread wafts upward. Rye naturally has a lot of volatile oils that carry over in the distillation process. Think Stoli (also Rye) it’s thick and textured. This goes many steps beyond and is more like a bread wine. It’s great for martinis and is also the perfect partner for oily olives.
Drumshanbo Sausage Tree Pure Irish Vodka
Drumshanbo
Cosimo Bruno, beverage curator at the Daxton Hotel in Birmingham, Michigan
If you are looking for a vodka that is under the radar, you must try Drumshanbo Sausage Tree Pure Irish Vodka. This latest spirit from the Shed Distillery was born in search of creating ‘nature’s purest tasting vodka’ and delightfully combines the majestic Kigelia Africana plant (the ‘Sausage Tree’) with the wild Irish nettle. The result is unlike any other vodka I’ve tasted. The slow distillation process with the Sausage Tree fruit, Irish grain, and wild Irish nettle are unique and have created a smooth aroma with hints of fruit that you don’t often find.
Tasting Notes:
On the palate, this vodka is refined, and smooth, and leaves you savoring some soft fruity, and herbal notes. Sausage Tree Vodka with soda and an orange wedge is perfectly refreshing down to the last sip.
I enjoy all of the products by Amass spirits, which is far more under the radar than it should be. The team behind their spirits put a lot of care and effort into the process, and their Botanic Vodka might be one of the best I’ve tasted as someone who prefers other spirits. High-level distillers make it with input from high-level bartenders to ensure the product tastes good and can be mixed well.
Tasting Notes:
This wheat-based vodka has a big citrus nose and a grassy, herbal, lemon zest, and floral palate perfect for sipping neat or in a cocktail.
An under-the-radar Vodka that I particularly enjoy is Albany Vodka or otherwise known as ALB vodka, due to its clean and smooth finish. Produced in NY State and owned locally in Rockaway, the product is priced accordingly and can be found in the bar wells of many NYC institutions such as Cipriani and Balthazar.
Tasting Notes:
It’s crisp, very clean, and sweet with cereal grains, corn, vanilla beans, and mint. It’s great on its own and shines in a cocktail.
Boyd & Blair Potato Vodka
Boyd & Blair
Brandon Ristaino, co-founder and beverage director at Good Lion Hospitality in Santa Barbara, California
An under-the-radar-vodka that we really enjoy is Boyd & Blair Potato Vodka, distilled in Glenshaw, Pennsylvania. It’s a unique vodka that can be consumed neat, chilled, or in a lightly modified cocktail a la a classic dry martini. We had a regular that would ask for it as a base to an old fashioned. It’s definitely not traditional, but super tasting at a great price.
Tasting Notes:
It’s definitely not a neutral vodka, this 100% potato vodka is soft, creamy, and has a bit of fruit and vanilla on the palate.
In my view, vodka should exhibit two things. One, it should have character. You don’t want to be tasting a dentist’s office when you’re knocking back copious amounts with a pile of sumptuous caviar or sausage dumplings at dinner with your Babu. Two, it should be adaptable. Can we mix a great ginger cosmo with it? Is it too strong for an Arnie Palmer? If you drink it in a martini or on ice, will you make ‘that face’ and scare everyone at the bar? Vodka has to be its own spirit but also has to play well with others. That’s something we don’t demand from every bottle on the shelf, but with Vodka it’s a must for me. That’s why I like the Polish brand, Monopolowa.
Tasting Notes:
It’s distilled from potatoes so it’s soft and rosy – and seriously I mean roses, take a whiff and enjoy that dainty, floral nose. It’s 40% ABV on average so you aren’t retching after a few, and its price point has been consistently spectacular for both cost sheets and retail purchasers. Now made in Austria, it’s still one of my favorites – it’s a sippable, delicate, completely underrated brand that is great for every occasion.
My favorite, under-the-radar vodka is Haku Vodka. It is a vodka made with white rice that comes out so clean and pure but has the most amazing texture to the vodka itself. Rice has been used in commercial beer production to help purify and ‘clean’ the beer to make it crushable (think Budweiser). The texture is the thing that sets this apart from most vodkas for me.
