Ricky Velez’ publicist reached out to me 16 months ago to set up this interview ahead of him taping his HBO comedy special (which drops Saturday on HBO at 10PM) which was “set to shoot post-COVID” back when we thought such a thing was around the corner or even possible. I bring this up to illustrate an obvious point that Velez (who you may remember from King Of Staten Island, which he co-starred in and produced, collaborating with friend Pete Davidson and now frequent collaborator Judd Apatow, who also produced the special) speaks to in our conversation — the world of stand-up comedy got turned upside down by something that kept performers from the audiences that support and validate their professional existence.
How did that time away impact Velez’s work and relationship to a profession that he is confident he’ll do until the day he dies? We spoke about that, his willingness to open up and talk about his life on stage in pursuit of connection, and what he’s learned from observing some of his most frequent collaborators.
How do you stay sharp and get that fill-up kind of feeling from doing comedy during COVID when you’re kind of just stuck doing nothing.
Yeah. I was stuck, and I definitely use stand-up a lot… it’s something that I love to do. And I love being a part of it, but at the time, it was a good time to exercise a new muscle, which was writing. And I worked with Judd [Apatow] and Judah Miller through the whole pandemic. And that kept me sharp. And then we went right back on the road the moment it was safe to. The moment I had two vaccines in me and two weeks passed me, it was time to hit the road, and we hit it as hard as we could.
Beyond just the monetary side of things, I’m sure comedy also fills a specific need in terms of just talking through stuff, processing your life. Without that, where did you turn to kind of get that fix while not being able to do comedy?
You just stay in touch with the guys you know that are funny. That’s what I did. I mean, I have great friends that are really, really, really funny people. And we all helped each other out during that time. And they were there for each other. It was a really tough time for comics, I believe. Because, unlike any other art, you absolutely need an audience to even practice it. So it was a hard time, but we’re through it. And I’m so happy we are.
The special was in the works for a long, long time. How does your idea of what the material’s going to be for this special change over that period?
The world changed, as did I, right? My environment changed, the people I was around, the people I was seeing, the people that I was able to see, let alone the people that I got to. And that was very important when getting back out on the road, to make sure this was the way to do it. I just felt that I knew, going into my special, based on traveling and seeing the world and seeing how other people were taking everything in. [That] was very important.
I know I’d read an interview where you talked about kind of catching fire for some stuff that you had said on Larry Wilmore’s show back in the day. When you’re coming up with material, what is the do not cross point for you?
I think I just try to be funny, not to just one group or another. I try to be funny across the board. And I don’t like to limit myself, so I’ll try anything. But I mean, if I’m hurting somebody or feel like I am, I move away from it.
What role does the challenge of it play? The challenge in terms of, “I’m going to tell this joke, I’m going to walk a really tight rope, and I’m going to find the funny there, and I’m going to get everybody to laugh at this thing.” Is that a part of what drives you as well?
Yes. Yes. I think it is, it definitely is finding a way to go about something, to talk about either topics, or your family, or something that means something to you, and making a whole room understand it in a moment in time. It’s a thrill.
What do you think it is that pisses comics off so much about the idea of quote cancel culture and the notion that if they, while they’re trying to do this comedic alchemy… if they veer too far in one direction, they may not just alienate people, but just actively spoil any notion of people picking them up again?
I don’t know, I don’t. I don’t know. I think that comics don’t like to be told much, so they definitely don’t want to be told how to speak, but I don’t know. I truly don’t know.
But at the end of the day, I mean, that is part of the challenge too. Isn’t it? To be able to say something and essentially make an impact and get away with it.
No, I think, me personally, I don’t go for that as much as I go for I want to make this a fun experience. That’s how I think about it. And this is what I find funny, and this is what me and my friends that I grew up with and that I’m friends with now belly-laugh about. And hopefully, you guys can understand what we’re saying, what I’m doing.
In the special, you talk about your father and your childhood and being beat as a kid. Have you always been willing to open yourself up to talk about certain things you’ve gone through in your life or did that come over time?
I started writing more personal the more I started to realize how much I was connecting with other people and the things I was talking about, I no longer felt alone about it.
Is that something achieved through direct interactions with your audience and people actually telling you about their stories?
Yeah. I remember when I first started talking about anxiety, I was shocked about how many people were coming up to me and telling me their stories. Even when my mother passed away, I had numerous people come out and reach out to me that had been in my everyday life when it comes to comedy and the rest, telling me their stories. And I just had no clue. So I feel like so often you feel alone and there are people just like you right next to you, and you don’t even know.
How does the working relationship with Judd inform your comedy and what have you learned from working with him?
The work’s never done, that’s how I feel until it’s taped. That’s something I learned from Judd. A lot of work is good work. And be open and lose the ego, and you’ll be fine.
What have you learned from just working with and observing the world as it responds to Pete Davidson [in terms of tabloid coverage]?
I think good work always trumps all that noise. And if you continue to do good work, you’ll continue being great. And that’s what I’ve noticed from those guys.
Who’s in your internal focus group? Do you run material by your wife before it even gets to a crowd before it even gets to other comedians, are there people in your life that you kind of run material by, just to see if it’s hitting, if it feels off?
No, I don’t do that. I bring it straight to the stage. I trust the audience, and I put myself in situations that I can play with it and everybody and get honest reactions. The one thing about my wife, though, if you want to make fun of your wife on stage, you have to have it kill when she comes to see it. If you just have a joke that’s poking at her, whatever, just make sure when she sees it, it’s amazing.
What is up next for you?
Writing, more stand-up, and just keeping the projects that I have in motion, in motion, and just allowing myself to be open to opportunities that are around.
Is there ever an endpoint? I guess the question is, do you ever perfect the art of stand-up comedy, or is that something that you feel you’re just going to do it till you die?
