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Maxo Kream Will Never Buckle Under The ‘Weight Of The World’

The RX is Uproxx Music’s stamp of approval for the best albums, songs, and music stories throughout the year. Inclusion in this category is the highest distinction we can bestow, and signals the most important music being released throughout the year. The RX is the music you need, right now.

There are only so many people in the world that deal with pressure as Maxo Kream does. Through projects like 2018’s Punken, 2019’s Brandon Banks, and now Weight Of The World, the rapper reveals the causes o these pressures as well as what often pushes him through them. In an interview with Complex’s Andre Gee, he explained how the three albums relate to each other and further his goal of helping fans understand what goes on in his world. “I feel like Brandon Banks coming after Punken allowed my fans to understand Punken more,” he said. “So now, with this one, you’ll understand what’s going on from Brandon Banks, like where I left off.”

Throughout Weight Of The World, Maxo delivers clarity for his previous work, as well as clarity towards his current position and his hopeful future. The album presents a man who must balance the multiple worlds he’s immersed in as a family man, supportive friend, experienced gang member, and rapper, as well as the responsibility that arrives when these worlds collide — intentionally or not. He details the collision of the streets and family through the tragic death of his brother Mmadu, which he details on “Trips,” and his success as a rapper providing a better lifestyle for his family and friends, allowing them to live a life away from danger. His hopeful future is captured on “Mama’s Purse” when he raps, “I was tryna buy her love, but I really made it worse / Put a price tag on her love but can’t afford how much it’s worth.” Behind the tough persona lives a man who yearns to provide greener pastures filled with “greener knots” to his inner circle, even if the cost is more than he ever imagined.

While Brandon Banks covered Maxo’s childhood, growth, and his clashes with both loved ones (his father specifically) and the streets, on Weight Of The World, he’s a well-established man with a family of his own in the making. However, now his conflicts are with those who doubt his legitimacy and commitment to the lifestyle he often raps about. On “They Say,” just three songs into the album, he rhymes, “And they say Maxo a b*tch, they say Maxo a h*e / He got rich and he dipped, don’t come around no more / They say he switched on his clique, yeah, he turned on his bros / And he ain’t pimpin’ a b*tch, he out here trickin’ on h*es.” In response, Maxo sets the record straight with a menacing display of his receipts. “Like we ain’t slang that rock for paper, totin’ scissors,” he quips. “Told you worked n****s ass off so how I owe you n****? / ‘Cross the globe, took you to my shows, done bought poles for n****s.” In Maxo’s eyes, there’s more than enough proof that he’s carried the weight of the world for people, making his doubters’ attempts to rewrite history a sure failure.

To a certain extent, Maxo insists on facing the world’s pressures rather than finding a way to diminish them. It could be because this path, as dangerous and as ruthless as it’s been, has given him everything he wanted in life and more. It’s what allows him to rap this on “Big Persona” with Tyler The Creator: “Eight figure n****, no more section 8 / Moved momma out the hood / We ain’t doin good, b*tch, we doin great.” Even when people in his inner circle beg for him to detach himself from the risks, as his mom and preacher do on “Streets Alone,” Maxo’s only response is to double down.

Maxo Kream is more than deserving of a moment to breathe freely in a world without danger. Unfortunately, it appears that Maxo was born into a world where peril lurks around the corner. For Maxo, acquiescing to these dangers is a lot like running away from your own shadow, and that’s something he will never do. “Never ran from a n****, don’t ask if my legs work,” he says on “11:59.” For more than a half-decade, Maxo Kream has explained the many responsibilities, pains, and traumas that rest on his shoulders; on Weight Of The World, the rapper insists on carrying this weight. The ups and downs of the past years gave him the strength to do so, and hasn’t buckled under this weight before, he certainly won’t now.

Weight Of The World is out now via RCA. Get it here.

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All The Best New Indie Music From This Week

Indie music has grown to include so much. It’s not just music that is released on independent labels, but speaks to an aesthetic that deviates from the norm and follows its own weirdo heart. It can come in the form of rock music, pop, or folk. In a sense, it says as much about the people that are drawn to it as it does about the people that make it.