Tasting Notes:
While it is incredibly clean and vibrant it still maintains a plush texture that adds body and weight to cocktails without adding flavor or the gross alcohol quality that certain vodkas have. Admittedly, I am a sucker for a Moscow mule, a cocktail that is meant to be spicy and bright. I don’t want the flavor to influence this drink, but I do think they can be very lean sometimes, and having Haku Vodka in it just adds that little bit of something. Think salt on a plate of food that isn’t quite there, but you can’t put your finger on why you don’t like it. I also think this characteristic makes it a perfect vodka for a Vesper, arguably the best Martini, says James Bond.
Bolden Vodka
Bolden
Nicholas Karel, director of bars, lounges, and beverage at The Windsor Court in New Orleans
My favorite under-the-radar vodka is Bolden Vodka, named after one of the earliest figures in Jazz Music, Buddy Bolden, and is distilled by Porchjam Spirits in New Orleans. It is unique and notable in that it is column distilled from a mix of malted barley and a winter wheat blend. Whereas most vodkas these days are created with the intention of being essentially flavorless by distilling several times from neutral grains, Bolden bucks that trend by going through one distillation using robust grains, resulting in a vodka that is full of flavor and character.
Tasting Notes:
I get notes of chocolate, malt, and a finish of banana, with a light sweetness and a rich, creamy mouthfeel that continues to linger long after the sip. One cocktail I’ve used it in was a twist on a Parkside Fizz, mixing it with an Orgeat made with local honey, fresh lemon juice, and topped with soda. My favorite way to enjoy it however is neat, savoring each sip, which is something I am rarely able to say about a vodka.
Hanson of Sonoma Organic Original Vodka
Hanson of Sonoma
Roderick Palamountain, bartender at Chart Room Bar in Key West, Florida
Hanson of Sonoma Organic Original Vodka is the best under the radar vodka I’ve seen in a while. The grape fusion adds a unique note of flavor and the fact that it’s grape infused is different than all other vodkas. It’s made in small batches, using only organic ingredients. This is a special, must-try vodka.
Tasting Notes:
This sublimely mellow, easy-drinking vodka is surprisingly fruity with stone fruits, ripe berries, vanilla, and gentle spices on the palate.
I’m going to throw it out there that Polish rye is the one everyone misses out on, with their Scandinavian, French, or Dutch wheat fascination. To define why this style is the ‘best’ I have one example that we work with – Wódka. It’s bang for your buck, the best all-around vodka on the market. Fact. Wodka is substantially cheaper than many premium vodkas (and the bottle is clear and normal-sized), but the flavorful liquid is also made traditionally with Dankowskie rye from one of the oldest rye growing regions in Poland.
Tasting Notes:
Wódka packs a flavorful punch, whilst remaining easy to drink with a great mouthfeel. The more traditional rye notes of white and black pepper with toasted rye bread pervade the nose through the palate to the finish and make it an excellent vodka for most cocktails.
The Succession Report Card is a weekly recap feature where we attempt to assign grades to the important people, things, and themes from each episode of Succession. The grades are entirely subjective and the criteria for scoring will change from week to week and occasionally mid-week. Someone might get detention. It’ll probably be Roman.
UPROXX
Willa
HBO
Willa gets an F only because I think she’s just now really, truly realized what she is getting herself into and she is not having any fun about it, which stinks because I like Willa. Her dipshit fiancé is at one percent and falling in the polls and he wants to have a wedding with a brass band and bum fights and razzmatazz and the faces she’s making while he says these things out loud are the faces of a woman who is seriously considering chewing off her own leg to get out of a bear trap. It’s not going great.
GRADE: F
MUST IMPROVE: Life choices, wedding planning
Connor
HBO
I know I just mentioned it in the section on Willa, but look what is going on with this goof:
Is polling at one percent
His competitors are “squeezing” that percent, attempting to peel off the sad souls that have hitched their wagons to a horse that was never going anywhere but the glue factory
He’s thinking about spending $100 million just so he doesn’t get extra super embarrassed by finishing in the decimals
The smartest people on this entire show are the sometimes unseen consultants and advisors who fleece these idiots for their money. Everyone with their hand in Connor’s pocket during this election is a hero to me. Good for them.
GRADE: F
MUST IMPROVE: [sighs deeply]
Tom
HBOHBO
Tom is currently the man in the company whose job it is to deliver hard news to and from his boss, who is also about to be his ex-father-in-law on account of the thing where his wife is finally calling off the marriage and kicking off the divorce after running around and telling borderline strangers it was going to happen first as part of a business negotiation. The only thing he has left in his life, the only sliver of power and control, is mocking and belittling Greg, who is also his only friend.