Yeah. I think I would probably do stand-up until the day I die. It’s one of those things, it’s a puzzle that’s never done. It’s a lot of fun. And I got to make my job, my hobby and vice versa. And I just feel really lucky to be able to go do my job whenever I want now. And that’s the one thing I’ve taken away from COVID is how grateful I am to have audiences again. But yeah, this isn’t something, just one day you stop doing.
Nate Bargatze has a great joke about how you can never really quit. You can’t just call somebody and be like, “I’m done.” So it would always just linger. It would always just linger in the back of your head, I would believe. But yeah, that’s why you see people do this until the day they die because it’s an addiction. It’s definitely something that fills a void possibly for a lot of people. And I think it’s changed my life, and I don’t know where I’d be without it.
Ricky Velez’ ‘Here’s Everything’ premieres on HBO Saturday at 10PM ET
While we’ll never say never when it comes to the possibility of the DC cinematic universe and Marvel cinematic universe one day colliding in a cape-filled showdown of epic proportions, as it stands now it does seem pretty farfetched. However, just because the two studios are owned by different parent companies and are in a pretty contentious rivalry with one another doesn’t mean the film’s directors can’t have a bit of fun slyly acknowledging the other one exists, right? Right.
In an exclusive interview with Comicbook, Eternals director Chloe Zhao admitted she did just that, placing a pretty apparent Superman reference within her debut Marvel film. According to the outlet, the scene occurs when Ikaris (Richard Madden) and Sersi (Gemma Chan) reunite with fellow Eternal Phastos (Brian Tyree Henry). Upon seeing Ikaris, Phastos’ son says, “Dad, that’s Superman! With the cape, and you were shooting laser beams out of your eyes!” However, Ikaris dismisses the rumor, responding with a quick, “I don’t wear a cape.” Zhao has now confirmed the young boy was, in fact, referencing that Superman, and proceeded to explain why:
“I take some responsibility for that. I think we’re in the business of telling stories about mythology, and Superman, for example, comes from origin of mythology. In many different cultures, there’s a form of Superman. And the people that created Superman and the brilliant filmmakers [who] brought Superman to screen, their movies are basically, in my opinion, doing a modern interpretation of that mythology.”
You gotta admit, Zhao’s reasoning makes complete sense given the Eternals intense emphasis on history, mythology, and an ever-expanding multiverse. It’s also just nice to hear that the folks working at Marvel still appreciate what the folks over at DC are doing with their stories. While Zhao certainly isn’t the first to pay tribute (in fact, Marvel Studios president and producer Kevin Feige has actually admitted he watches Superman: The Movie before the start of production on most Marvel movies because it’s “the archetype of the perfect superhero film origin story”), it’s pretty cool to see Marvel studio’s newest addition to their directing team is already eager to spread some love.
“It doesn’t mean we can’t pay tribute and have a good time with these iconic ones that we all love to so much,” Zhao said. “I mean, who doesn’t love Superman and Batman? Clearly our Eternals like them.”
Eternals, starring Gemma Chan, Richard Madden, Kumail Nanjiani, Lauren Ridloff, Brian Tyree Henry, Salma Hayak, Lia McHugh, Don Lee, Barry Keoghan, Kit Harington, and Angelina Jolie, opens exclusively in theaters on November 5.
Barack Obama has maintained a public presence since leaving the White House, and he kept that going earlier this year when he teamed up with Bruce Springsteen to start hosting Renegades: Born In The USA. While it might be natural to assume that podcast was an idea the former POTUS was approached with, Obama says he was actually the driving force behind it.
In their first interview together for “CBS Sunday Morning” and @CBSMornings, former President Barack Obama and the Grammy-winning singer-songwriter Bruce Springsteen discuss their podcast and new book, “Renegades: Born in the USA.” https://t.co/VxcMaGAC89pic.twitter.com/4dyldIWLw0
Obama and Springsteen are the subject of a CBS Sunday Morning profile set to air this weekend, and in an advance clip, Obama says the podcast was his idea: “I always say when I first met Bruce, he seemed surprisingly shy considering he goes out there and sings before tens of thousands of people for hours at a time. And we just ended up being in settings where we’d have these long conversations, and I thought the things we were talking about — What does it mean to be a man? What does it mean to be an American? — these were things that were just kind of poppin’ up over a meal or a drink. And I thought, “You know what? This might be something that would be useful for folks to hear.”
Springsteen them chimed in, “I initially thought that he had gotten a wrong number when he called me. I answered, I said, “Okay, let me figure this out. I am a guitar-playing high school graduate from Freehold, New Jersey, and you want me to do what?”
As soon as I heard the line “I got my peaches out in Georgia/ I get my weed from California,” I knew Justin Bieber would be debuting a weed line. I even had a few guesses about the name. Of course, I didn’t know know. But I’ve been around the legal weed industry long enough to recognize a good marketing opportunity when I hear it.
So I was unsuprised when I heard the Biebs dropped a line of pre-rolls and I was even less surprised to hear that it would be called “Peaches.” The least surprisingly of all? My editor hitting me on Slack 12 seconds after the news broke to say, “We need to try these ASAP.”
So I did! Check my full review below.
PART I — THE WEED
Peaches
Price:
The pre-rolls can be expected to retail from $50-$60 for a pack of seven, depending on where you live.
Availibility:
In California, Peaches partnered with pre-roll brand Palms and can be found at MedMen stores. The joints are also availible for delivery via Eaze. In Massachusetts and Florida, Peaches is partnered with Parallel and will be available exclusively at New England Treatment Access and Surterra Wellness, respectively. In Nevada, the line will be powered by Flower One and can be found at MedMen and Planet13.
Extra Context:
“I’m a fan of Palms and what they are doing by making cannabis approachable and helping to destigmatize it,” Bieber shared in a press release. “Especially for the many people who find it helpful for their mental health. I wanted to make sure that I was doing something with them that felt genuine, and PEACHES felt like a good place to start.”
Broadly speaking, this is a big deal for the cannabis world. There are plenty of celebrities with weed brands these days, including many hip-hop stars, like The Game, and actors like Seth Rogen, who were already vocally and proudly embedded in weed culture. Justin Bieber is arguably one of the most famous people on earth but isn’t associated with weed in any significant way.