Every week, Uproxx is rounding up the best new indie music from the past seven days. This week we got the hotly anticipated new LP from The War On Drugs, a wonderful Weezer cover from Japanese Breakfast, and a great new track from Spoon. Check out the rest of the best new indie music below.

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The War On Drugs – I Don’t Live Here Anymore

The first new album from The War On Drugs in four years has finally arrived. Musically, I Don’t Live Here Anymore is a refinement of the craft the band explored on 2017’s A Deeper Understanding, which itself was a refinement of 2014’s Lost In The Dream. It’s without a doubt the band’s most accessible material to date, boasting dramatic guitar solos and cathartic instrumentation.

Save Face – Another Kill For The Highlight Reel

It’s always fun to see a band wear their My Chemical Romance inspiration on their sleeve. For Save Face’s new record, the New Jersey outfit attempt to build a musical world that exists as a culmination of emo icons like MCR and Thursday, but also their unabashed love for Broadway musicals like Sweeney Todd and Rocky Horror Picture Show. The resulting effort is big, bold, and impressively constructed.

Japanese Breakfast – Live At Electric Lady EP

Japanese Breakfast’s new Spotify-produced Live At Electric Lady EP features live renditions of tracks from Jubilee, as well as a cover of Weezer’s “Say It Ain’t So.” It’s not exactly a faithful cover, as Michelle Zauner calls upon the the Quartet 121 string section to give the track a true makeover and build what Caitlin White called for Uproxx “a whole new layer into the song.”

Orson Wilds – What Is It That You Won’t Let Go EP

Canadian outfit Orson Wilds write big, anthemic choruses that feel like a callback to the aughts. Their debut EP, What Is It That You Can’t Let Go, was recorded with producer extraordinaire Will Yip (Bartees Strange, Turnstile) and features three previously-released tracks that have been staples of all my playlists since they were unveiled.

Boston Manor – Desperate Times Desperate Pleasures EP

Boston Manor’s 2020 LP Glue was an impressive step forward for the pop-punk outfit, balancing more melodic vocals with heavy, groovy instrumentation. The new EP Desperate Times Desperate Measures continues building upon that momentum, driving into a new era for Boston Manor as they emerge back onto the road.

Spoon – “The Hardest Cut”

One of the most consistent indie bands of all time is officially back with a brand new album that already sounds… pretty good! Alongside the album’s announcement, the band shared “The Hardest Cut,” which Derrick Rossignol calls for Uproxx “a pure rocker driven by a forward-moving and upbeat riff.”

Snail Mail – “Madonna”

With the new Snail Mail album Valentine set to drop this week, Lindsey Jordan has shared its final preview in the form of “Madonna.” The polished, driving rocker is all about “why love can’t exist between a person and a concept of a person,” Jordan explained in a statement. “Remove the pedestal and you might realize there was never anything there at all.”

Beach Bunny – “Oxygen”

Beach Bunny can’t be stopped. One of the first indie rock bands to rocket to stardom from a TikTok smash, the Chicago quartet is set to embark on 32 sold out headline shows later this month and is celebrating with a brand new track. “Oxygen” features what Adrian Spinelli calls for Uproxx “yet another sing-a-long hook for a band who just can’t seem to stop to keep producing them.”

Michelle – “Mess U Made”

I’ve been digging New York City collective Michelle for a while and truly can’t wait for their forthcoming debut album After Dinner We Talk Dreams. We’ve already heard a few tracks from the LP, and album opener “Mess U Made” is a contemplative slow burning track that continues to build as the group’s four vocalists trade verses before finding gorgeous joint harmonies on the chorus.

Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

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‘Game Of Thrones’ Actress Gemma Whelon Compared The Show’s Sex Scenes To A ‘Frenzied Mess’

The Game of Thrones cast has been outspoken about the show’s plentiful sex scenes. Emilia Clarke (Daenerys) thanked showrunners David Benioff and Dan Weiss for the episode where the Mother of Dragons instructs Daario Naharis to take his clothes off (“That’s a scene I’ve been waiting for!”), while Sophie Turner (Sansa) made a dirty joke about Arya losing her virginity. On the flip side, Nikolaj Coster-Waldau (Jaime) has criticized the show for making the performers do “degrading” things, and now Gemma Whalen (Arya) has opened up about how the sex scenes were a “frenzied mess.”

The Killing Eve actress told the Guardian, “They used to just say, ‘When we shout action, go for it!’, and it could be a sort of frenzied mess. But between the actors there was always an instinct to check in with each other.” Whelan brought up a specific example.

“There was a scene in a brothel with a woman and she was so exposed that we talked together about where the camera would be and what she was happy with. A director might say, ‘Bit of boob biting, then slap her bum and go!’, but I’d always talk it through with the other actor.”

Whelan also praised her on-screen brother, Alfie Allen (Theon), for a, um, memorable encounter in season two. “Alfie was very much, ‘Is this OK? How are we going to make this work?’ With intimacy directors, it’s choreography – you move there, I move there, and permission and consent is given before you start. It is a step in the right direction,” she said.

Whelan can be seen in the ITV series, The Tower, which premieres next week.

(Via the Guardian)

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Terrace Martin’s New Album ‘Drones’ Will Feature Cordae, Kendrick Lamar, And Ty Dolla Sign

Although Terrace Martin’s last solo full-length collection came out four years ago (2017’s criminally overlooked Sounds Of Crenshaw Vol. 1 with The Pollyseeds), the Los Angeles producer has nevertheless remained busy throughout the past year, co-producing a number of EPs including They Call Me Disco with Ric Wilson and joining the jazz supergroup Dinner Party with 9th Wonder, Kamasi Washington, and Robert Glasper. However, today he announced his solo return with Drones, a new album coming out this Friday, November 5.

Included on the album’s 13 tracks are appearances from a veritable who’s-who of hip-hop luminaries including Cordae, D Smoke, Kendrick Lamar, Smino, Snoop Dogg, Ty Dolla Sign, and YG. Martin’s Dinner Party bandmates Kamasi Washington and Robert Glasper are also set to appear, along with a genre-hopping collection of rising stars and well-known hitmakers including Arin Ray, Celeste, Channel Tres, Hit-Boy, James Fauntleroy, Kim Burrell, and Kim Burrell.

In his press release for the new album, Martin teases the eclectic mix of sounds he intends to display throughout: “There are touches of R&B, touches of jazz, touches of hip-hop, touches of classical, Cuban music, West African music, house music,” he says. “You’re going to hear all elements of Black music within this record. It’s not one element I can leave out if I call myself a true Black artist.”

Drones is due 11/5 via Sounds of Crenshaw / BMG. You can pre-order here and check out the lead single, “Leave Us Be,” above.

Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

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Spiritualized Announce The New Album ‘Everything Was Beautiful’ With The Epic ‘Always Together With You’

2018’s And Nothing Hurt was Spiritualized’s first album in six years. Their next full-length won’t take that long to arrive, as they announced today that their ninth album, Everything Was Beautiful, is coming out on February 25, 2022. They also shared the record’s lead single, “Always Together With You,” an epic tune that gradually blooms over the course of nearly seven minutes.

J Spaceman (aka Jason Pierce) says of the album, “There was so much information on it that the slightest move would unbalance it, but going around in circles is important to me. Not like you’re spiraling out of control but you’re going around and around and on each revolution you hold onto the good each time. Sure, you get mistakes as well, but you hold on to some of those too and that’s how you kind of… achieve. Well, you get there.”