The man is desperately clinging to almost nothing. I suspect he spends a lot of the moments we don’t see him just staring out windows. Could be going better.
GRADE: F
MUST IMPROVE: I feel like Tom might be in a better place mentally if he went to a driving range once a week and smashed about 100 golf balls as far as he can
Turnips, generally
HBO
The thing about turnips is that it’s rarely a good thing when you hear the word in conversation. It’s usually, like this week, saying someone “fell off the turnip truck” to imply they’re some naive rube, or apparently, because this was the first time I’ve heard it, “twist my turnips” to imply someone is grasping your balls and turning them, which doesn’t sound too hot either. It’s almost never “hell yeah, dude, look at those turnips” or “this dish could use a little more turnip” or something even reasonably positive. The turnip industry has really dropped the ball on the marketing. At this point, they might just need to change the name and start fresh. Call them Carrot Bulbs or something. That’s not a great suggestion but it is a free one.
GRADE: F
MUST IMPROVE: Public relations and flavor
The Hundreds
HBO
Rest in peace to the indispensable bespoke hub that was going to cover Israel-Palestine and artificial intelligence while being Substack meets MasterClass meets The Economist meets The New Yorker. God, I wish this website and/or app really existed. My hatred of it would have fueled me for hours at a time between cups of coffee.
Also:
every time a Succession character mentions a publication, media professionals react like when a stadium headliner says the name of the city they’re in
This show really gets the little things so incredibly correct almost all the time. There are so many that I don’t even want to try to list them all because I’d be typing until tomorrow.
GRADE: F
MUST IMPROVE: Existing
UPROXX
Logan
HBO
Logan is:
Having a terrible time at his birthday party
Grumbling more than usual
Demanding his underlings tell jokes and roast him and then whipping off comebacks that aren’t so much funny as they are horribly mean
Escaping to diners with his security staff and having long one-sided conversations about what people are and are not that reveal a deeply depressing worldview
Losing out on acquisitions to his idiot children, who he calls rats and who spent his birthday party trying to ruin him from a scenic villa on the other side of the country
Watching the news channel he owns and built an empire around alone in his house and calling network executives late at night to shout about the coverage in a way that implies that it is dawning on him that this sale will leave him with no family and no business and a big gaping hole in his life that he has no clue how to fill
Other than that, hunky dory.
GRADE: D-
MUST IMPROVE: Party etiquette
Kendall
HBOHBO
Sometimes I feel like everything about Kendall worth saying has already been said and then he just very casually says things like “I’ve smoked horse” as part of a business discussion and, blammo, I’m back in.
Kendall, Shiv, and Roman are all broken in such separate and distinct ways and watching them try to do any sort of venture together is like watching a train barrel toward a cliff. Why would the train tracks lead the train toward and eventually off the cliff? Why would anyone plan things that way when they could have laid the tracks anywhere? Doesn’t this seem like a failure of planning and execution?
Great questions. And exactly the point.
GRADE: D
MUST IMPROVE: I want to say “business sense” here but I feel like that is just putting Neosporin on a cannonball wound
Shiv
HBO
Shiv is tricky because you’ll watch her operate a little bit and think for a second that she’s the most competent one of the group and then she’ll go ahead and toss multiple billions of dollars into a fire while negotiating against herself and the general idea of her father. She is saying “I’m fine” and “it’s fine” out loud kind of a lot, which is not usually a sign of someone doing fine. Her marriage is over and she’s lashing out a little bit. A D might be generous here. Shiv is doing real, real bad.
GRADE: D
MUST IMPROVE: Snaking
UPROXX
Cousin Greg
HBO
ON ONE HAND: I am so disappointed in what my sweet boy has become. He got that haircut last season and it’s all gone to hell since then, with him sucking up to Logan and embracing the worst of the entitlement issues people on this show have and bringing dates from various apps to high-society functions and rummaging to fruition with them in the bathroom like the Disgusting Brother he so desperately wants to be. Sometimes I think I hate him a little bit now.
ON THE OTHER HAND: I still smile a lot every time he is on screen. I can’t help it. I love this doofus.
GRADE: C-
MUST IMPROVE: Romantic entanglements
Various Karls and Franks
HBO
I know this is the last season and there isn’t much time to wander off the main story thoroughfares but: I think I would really enjoy a standalone episode where these two go on a business trip together and end up sharing a hotel room in, like, Minnesota.