Don’t forget, this is a guy who began his career as a child star and catapulted to stardom thanks to the affection of teenage girls. Every step he’s taken away from that image has proven to be sensational and controversial. It was only natural, as Bieber grew up and matured, that he would eventually shed his squeaky clean image. So while it wasn’t exactly a surprise to hear he gets down with the devil’s lettuce, it’s definitely a big step for reducing the stigma of the plant, however one chooses to use it.
The Philanthropy Angle:
A portion of proceeds from PEACHES Pre-Rolls will go to philanthropic partner organizations like Veterans Walk and Talk, a community of veterans who advocate for the outdoors and cannabis utilization as a form of medicine, and Last Prisoner Project, a leading nonprofit dedicated to cannabis criminal justice reform that supports individuals and their families impacted by cannabis convictions.
Additionally, the Palms team will be supporting Eaze’s Momentum Business Accelerator and Social Equity Partners Program that aims to create a more diverse and sustainable industry.
PART II — TASTE TEST
Peaches
Joint Details:
The pre-roll packs consist of seven 0.5 gram joints bucketed into Indica, Sativa and Hybrid strains, as well as a Peaches-branded lighter. The Sativa pack strain is Golden Jack, which clocks in at 28.34% THC. The Indica pack is made with Skittles-n-Cream, which tested at 27.96% THC and the Hybrid pack’s strain is White Runtz, which I was pleased to learn contains 23.11% THC.
Structure-wise, they are longer and skinnier than most half-gram joints, which I like. They look chic. The pack was a little tight and, sometimes, I had to massage the joints to break up the weed to make sure it pulled evenly and consistently.
The High:
As for the weed, it’s… okay. Pre-rolls are a tough category for manufacturers because the very things that make good weed good weed are inherently hampered by the manufacturing process. Mechanical grinding causes trichomes to fall off, which are the little crystals that deliver THC and other cannabinoids. It also causes terpenes, which give smell and taste, to evaporate, and the actual weed to go dry. Some companies also use crappy weed in the joints, causing them to be repositories of trim and other less potent and desirable by-products of the cannabis manufacturing process. Pre-rolls are convenient, sure, and there are some top-shelf options out there that manage to retain taste, smell, and the appropriate amount of moisture, but for the most part, it’s a difficult category to get right.
I sampled joints from each pack and tried the Hybrid first, and I was surprised the smoke was so mellow, high-wise. Smoking the other two packs resulted in a noticeable difference in the high — I got more stoned from the Sativa and Indica joints. Learning the THC content of all packs confirmed my suspicion that some were more potent than others.
“Peaches Pre Rolls don’t have terpene infused papers or infused plant material, they’re full-flower, single strain indoor-grown from partner farms in California,” Noah Annes, the founder of Palms told me, also confirming that no shake or trim was used.
Apart from a few whiffs of taste here and there, they’re largely tasteless. Many pre-rolls are — it’s not necessarily an indicator of the resulting high, which is pleasant. In the Hybrid joints there are faint fruity terpenes, which at times are redolent of peaches (the fruit).
PART III — THE BOTTOM LINE
Peaches
Ultimately, Peaches pre-rolls will definitely get you buzzed, though it’s not the most potent stuff out there. That’s actually okay with me because I like to smoke throughout the day, and, lately, I am getting a little bulldozed by extremely high THC weed that results in nothing other than couch lock.
Point being: peaches are good social joints. They’re not going to get you the highest nor are they likely to impress OG weed heads, who more often focus on THC percentage and terpenes than anything supporting functional smoking. But they will be a hit at the party, which I think is really the point of why these exist at all. They are perfect road dogs, which will have you looking stylish and pleasantly buzzed for whatever adventures the day should bring.
This is weed you can chill on and socialize with. It’s weed you can take hiking or enjoy at the beach. It’s functional weed. That’s a sorely needed thing in this day and age of legal weed.
CNN’s Jake Tapper didn’t hold back his thoughts while addressing Marjorie Taylor Greene’s unhinged screaming match with Liz Cheney on the House floor. Despite both being Republican congresswomen, Greene and Cheney represent an ideological divide inside a party that continues to grapple with its allegiance to Trump. During a Thursday night hearing on holding Steve Bannon in criminal contempt for his refusal to testify before Congress, Greene randomly approached Cheney, who serves on the Jan. 6 select committee, and she began yelling bizarre questions about when the House would start investigating the Black Lives Matters protests.
It was an awkward scene, to say the least, and Tapper unloaded on Greene. “I’m not a licensed psychologist, I don’t know her, but her behavior suggests somebody that has real issues, that is not tethered to reality or basic standards of decent behavior,” he said during Friday’s edition of New Day.
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene confronting Rep. Liz Cheney is more than “just a squabble” and represents the choice in front of Republicans, @jaketapper says. “A lot of them think there is some sort of third option. There isn’t. … Which one are you going to follow?” pic.twitter.com/t7vubdBTQN
The CNN anchor also made a wider point about what Greene’s actions say about the current state of the Republican Party. Via Mediaite:
“Kevin McCarthy has chosen the Marjorie Taylor Greene direction, that is the MAGA direction, that is the Donald Trump direction, that is the election lie direction, that is the, ‘We are not going to care if people are engaged in racist anti-Semitic conspiracy theory politics.’ That’s fine. And Liz Cheney provides the alternative view,” he said. “I look at what happened on the floor of the House as much more significant than just a squabble.”
According to Tapper, Republicans have either two choices for the future of the party: Greene or Cheney, and there is no third option. “Which one are you going to follow?” he asked to close out the segment.