He also noted of making it, “There’s a line from Jonathan Meades that’s about having all the attributes to being an artist. ‘Paranoia, vanity, selfishness, egotism, sycophancy, resentment, moral nullity and more idiot than idiot savant.’ And that’s what it feels like, this kind of thing. You’re your own worst enemy and biggest supporter. “There’s a ‘Of course this is worth it. It’s me,’ and then this kind of deep doubt of ‘What the f*ck is this all about?’ And then ‘Why is it important?’ and then knowing there’s no easy answer. But it’s there. I know it’s there.”

Watch the “Always Together With You” video above and find the Everything Was Beautiful art and tracklist below. The band also announced a run of North American tour dates, so find those below as well.

Spiritualized Everything Was Beautiful
Fat Possum

1. “Always Together With You”
2. “Best Thing You Never Had (The D Song)”
3. “Let It Bleed (For Iggy)”
4. “Crazy”
5. “The Mainline Song”
6. “The A Song (Laid In Your Arms)”
7. “I’m Coming Home Again”

03/31/2022 — Dallas, TX @ Granada Theater
04/01/2022 — Austin, TX @ Scoot Inn
04/03/2022 — Santa Fe, NM @ Meow Wolf
04/04/2022 — Denver, CO @ Ogden Theatre
04/05/2022 — Salt Lake City, UT @ The Commonwealth Room
04/07/2022 — Seattle, WA @ Neptune
04/08/2022 — Portland, OR @ Revolution Hall
04/09/2022 — Vancouver, BC @ Commodore Ballroom

Everything Was Beautiful is out 2/25/2022 via Fat Possum. Pre-order it here.

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Lil Nas X Says He Regrets The First Big Purchase He Made With His Record Label Money

Lil Nas X is definitely an example of a self-starter. The musician’s debut smash hit “Old Town Road” was first uploaded to SoundCloud and shared on TikTok before being picked up by a record label. So when Lil Nas X first inked a recording contract, he celebrated by making a big purchase — which he now regrets.

When Lil Nas X first signed a record deal with Columbia, the musician was suddenly confronted with a bunch of money. As most people would do, Lil Nas X decided to buy himself something nice to celebrate, he recalled in a recent interview with the Wall Street Journal. For his first post-record contract purchase, Lil Nas X shelled out $2,000 for a a Burberry jacket but then had almost instantaneous buyer’s remorse. He told WSJ he’s never really enjoyed shopping for himself and saw the jacket as a frivolous purchase. “What was the point? To post it on Instagram once?” he said. Later down the line, Lil Nas X ended up buying himself a house with his new funds, which still to this day hasn’t been filled with many furniture items because he’d “rather take his friends or family members out on shopping sprees instead.”

Elsewhere in the conversation, the musician described the one thing that helped him really open up with the lyrics on his album: psychedelic mushrooms. “I was able to open up a lot,” he says about the trip. “I was able to write actual stories about my life and put it into my music. I actually did that for the first time.” Lil Nas X isn’t the only musician who has taken mushrooms to help kickstart the creative process. Kacey Musgraves did the same with her Star-Crossed album, and so did Harry Styles on Fine Line.

Read Lil Nas X’s full interview with The Wall Street Journal here.

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The CEO Of One Of Britain’s Biggest Banks Has Resigned Over His Shady Ties To Jeffrey Epstein

It’s now been more than two years since Jeffrey Epstein’s death, yet the sheer mention of his name alone in connection to another person is enough for any former associate to call in for serious damage control. (See: Bill Gates and Prince Andrew.) Now Jes Staley—who, until this week, was CEO of Barclays—is the one in the hotseat.

As The Washington Post reported, Staley stepped down from his post as the head of one of England’s biggest banks on Monday following an investigation into his relationship with Epstein, a financier and alleged sex trafficker who was reportedly pals with some of the world’s richest and most powerful people—oh, and Donald Trump, too.

Though the details of what the investigation unearthed have not been made public, Staley must not have liked what he saw because he had apparently planned to contest them. What we do know is that Staley has asserted his relationship with Epstein was totally on the up-and-up and strictly professional. Staley also claimed that his dealings with the disgraced financier ended before he took up his post at Barclays. Bloomberg ran a thorough timeline of key moments in Staley and Epstein’s relationship, including the time—in April 2015—when Staley and his wife sailed their boat to Epstein’s private island (a detail that had not been previously disclosed).