GRADE: C
MUST IMPROVE: Telling jokes
Colin the Security Man
HBOHBOHBOHBO
Poor Colin.
GRADE: C
MUST IMPROVE: I mean, being a goon who does dirty work for one of the worst people alive? This one is hard. I should hate him more but I don’t see that happening for a while.
Kerry
HBO
Logan’s friend/assistant/advisor spent a solid chunk of this episode as a messenger between her new boyfriend and the grown children who hate him and demean her about it all. She would have gotten a much worse grade if not for the thing where sometimes she makes a face that tells you she knows none of this a great situation but she’s in too deep now. I would like to know what she talks to her therapist about.
GRADE: C+
MUST IMPROVE: Negotiating calls and texts
UPROXX
Bridget from the apps
HBO
Bridget:
Got to go to a fancy party at a billionaire’s house on a first date
Absolutely housed some canapés
Had a little bathroom fling with a lanky goofball
Came out of all this with a killer story she can tell new friends and acquaintances for many decades
Good for her.
GRADE: B
MUST IMPROVE: Selfie etiquette
Roman
HBO
One of the things I like most about this show is Roman actually being the sibling with the most business savvy and humanity but having so little confidence about it that he gets steamrolled and undercuts himself before anyone stops to realize it. Watch him kick the bankers out of the room so they can talk to Shiv after her phone call with Tom about Naomi Pierce. Watch him be the only one to recognize that tossing $500 million dollars onto a bid just to make it a round number is both insane and stupid. There might actually be a real person in there under all those layers of sniveling and self-loathing.
We are now officially rooting for Roman. I know this is weird. I suspect he will ruin it next week. But here we are.
GRADE: B
MUST IMPROVE: I’m going to say “having a backbone” here but that’s barely scratching the surface
Gerri
HBOHBO
The smartest thing anyone did in this entire episode: Gerri just walking away while Frank and Karl were hemming and hawing about who was more suited to deliver bad news to Logan. They weren’t going to chase her. They’re too conflict-averse for that. These are survival skills honed over many years of living in a snake pit. Let the other suckers get wrapped up and swallowed whelks until the snakes aren’t hungry anymore. It’s a good strategy.
GRADE: B+
MUST IMPROVE: Part of me hopes that by the season finale Gerri has left this life and started flipping houses or running a food truck or something.
UPROXX
Tellis the Banker
HBO
I meant what I said earlier about the people with their hands in the Roy family’s pockets. This dude is a creepy vulture who works for a soulless financial institution that exists to move money from one billionaire’s bank account to another billionaire’s bank account. There is almost no other world where I have anything but disdain for this man. But here, on this show, given the people he’s working with and billing upwards of eight figures to for the most basic and worthless business advice you could ever imagine… I don’t know. There’s a begrudging respect here. Real “in the land of the blind the one-eyed man is king” situation.
Nan is a shark in a goldfish tank. She squeezed an extra $3 billion out of this family — Logan’s soft offer was $7 billion, the kids gave her 10 — just by playing naive. “Oh, I just hate this” she says while doing it like a champion. “Everyone is saying numbers” she says while then saying two numbers herself that are both higher than her best offer and imply even that’s not enough. She and Logan are flip sides of the same coin, not so different, two old warriors who built and/or ran things and are ready to get out right after they squeeze a few more nickels out of the people stupid enough to think they are smarter than them. The woman did everything other than wink directly into the camera about it all during that negotiation. I’m very proud of her. I want to see her run her fancy wine business a little. Maybe a lot. Maybe as a whole spinoff.
Like peanut butter and jelly, France and white wine were simply made for each other. From crisp, high-acid Sauvignon Blanc to age-worthy White Burgundy, France’s white wine production spans a plethora of grape varieties and styles. French wine — whether red, white, or sparkling — can also be found at basically every price point, from bottom-of-the-barrel jug wine all the way up to coveted auction house gems that garner the highest profits in the world.
Today, we’re focusing on the former — or at least skewing much more in that direction — with wines under $20. As always, we’ll reinforce that not all budget-friendly wine is created equal. In fact, most of it is made pretty poorly. When seeking out affordable bottles, we recommend sticking with those produced from responsibly-farmed fruit (organic, biodynamic, or sustainable) to start. To find this information, simply do a quick check on the producer’s (or their importer’s) website to see what’s going on.
Read on to read our ranking of 10 of the best French white wines to be found under the $20 price point. Select a few, or even better, build a case and try ‘em all.