One of the more amusing/annoying things about Twitter is the preponderance of food opinions and the rigor with which users debate such weighty and controversial topics as pineapple on pizza, whether hot dogs are sandwiches, and drumettes vs. flats. It generally tips further into annoying, though, when folks get snooty about things like bottled water brands as indicators of wealth (it’s a whole thing; you can read about it here). Unfortunately, it seems no one is immune from the judgment of the Twitter peanut gallery — not even young artists as universally beloved as Chloe Bailey.
The 23-year-old singer recently attended the NBA’s Atlanta Hawks vs. Dallas Mavericks game, drawing attention for two major reasons. One was her immediate neighbor on the courtside seats: Atlanta rapper Gunna, whose reaction to Chloe’s recent VMA’s performance of her debut solo single “Have Mercy” went viral. And the other was her choice of beverage — a bottle of water. As photos of the couple(?) began circulating on Twitter, the water began drawing even more attention, mainly due to the name on the label: Dasani, which according to some Twitter users is an inferior brand (the ingredients are H2O, people, it shouldn’t be this serious).
Meanwhile, as some more astute folks observed, the brand of water being served is controlled by the venue, not the guest, and they were rightly amused at the water snobbery on display.
people who’ve never left the house are mad she has a Dasani in an arena where only Dasani is served https://t.co/Vl3GBJPPNf
I guess it just goes to show that you can’t do anything right as far as social media is concerned. Also, y’all need to drink more water, I promise it’s better for you than whatever sweet drinks you’re guzzling — no matter what brand it is.
Every SNL fan adores Kenan Thompson. He’s the longest-running cast member on the show, and he’s a comedy legend who finally gained leading man status NBC sitcom (Kenan, obviously) this year with a second season to come. He’s been making us laugh since D2: The Mighty Ducks and Kenan and Kal, and he’ll probably be the best part of the upcoming Home Alone follow-up on Disney+. He’s held countless SNL sketches together (he’s the greatest fake game show host of all time — sorry, Will Farrell) and earned the highest level of respect from his fellow cast members. No one ever has a bad word to say about Kenan Thompson’s character as a person. I dare you to go google that. You won’t find a thing.
Nope, the guy is simply committed to making you laugh, and he inherently knows what works, and what doesn’t, and when to just roll with it. And as Kenan told us, he absolutely loves it when sketches don’t turn out as planned, when the cast can’t hold it together and starts laughing, and when the energy flow from the live audience is palpable. That’s part of why SNL is an institution, and part of why Kenan’s been a ready, steady presence there for nearly two decades. He’s slightly less funny in a new ad campaign from Autotrader, which aims to make the car-buying process easier and, yes, fun. We chatted with Kenan about his career and why he’s so grateful for everything that he’s got going on these days, at work and in life.
I think that I’m obliged to pester you about how long you’re planning on staying at SNL, so let’s get that out of the way first.
Oh yeah, that’s a main topic of discussion. It’s a staple in my life and in America’s life, but yeah, I have my number that I would like to get to, and then after that, it’s up in the air-ish, you know what I mean? It’s just such a special place, and I don’t know that I ever have to leave, but at the same time, I would like to make room for others, so if I can get to my 20 [seasons], that would be great. And I’m on 19 right now, so that doesn’t seem too far-fetched.
What do you think it is about SNL that makes people ask that question? No one asks Law and Order: SVU people that question.
It’s the greatest comedy show in history. Just the live element and the air, and what the show has achieved. It’s a monument and a staple, and everybody respects it, and everybody protects it. So, when you’re inside of that studio, no matter how famous you are, people come back down to their human selves and have a good time. It’s just a special experience.
Well, one of my favorite things about SNL is when you guys break character when something is just so funny that you can’t keep it together.
Yeah, that’s another thing! That’s another thing that makes it special.
Last season with Keegan-Michael Key, he was beating the hell out of Muppets. You started to break. What goes through your head at a moment like that, when things are going off the rails.
I crave those moments. I want it to go off the rails. That’s what makes it different and exciting and much-watched TV and all of that. And when anybody like Keegan comes on, it’s hard for me to keep a straight face at all. But the fact that the audience gets to see the fun that we’re having as well, you know, that’s a whole different experience for everybody.
I got carried away last night rewatching “Black Jeopardy” sketches, and I was thinking of the major hosting mess with actual Jeopardy. Will SNL truly give its view on the host-changing fiasco, maybe through “Black Jeopardy”?
I guess we’re waiting on the official outcome before we harp on what has happened [laughs] so far. That’s usually how it goes. We have to wait for the finished story, so we can actually reflect it, basically. Right now, it’s still fluctuating or something, or did they finally land on a host?
For the rest of the year, Mayim Bialik and Ken Jennings are sharing things until they really figure it out.
Exactly, so I guess there will be little touches like me doing LeVar Burton in the Cold Open. And little mentions of LeVar, like the week before, I played Levar B. Burton because he’s in the zeitgeist right now, but as far as doing the whole journey of the Jeopardy! host, we’ll just have to wait until the end.
With interviews about commercials, things can get really random. When Ice-T did that Tide commercial, we talked about, you know, Twitter. Speaking of which, I saw that you saw that Dionne Warwick called you out. Did you figure out why?
[Laughs] Not yet! But I’m intrigued. I think it’s so hilarious that Dionne Warwick tweets so much. It’s really funny. She was definitely on Ego [Nwodim]’s back when she did the impression, so I just think that’s great. We’ve got action with Dionne Warwick out there, that’s an awesome thing.
So how does an LA-to-New York guy like yourself get involved with Autotrader?
You know, they called! Luckily, I was checking a lot of boxes with them as far as people who could be potential faces for their brand right now. When they called and talked about their platform, I mean, I was familiar with Autotrader, but I wasn’t as familiar with all the advances that they’re making with their product, so I just thought it was great. And it was an easy thing for me to do. It was like a one-day shoot, so it checked a lot of boxes for me, too. It was a nice, pretty even conversation. I like what they’re doing. The car-buying experience is easier probably than it’s even been in history. It’s right there in the palm of your hand, and the car gets delivered to your house. That’s the thing.
Well, buying a car, traditionally speaking, is not a very fun experience.
Yeah, it’s a tough deal! Going and shopping and figuring out, “Which brand do I want?” Walking that strip in everybody’s town that’s just dealership row and just trying to figure out which one fits and what you want and what you can afford. Those are usually two very different things. They’ve really broken it down to a way where you can skip a lot of headaches and still have the involvement of the car salesman as well, so it’s not like you’re cutting out the middleman or anything like that. It’s just making it convenient for the everyday guy like myself.
You’re an everyday guy whose sitcom got renewed for a second season. Did NBC’s Kenan seem overdue to you?
I’m a big believer in destiny, so I believe that things work out like they’re supposed to. It doesn’t really help for me to have a chip on my shoulder like, “Oh, I should have done this years ago!” Because that might sour what I’m trying to do right now. I want to feel appreciative in the moment and just go to work happy and dedicated because I am doing the show, and nothing is necessarily promised. Not even tomorrow, so I just try to approach it that way and just take the blessings as they come and not harp on the fact that the blessings didn’t come when I expected them to. They say a lot in church and stuff that, you know, God comes when he’s supposed to and I think there’s validity in that. Things happen when they happen, and I think a better attitude about it is to be grateful when it does happen.
Here’s a tangent for you: Snakes On A Plane recently turned fifteen years old.
Nice!
When was the moment while you were making that movie when you realized it would be such an instant cult classic?
I thought it was gonna be that from the idea. I hadn’t seen an airplane horror movie where snakes get loose on an airplane. I was like, “Oh, that’s a crazy idea in general.” And then Sam Jackson is probably one of the best on-deck players that there’s ever been. Whenever he takes a swing, it’s gonna go somewhere, so that was cool. And they added on the rest of the cast: Julianna [Marguiles] and everyone else. That was before anyone knew Chris Hemsworth’s wife, Elsa [Pataky]. I could tell, just from the vibing. Flex [Alexander] was in there, and he’s my brother, so I got to play a character with him. I was excited about building something with people that I liked… It felt like it had the pedigree. And when I was making it, everyone was taking it very seriously. I was like, “You all know we’re making a comedy, right?”
They were like, no, we’re making an action movie. I was like, “Sure!” And I was right. Everyone took it as a cult comedy because it became kinda silly with CGI snakes, early in the CGI game. It just looked kinda funny, so I enjoyed the whole movement of it becoming cultish. You know, “Get these snakes off this MF-ing plane!” It was becoming a thing even before it came out, so I think I was right in my approach that we should be having fun with it.
Back in the day, what led you to stick with comedy when you were sort-of at a crossroads after Kenan and Kel?
Acting, I guess, was always on my mind, the career trajectory path or whatever, was just going heavy in the comedy direction, so I didn’t feel the need to grind gears to a halt, just as I was getting started in the adult world. The kid world and the adult world are two different things, so I until I was able to get it going in the adult world, and I was qualified to be like, “I’m done with that and did everything I wanted to in comedy,” I was always in the mindset to just keep working and doing it, and then if I get dramatic opportunities, I’ll get a chance to showcase that, and it’ll be a thing later down the line.
I’ve read that a lot of funny people have a hard time turning off their comedy during downtime, and they always feel the need to entertain. Do you ever feel that way?
I guess it’s different for me because I approach entertainment through acting, so yeah, I can turn it off and on, I think. But like, my sense of humor and the need to laugh never goes away, but the need to entertain others, I don’t know if I have that itch.
It’s probably so much easier that you can turn it off at home.
Yeah! And I also don’t wanna, like, annoy my family.
No matter how cool you are in real life, your kids are never gonna tell you that you’re cool.
Yeah, they’re living their life. So, if I have jokes that actually pertain to their life and are on point, and what they’re going through and the timing of their day, yeah, they’ll laugh. But if I’m just making jokes like a jokester guy, I’m just their dad telling jokes.
We’re out of time, but if you could join any drama on TV right now, as a guest, what would it be?
It’s gotta be Law and Order: SVU, man. That’s the longest moving thing, that’s the mothership. Shout out to Ice-T.
500 episodes!
23 years and counting. Good for him.
Let’s get you on there.
Incredible.
‘SNL’ is currently cranking through its 47th season, and you can find out more about Autotrader’s “Finally, It’s Easy” ad campaign at their website.
Peep the Washington Wizards’ rotation from their opening night, 98-83 victory over the Toronto Raptors. Look who saw the floor. There are a whole lot of guards: Bradley Beal, Spencer Dinwiddie, Aaron Holiday, Raul Neto, and Kentavious Caldwell-Pope. There are also a whole lot of big men: Kyle Kumza, Daniel Gafford, Davis Bertans, Montrezl Harrell, and Deni Avdija.
Squint and you can call Caldwell-Pope, Kuzma, and Avdija wings, sure. But the boundaries of that general classification are being stretched. This team is quite oddly constructed, with two excellent creators in Beal and Dinwiddie, and an assortment of play-finishers, both beyond the arc and at the rim, alongside them.
While the importance of “wings” to high-level basketball has probably been overstated in recent seasons, a balanced roster is still prudent. How Washington chisels together minutes on the wings remains a looming question mark for the year. Perhaps the 15th overall pick from July’s Draft, Corey Kispert, fights his way into the rotation. Maybe, Caldwell-Pope can truly assume those duties on a nightly basis. Is Avdija primed for a sophomore leap that sees him ready to handle more perimeter responsibilities defensively? Strength, ironically enough, is not a strength for this club.
Three-guard lineups appear to be expanding in popularity as of late. The Wizards frequented them last year and look as though they’ll do so again this season. But poor wing depth buried them in their first-round series with the Philadelphia 76ers. They had no avenue to upsize their lineups and compete against the Sixers’ jumbo trio of Joel Embiid, Tobias Harris, and Ben Simmons.