10. Anne Pichon Sauvage Viognier 2021
Kingston Wine Co.
ABV: 13.5% Region: Rhône Valley, France Price: $19.99
The Wine:
Anne Pichon and her late husband Marc Pichon moved to the southern base of Mont Ventoux during the late 1990s. Today, Anne and her sister-in-law, Véronique, farm 15 hectares of vines all organically, with a focus on producing ripe, fruit-forward wines that speak to the place from which they come.
Tasting Notes:
Classic to Viognier, this wine is all things stone fruit, canned peaches, and apricot, with hints of honeysuckle, tangerine, and white flower blossoms. The Pichons vinify this wine entirely in steel (no oak), so as to preserve the wine’s juicy flavors and natural acidity.
The Bottom Line:
Viognier-based wines aren’t for the faint of heart. They’re full-bodied, flavor-packed, and have some serious punch. If this sounds up your alley, then Anne Pichon’s expression is a great place to start.
9. Souleil Vin de Bonté Le Blanc 2020
Convive Wine
ABV: 13% Region: Languedoc, France Price: $18
The Wine:
Founded by longtime friends Marianne Fabre-Lanvin and Thomas Delaude, who grew up surfing and shucking shellfish in the sunny south of France together, Souleil embodies the style of wine that the two love to drink: fresh and food-friendly, yet easy to enjoy during at-home happy hours on its own.
Tasting Notes:
Bright and refreshing, Le Blanc jumps with flavors of pineapple, tropical fruits, and orange blossom, marked by a long, saline-driven finish. Enjoy on its own or with salty shellfish, cheese boards, or Macona almonds. Fun fact: Souleil means sun in ancient French, and bonté means goodness—upon first sip, that’ll all make sense.
The Bottom Line:
Many budget-friendly whites from the south of France tend to be richer, lower in acid, and lack structure—not this wine. Expect all things saline, acid, and coastal influence here; like sunshine in a glass. Added bonus: A portion of all of Souleil’s proceeds go to ocean restoration.
8. Les Deux Moulins Sauvignon Blanc 2020
Vivino
ABV: 11.5% Region: Loire Valley, France Price: $13.99
The Wine:
Les Deux Moulins is a sustainability-focused company that produces budget-friendly wines from the Loire Valley’s signature grapes. The white cuvée is 100% Sauvignon Blanc, while the red is 100% Pinot Noir. Fruit for this cuvée comes from gravelly soils between the subregions of Anjou and Saumur.
Tasting Notes:
Flinty and citrus-driven, this refreshing wine shows flavors of grapefruit, lemon, green apple skin, and crushed rocks. Pair with a warm goat cheese salad and relive your best bistro-inspired life.
The Bottom Line:
The Loire Valley’s most famous expressions of Sauvignon Blanc hail from Sancerre, though they’ll cost you quite a bit. For more budget-friendly expressions, look to those produced in Touraine and other more westerly areas for similar, lower-priced options.
7. Font-Mars Picpoul de Pinet
Vivino
ABV: 13% Region: Languedoc, France Price: $14
The Wine:
Picpoul de Pinet wines are known for their zippy acidity and lingering finishes, as well as their very accessible price tags. Font-Mars’ expression ticks all of our boxes, plus, it’s produced from sustainably-farmed fruit.
Tasting Notes:
Picpoul de Pinet is the appellation, but the grape is actually called Piquepoul, which loosely translates to lip stinger. Truthfully, the wine is just that—acid, acid, and more acid. Expect flavors of lemon, green apple skin, dried herbs, and crushed oyster shell.
The Bottom Line:
If you love high-acid French whites like Muscadet and Sancerre, Picpoul de Pinet is a great budget-friendly alternative. Look for the signature tall, green bottles and get the party started.
6. Leon Manbach Riesling ‘Granite’ 2021
Astor Wines & Spirits
Region: Alsace, France Price: $14.96
The Wine:
Old vines, organic farming, and granite-based soils are the foundations of this world-class Riesling, and if you’re looking for a bottle to change your mind about the grape, this bone-dry expression is totally it.
Tasting Notes:
Contrary to the sweet stereotypes that Riesling often gets pigeonholed into, this zingy, dry expression from Leon Manbach is all things lemon-lime, grapefruit rind, crushed stones, and coarse sea salt.
The Bottom Line:
Not all Riesling is sweet, and this bone-dry bottle from Granite is a great pick to break all of your preconceived notions about the variety. Seriously, it’s like lightning in a bottle.