Any team that marries offensive juice with brawn will pose issues for Washington’s current rotation. Alleviating this hole in their approach could help differentiate them between a squad struggling to tread water on the heels of the play-in and a squad whose offensive firepower has it vying for one of a top-eight seed. The latter outcome is assuredly on the higher end, but seems plausible with a little bit of good fortune because there is clearly talent across the roster.
Beal, for all his defensive gaffes, is a borderline All-NBA guard. In his last healthy year, Dinwiddie was just on the outskirts of All-Star contention. Gafford looks poised to expand his second-half breakout into a full year of exceptional rim-running and viable defense. Caldwell-Pope is a good 3-and-D role player, and spearheads a cast of useful role players.
Projecting them to be good enough to rise above the play-in is far-fetched, but hosting a play-in game is not unreasonable in the rosiest of circumstances. That, however, can skew closer to reality if legitimate wing depth emerges and incorporates more stylistic diversity into the Wizards’ day-to-day possibilities.
The Rundown is a weekly column that highlights some of the biggest, weirdest, and most notable events of the week in entertainment. The number of items could vary, as could the subject matter. It will not always make a ton of sense. Some items might not even be about entertainment, to be honest, or from this week. The important thing is that it’s Friday, and we are here to have some fun.
ITEM NUMBER ONE — They did it
Only Murders in the Buildingwas a blast. This shouldn’t have been a surprise. The show stars Steve Martin and Martin Short and Selena Gomez. It opened with a dead body and a mystery. Guest stars like Nathan Lane and Tina Fey and Jane Lynch popped up here and there, and some of them had names like “Sazz Pataki.” There was a gentle skewering of true crime podcasts that featured a show-within-a-show podcast, all of which resulted in a kind of fourth-wall-shattering series of winks at the audience. Again, none of us should have been surprised by the quality at play here. Steve Martin rarely misses. The guy has been hitting dingers for decades now. But I guess it’s still worth noting.
The bigger thing in all of it — and again, shouldn’t have been a surprise, but still — is that they nailed the ending. I’m going to dance around the specific hows and whys for now, just because some of you probably didn’t watch it yet and deserve this experience. (It’s 10 half-hour episodes. You can rip through it this weekend. We’ll come back to this.) All you need to know is that it ended with a satisfying resolution that tied up the murder without losing an ounce of the comedy and still managed to set things up pretty nicely for a second season. Also, for reasons that are not important for our discussion here but very important to the events of the show, Steve Martin’s character went mostly limp and ended up doing, well, this.
HULU
I do not think I can put into words how funny this was. It wasn’t just this bit I GIFed, either. This all went on for a while. Steve Martin is a 76-year-old man and is still out here putting on a master class in physical comedy for the price of a Hulu subscription. This wasn’t even his funniest bit from the whole endeavor. The funniest bit centered around a big dramatic speech he kind of delivered at the end. It was incredible. Maybe the hardest I’ve laughed at anything that happened on television this year, give or take a live news blooper or two. This is high praise from me. It’s a good show. Please watch it. You can watch your bleak and depressing murder shows later. Make room for the fun murder show. You deserve it.
You know what else I liked about it? The thing I mentioned earlier about it being 10 30-minute episodes. That was nice. As was the thing where the episodes came out one at a time every Tuesday. There can be something satisfying about a binge, about sitting down and crushing a show from beginning to end in one afternoon or sleepless night, but there’s also something nice about carving out 30 minutes a week and then just, like, putting the show away until the next week. Let the action sit and stew for a bit. Read some blogs about it all. And so on.
There’s a chance this is just a remnant of my brain being wired to consume television this way. Maybe it’s just comforting to me to have one episode every week instead of having an entire season dropped in my lap, just because that’s how I consumed it for the first few decades of my life. But I think it’s also because I like the community aspect of watching a show this way, with everyone at the same point in the narrative for a few days. There are cool conversations that bubble up that way. People who are behind can get caught up. It’s not the isolating experience binge-watching can be, and a big part of why I dig Ted Lasso and Succession so much. I like talking about television at least as much as I like watching it. It’s one of the reasons I’m doing this job while my law degree collects dust in a closet. “One of” is doing a lot of work in that sentence.
But I’m getting off-track here. The point I’m making is that Only Murders in the Building was a ton of fun. It might end up being one of my three or four favorite shows this year, depending what happens in the last two-ish months. A lot of that is the obvious stuff, the Steve Martin and Martin Short and potty-mouthed Selena Gomez of it all. But a lot of it was the last 30 minutes. It’s not an easy trick to pull off, providing a solid resolution without sacrificing the tone while also kicking open the door to a potential new story. I guess the lesson here is to let people who know what they’re doing make cool stuff and stay out of their way about it.
I mean, that and “let Steve Martin do elevator things if he wants because it will probably be pretty funny.” So… two lessons, really.
ITEM NUMBER TWO — We are now one step closer to the Jennifer Coolidge extended universe
HBO Max
The White Lotus was a lot of fun, to the degree that any show about a bunch of rich people having a miserable Hawaiian vacation can be fun, which, as it turns out, as I said, is a lot. HBO picked up the show for another season and creator Mike White said his ideal situation involves some — not all — of the cast returning for another go-round at another luxurious hotel in another scenic location where another collection of presumably wealthy guests will watch their relaxing getaways go to crap.
This, to be clear, is lovely, and kind of what Knives Out is doing by plopping Daniel Craig’s character in new situations to investigate new murders committed by one or more new goofballs. And it brings me great pleasure to report — er, re-report — that the first and possibly only uniting link between the first and second seasons will be Jennifer Coolidge’s character. This is good news. Because Jennifer Coolidge rules. From TV Line:
In a recent interview with TVLine, White shared his desire to potentially bring back a few Season 1 favorites. “I don’t think you can credibly have [all the Season 1 guests] on the same vacation again,” he explained. “But maybe it could be a Marvel Universe type thing, where some of them would come back. We only made one-year deals with the actors, so we’d have to find out who is even available.”
This is cool. I hope the show runs for 10 seasons and every season opens with Jennifer Coolidge checking into a new five-star hotel. Hell, use CGI or camera tricks or an elaborate system of mirrors to give us two Jennifer Coolidges and have her play her own twin, too. Cross the third season over with the third Knives Out and let her and Daniel Craig’s character solve a murder. And then get married? Hmm. Maybe. I’ll need to think about the last part a little more. We have some time.
I’m serious about the twin thing, though. That’s a good idea. Listen to me, please.
ITEM NUMBER THREE — The good shows are coming back
BREAKING: Big announcement from Sir Anthony Hopkins and Jason Sudeikis (and Ron something) #MythicQuest is returning for Seasons 3 & 4 pic.twitter.com/OugCaIWwjv
Okay, good news: Mythic Quest has been renewed for a third and fourth season. That’s what Rob McElhenney and Anthony Hopkins and Jason Sudeikis are saying in the video up there, which you should watch because it’s about as good as anyone can do with an announcement like this. Mythic Quest is so good. It is so, so good, funny and sweet and sometimes sad, kind of like a version of Ted Lasso that’s about video games. And, like Ted Lasso, it’s on Apple TV, which you probably have. You should check it out if you haven’t. We’ve talked about this.
Want more good news? Of course, you do. And I have some: Barry is coming back, too. Barry is also good. The first two seasons played with a fascinating silly/dark balance and introduced the world to NoHo Hank, who remains one of my, oh, let’s say 10-15 favorite characters on all of television. Collider interviewed Bill Hader this week and he talked about the upcoming third season in a way that made me very excited.
I don’t know if I could tease really anything because so much stuff happens. We had some people come in and shoot stuff who’ve been in the other seasons and yesterday actually they came in and they have this kind of cameo part this season. And I showed them a still from the first episode and they were shocked and they went, whoa, what? I was like, yeah. So that was a fun reaction so I’m interested to see what people think about it.
Yes, I am also interested to see what people think about it. People like, for example, me. I want to see what I think about it. Soon. Today, if possible. And Hader also revealed that they’ve written the entire fourth season, so now I want to see that, too. I stand by what I said about it all being good news, but it is a little evil as well, with the waiting. Evil and good. Kind of like NoHo Hank.
Hey, do you want even more good news? Because I have some. Ready? Atlanta is coming back soon, too. Brian Tyree Henry, Paper Boi himself, revealed that the third season is all shot and ready to be edited. But, because Brian Tyree Henry is awesome, he revealed it in a cool way. On the red carpet of Eternals. By saying this, via Slashfilm:
“We’re done. We finally got that season in the can, everyone please stop yelling. It is coming, I had to be a superhero first, okay?”
You know what? Fine. I guess I can’t get upset if this is the reason. It’s a terrific excuse to keep in your pocket to try out sometime. It probably won’t work for you, I guess, but, like, worth a shot, you know?
ITEM NUMBER FOUR — The important thing to remember here is that they did not have to do this
Lionsgate
Mel Gibson was cast in a lead role in the new John Wick prequel series that is coming to Starz next year. This is another one of those Two Things Can Be True situations. Here, I’ll explain:
I have no doubt that he will be good in whatever the role ends up being, because Mel Gibson is and has been an on-camera charisma bomb for almost 40 years now
It kind of stinks
It stinks for a few reasons, too, but it mostly stinks because it would have been so incredibly easy to just… not do it. They could have cast anyone. Walton Goggins. Bob Odenkirk. Russell Crowe. Kelsey Grammer. There are so many options. Almost a limitless number, in that the category we’re looking at here is “anyone but Mel Gibson.” It didn’t even need to be someone that mega-famous. The John Wick of it all can carry it. I mean, look at this sucker.
The Continental will explore the origin behind the hotel-for-assassins, which increasingly has become the centerpiece of the John Wick universe. This will be accomplished through the eyes and actions of a young Winston Scott, who is dragged into the Hell-scape of a 1975 New York City to face a past he thought he’d left behind. Winston charts a deadly course through the New York’s mysterious underworld in a harrowing attempt to seize the iconic hotel, which serves as the meeting point for the world’s most dangerous criminals. No word yet on who’ll play Winston Scott (the hotel owner is played in the films by Ian McShane). Gibson will play a character named Cormac.
Buddy, we can easily make this go without bringing Mel Gibson and all of his baggage into it. Everyone would have been fine, too. The show would have been fine. I would have been fine. Mel Gibson and his $400 million net worth would have been fine. But now… blech. We had a cool idea for a series that I was all excited about and now… blech. And no one had to do any of it. Just an unforced error. That’s why it’s such a bummer. Once again, and you can quote me on this, blech. Please fix it.
ITEM NUMBER FIVE — Look at Guillermo!
FX
A brief note about last week’s episode of What We Do in the Shadows, in part because I didn’t mention it last week and in part because big stuff happened this week that I don’t want to spoil yet: LOOK AT GUILLERMO.
I suppose I should supply a tiny bit of context for those of you who don’t watch the show:
Guillermo is a human who works for a legendary warrior vampire named Nandor the Relentless
We found out recently that he is actually descended from the Van Helsing line of vampire slayers
Nandor had been sucked into a fitness-based cult that bases its teachings on the song “One Week” by Barenaked Ladies
You should know all of this. You should be watching the show. If you did watch the show, you would’ve already seen Guillermo spray holy water on a slew of fitness vampires, without looking at the GIF up there. You would have also seen him do this…
FX
… and this…
FX
… and, incredibly, this.
FX
Guillermo went full-“John Wick at the Russian disco” on a bunch of aerobics-obsessed vampires. It was awesome. He used a hula hoop to kill one, which is somehow still only the second coolest hula-hoop-related piece of business from this year of television, sliding in just behind Coach Beard dancing with one in a neon disco located under a church in an episode of Ted Lasso.
To recap:
What We Do in the Shadows — good
Coach Beard — good
Hula hoops — surprisingly versatile
I’m glad we had this talk.