5. Domaine du Haut Bourg Muscadet Cotes de Grandlieu Sur Lie 2021
Vivino
ABV: 12% Region: Loire Valley, France Price: $15.99
The Wine:
Muscadet is known for its bright, refreshing, and salty flavor profiles, and Domaine du Haut Bourg’s perfectly embodies all of those things. This wine is produced from 60 to 80-year-old vines, which yield smaller amounts of high-quality, concentrated fruit.
Tasting Notes:
Think of this like tasty ocean water in the best way possible—salt, lemon, wet stones, and crushed oyster shell. Pour a glass for an instant mental escape to the craggy French coastline (and grab some freshly shucked oysters for the ride).
The Bottom Line:
Muscadet is the perfect happy hour wine—it’s affordable, it’s high acid, and it’s an all-around crowd-pleaser. You really can’t go wrong here.
Jean-Paul Brun is a Beaujolais legend, especially in the very small white winemaking world. Unlike those based in the more famous crus, Brung got his start in the southerly Terres Dorées, then eventually moved his way up to the bigger appellations. Today, his estate spans 45 hectares in total.
Tasting Notes:
This unique bottle of Beaujolais Blanc is juicy, medium-bodied, and laden with flavors of yellow apple, lemon curd, and hints of citrus. The wine is unoaked, which allows its fruit flavors to be the star of the show.
The Bottom Line:
Beaujolais is generally known for its red wines, though a minuscule amount of white, like this tasty bottle from Jean-Paul Brun, is made. For something tasty and unique, this bottle’s your answer.
3. Domaine du Pas St. Martin Saumur Blanc ‘Pierres Frites’
Vivino
ABV: 13% Region: Loire Valley, France Price: $17
The Wine:
This varietal Chenin Blanc is produced at the hands of Laurent Charrier, who took the reins at his family estate back in 1994. An early adopter of organic farming, the winery received certification back in 1997, far before this style of farming was popular. His Saumur Blanc is vinified in steel to maintain the wine’s freshness. Fun fact: In 2012, the winery received an award (Eco-Trophée) from the local Parc National for their pioneering work in environmentally-friendly viticulture and vinification.
Tasting Notes:
Medium-bodied and bright, this palate-coating wine exudes flavors of pear, honeyed stone fruit, freshly sliced apple, and a touch of toast.
The Bottom Line:
In terms of quality-to-price ratio regions, the Loire Valley is probably France’s best. However, remember that the area’s three sub-regions are home to different signature white varieties: to the west, Melon de Bourgogne (Muscadet), in the center, Chenin Blanc (Anjou, Saumur), and to the east, Sauvignon Blanc (Sancerre and Pouilly-Fumé).
2. Jean-Francois Quenard Chignin 2021
Vivino
ABV: 11.5% Region: Savoie, France Price: $18
The Wine:
For Alpine-influenced wines that can go to the limits with cheese and hearty chalet-inspired food, look no further than bottles from Savoie. The high acidity in these wines promises to cut through even the most savory of foods, yet they also taste delicious on their own.
Tasting Notes:
This 100% Jacquère comes from 40-year-old vines and is vinified in steel. On the palate, the wine is all things citrus, white pepper, and crushed stones. Refreshing as hell.
The Bottom Line:
Due to the fact that they live in the shadows of their more popular neighbors, off-the-beaten-path regions are home to a ton of hidden gem producers/bottles. Savoie is no exception.
1. Famille Paquet Bourgogne Blanc 2020
Union Square Wines
ABV: 12.5% Region: Burgundy, France Price: $15.97
The Wine:
The fact that this wine exists for this price is simply bonkers. Most sub-$20 White Burgundy comes from big-box brands, but the modest Paquet estate is the exact opposite. Rooted in the Maconnais, the family organically farms all of their vines, which are scattered across a handful of appellations.
Tasting Notes:
Everything you want from White Burgundy, with the unbelievable price tag being the cherry on top—ripe yellow apple, lemon cream, citrus, and a touch of pillowy brioche. Simply delightful.
The Bottom Line:
Steer clear of 90% of sub-$20 White Burgundy. Bottles like this are a serious exception—and nothing short of diamonds in the rough.