ITEM NUMBER SIX — Mustache chat
mark goodson productions
GQ interviewed Steve Harvey about his transformation into a style king. That’s great. Good for him. Go on his Instagram and Twitter if you want to see all of that. I have other things I want to talk about. Specifically, I want to talk about his mustache. I want to talk about something he said about his mustache. I want to talk about… well, this.
Steve, something you’re so well-known for is the mustache. I wonder, does that affect how you think about these outfits? It seems to me like it’s part of the look.
Harvey: He has to work around the mustache.
Karamoh: There’s no way, I can’t not work around it.
Harvey: You come in here talking about, “We going to take the mustache off,” you will lose your job. You cannot take the mustache off, so everything got to work around the mustache, man.
I took the mustache off when I was in college, when I was pledging. When I took it off, I discovered something: the distance from the top of my top lip to the tip of my nose is about four feet. It looks like a fucking sheet of plywood if I take my mustache off. So that can’t happen, partner.
Imagine you get a job as Steve Harvey’s stylist and you tell all your family and friends and you show up on your first day with a plan of going big and shaking things up and you say “First of all, I’m thinking we lose the mustache” and Steve Harvey straight-up fires you on the spot and you have to go back and explain all of that to all the people you bragged to about getting the gig in the first place. Brutal.
But…
Now imagine you’re at a bar and there’s an old guy sitting next to you — just a mess, rumpled clothes, scraggly beard — and the bartender flips the muted television over to a rerun of Family Feud and the old guy suddenly becomes very animated and starts shouting “THAT SON OF A BITCH RUINED MY LIFE” and you get him calmed down and eventually he explains to you that he was a rising star in the fashion industry until Steve Harvey fired him and had him blackballed for suggesting a clean-shaven look. Hilarious.
Life is all about perspective.
READER MAIL
If you have questions about television, movies, food, local news, weather, or whatever you want, shoot them to me on Twitter or at [email protected] (put “RUNDOWN” in the subject line). I am the first writer to ever answer reader mail in a column. Do not look up this last part.
From Tony:
Be honest, how happy were you on a scale of 1-10 when you watched the trailer for RPattz Is Batman and heard them drop a “we’re not so different”? Because I was at about a 9 and I didn’t even care about that line until you started tweeting about it constantly. Now I hear it everywhere.
Follow-up question: What actor or actress would you most like to hear do a “not so different”? I feel like you’re going to say Giamatti but I’ll hang up and listen.
What a great email. To answer your first question: a full 10, for a few different reasons. First of all, because it genuinely tickles me whenever I hear that line. It’s one of those phrases I’ve heard thousands of times in movies and television shows and have never once heard a real person say in a normal conversation. Second, because my mentions on Twitter started lighting up like a Christmas tree as soon as it happened, which says pretty much exactly what I want it to say about my stupid brand. And third, because it allowed me to make this screencap.
USA
Ahh, whoops. That appears to be Katherine Heigl doing a “not so different” on the USA drama Suits. I have a lot of these screencaps. Here’s the correct one.
wb
To answer your second question… yes. Absolutely Giamatti. In any fair and decent universe, he would have already done it a dozen times on Billions alone. Fix this one, too. Please. For me.
A group of rampant hippopotamuses, introduced by the late Colombia drug lord Pablo Escobar to his private zoo, are being sterilized by the country’s wildlife services, after mounting concern that the 80-strong herd presented a potential environmental disaster as an invasive species.
I do not know if I’ve ever read a sentence that has more going on in it than this one. We get a “rampant hippopotamuses” before the first comma and things somehow get even wilder from there. Students around the country should diagram it in English classes. I am barely joking. I can’t think of many better ways to engage bored rascal teens than by casually dropping in a one-sentence story about a country sterilizing a drug kingpin’s collection of wild hippos in the name of environmental protection.
Something to consider, at least.
The decision to neutralize the herd’s breeding potential comes after a study earlier this year concluded that the animals had become a hazard. The hippos, which were originally introduced to Escobar’s Hacienda Napoles estate, are one of the most enduring legacies of the notorious cocaine trafficker, who was killed by police in 1993.
I’ve known about the cocaine hippos for a long time but, I swear, there is no limit to the number of words I will read about them. Someone needs to write a full-length book titled Cocaine Hippos. Dibs on not it.
Enrique Zerda Ordóñez, a biologist at Colombia’s National University, told CNN earlier this year that chemical castration was the only way forward but acknowledged that sterilizing a hippo is no easy task.
“Sterilizing a hippo is no easy task.”
I…
I mean…
I don’t think anyone assumed otherwise, right?
The Biological Conservation study cited research on the negative effect of hippo faeces on oxygen levels in bodies of water, which can affect fish and ultimately humans. The journal also raised concerns about the transmission of diseases from hippos to humans.
To recap: The Colombian government is sterilizing Pablo Escobar’s collection of horny-horny hippos because they are concerned that the hippos will transmit diseases to humans through the fish that live in the water that the hippos poop in.
I must have this book. Preferably by next summer. Need something to read on the beach.
Last night marked the end of Coldplay’s week-long residency on The Late Late Show, and their time on the show yielded some highlights. For the first three days of the week, they focused on their collaborative tracks from Music Of The Spheres: “Let Somebody Go,” “My Universe,” and “Human Heart.”
For their final performance of the week (The Late Late Show doesn’t air new episodes on Fridays), they went with a feature-free cut, the single “Higher Power.” Visually, they kept things relatively straightforward, as it was just the band on stage with some colorful concert lighting.
The band previously said of the song, “I think people needed to have something uplifting. We wanted to put out this optimism and positivity into everything on this album. The famous story which is going around about this song is how Chris kind of was tapping out the drum pattern on a bathroom sink, and he recorded it on his phone and then went and wrote the song on top of it.”
Watch Coldplay perform “Higher Power” above.
Music Of The Spheres is out now via Parlophone. Get it here.
Coldplay 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.