Harry Styles and Emily Ratajkowski blew up the internet this weekend: The two were spotted together in Tokyo, kissing in the street, which of course sparked dating rumors. It seems now that Styles from nine years ago would be proud of Styles today, as a throwback interview clip from the One Direction days that has resurfaced in light of the Ratajkowski situation would suggest.
In a 2014 interview with Telehit (as E! notes), Styles, Niall Horan, Louis Tomlinson, and Liam Payne were asked for their celebrity crush (at 4:53 into the video below). They all named some options and Styles chimed in, “Emily Ratajkowski from, uh… Gone Girl.”
Around the time of that interview, Ratajkowski’s career and public profile were starting to take off in a big way: Gone Girl was her first major movie role after she made headlines for her appearance in Robin Thicke’s now-infamous NSFW “Blurred Lines” video in 2013. In her recent memoir My Body, Ratajkowski alleged of a moment from working on the video, “Suddenly, out of nowhere, I felt the coolness and foreignness of a stranger’s hands cupping my bare breasts from behind. I instinctively moved away, looking back at Robin Thicke.”
Jeremy Renner continues to update fans on his recovery, and the actor is making incredible progress after being crushed by a snow plow in a freak accident at the start of the year. In his latest Instagram Story, the Hawkeye actor is using an anti-gravity treadmill, which is helping him recover movement in his legs and get him back on his feet.
The machine allows for users to walk with less stress on the lower body joints and muscles. The actor confirmed he was able to do the “walking motion,” but with a lower percentage of his body weight, thanks to the treadmill.
He wrote in the post, “Now is the time for my body to rest and recover from my will.”
You can see a screenshot of Renner’s recovery workout below:
Instagram
Renner also recently revealed that the snow plow involved in the accident has been returned home. The vehicle reportedly had a police escort back to Renner’s home, which the actor said “feels like the Green mile!”
According to police, Renner was crushed underneath the snow plow when he saw it starting to roll forward toward his nephew. The actor attempted to “divert” the machine, but instead, suffered severe injuries including 30 broken bones. As for why the plow rolled, police believe the parking brake wasn’t properly applied.
“Although the PistenBully had some mechanical issues, it is believed based on our mechanical inspection that the parking brake would keep the PistenBully from moving forward,” the Sheriff’s department wrote.
It looks like new Kelly Clarkson music is finally on the way. Yesterday (March 26), the inaugural American Idol winner took to Instagram to announce her 10th studio album, Chemistry. Today, she revealed to Billboardthat she will launch a 10-night Las Vegas residency to accompany the album.
The Chemistry residency will kick off in July at the Bakkt Theater. Though Clarkson has kept the details rather mum, she told Billboard that she will be joined by a full live band, and each night will be different.
“We’re calling it an intimate night and I don’t want to give it away,” she said. “There will be different elements every night and every show is not going to be the same. We will have the audience participate and I will talk to the audience because now I’m on a talk show and I’m used to engaging. It’s going to be a different kind of show than what people are used to in Vegas.”
Elsewhere in the interview, Clarkson revealed that Chemistry was inspired by her divorce, and promises not to hold back in her new material.
“I’m very honest about everything but also I have to navigate that I’m a mom of two kids that will be affected,” she said. “That is one reason why I chose certain songs for the record.”
You can see the list of dates below.
07/28 — Las Vegas, NV @ Bakkt Theater at Planet Hollywood Las Vegas
07/29 — Las Vegas, NV @ Bakkt Theater at Planet Hollywood Las Vegas
08/02 — Las Vegas, NV @ Bakkt Theater at Planet Hollywood Las Vegas
08/04 — Las Vegas, NV @ Bakkt Theater at Planet Hollywood Las Vegas
08/05 — Las Vegas, NV @ Bakkt Theater at Planet Hollywood Las Vegas
08/09 — Las Vegas, NV @ Bakkt Theater at Planet Hollywood Las Vegas
08/11 — Las Vegas, NV @ Bakkt Theater at Planet Hollywood Las Vegas
08/12 — Las Vegas, NV @ Bakkt Theater at Planet Hollywood Las Vegas
08/18 — Las Vegas, NV @ Bakkt Theater at Planet Hollywood Las Vegas
08/19 — Las Vegas, NV @ Bakkt Theater at Planet Hollywood Las Vegas
Kelly Clarkson is a Warner Music artist. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.
This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish. Cookie settingsACCEPT
Privacy & Cookies Policy
Privacy Overview
This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these cookies, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may have an effect on your browsing experience.
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. It is mandatory to procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website.