According to a statement from Barclays:

Barclays and Mr. Jes Staley, Group Chief Executive, were made aware on Friday evening of the preliminary conclusions from the FCA and the PRA of their investigation into Mr. Staley’s characterization to Barclays of his relationship with the late Mr. Jeffrey Epstein and the subsequent description of that relationship in Barclays’ response to the FCA. In view of those conclusions, and Mr. Staley’s intention to contest them, the Board and Mr. Staley have agreed that he will step down from his role as Group Chief Executive and as a director of Barclays. It should be noted that the investigation makes no findings that Mr. Staley saw, or was aware of, any of Mr. Epstein’s alleged crimes, which was the central question underpinning Barclays’ support for Mr. Staley following the arrest of Mr. Epstein in the summer of 2019.

The Board is disappointed at this outcome… The regulatory process still has to run its full course and it is not appropriate for Barclays to comment further on the preliminary conclusions.

(Via The Washington Post)

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Odell Beckham Sr. Shared An 11-Minute Long Video Of His Son Being Open Leading To People Like LeBron Tweeting #FreeOBJ

The Cleveland Browns were supposed to be a contender to win the AFC this season after taking the leap last year to being a playoff team. With Baker Mayfield back with a full season under his belt in Kevin Stefanski’s offense, plenty of weapons around him including the expected return of Odell Beckham Jr., much of Cleveland’s attention in the offseason went to the defense.

However, eight weeks into the season and the Browns are 4-4, sitting in fourth in the AFC North and tied for seventh in the AFC, barely clinging to a playoff spot. Injuries have hit the Browns hard, but they also can’t seem to get out of their own way, with an offense that has seemingly taken a step back from last year. Baker Mayfield is at the center of that, with a lot of discussion shifting to how he seemingly can’t or won’t get the ball to his wide receivers, most notably Beckham Jr.

It has been a few weeks now of debate within Browns Twitter about whether there’s an issue between Mayfield and Beckham, and after a dismal 10-point performance in a loss to Pittsburgh on Sunday as Mayfield returned to play with a banged up left shoulder, the chatter only got louder. Tuesday, it reached a fever pitch when Odell Beckham Sr. posted an 11-minute long video someone made of his son being open only to see Mayfield either miss him or not throw him the ball — which you can watch in its entirety above.

To say things are bad in Cleveland would seem to be an understatement, and the optics of all of this are very bad for everyone involved. Given OBJ’s reputation as a diva receiver, fair or not, having your father post videos about how you aren’t getting the ball enough isn’t a great look. The video also brings into question plenty about Baker’s abilities to run an offense to its maximum capacity, as there certainly are a lot of apparent missed opportunities — even if some of the plays in question aren’t really misses but OBJ coming open late in routes on the backside of plays.

All of this has led to Browns fans taking sides between Baker and OBJ, and many prominent fans, namely LeBron James, are in Beckham’s camp and want to #FreeOBJ.

With the trade deadline hours away, we’ll see if that happens, but for a Browns team that finally seemed ready to shake free of two decades of dysfunction, a relapse appears to be taking place.

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With ‘Last Night In Soho,’ Edgar Wright Is Taking Nothing For Granted These Days

From the outside looking in, it sure seems like Edgar Wright has been taking some big swings with his films – like his latest, Last Night in Soho, which is currently in theaters – ever since, as Wright puts it, the movie that “nearly” happened did not actually happen. (For the sake of clarity, that movie would be his version of Ant-Man, even though below it’s often referenced as “the movie that didn’t happen.”) But there’s a difference between being on the outside looking in and actually being the person in that position, like Wright is and was.

It’s interesting because he paints a very different picture than we might think. We might look at Wright as someone who walked away from the machine and did his own thing. Which, sure, there’s some truth in that. But, as Wright explains, we don’t get to see the self-doubt part. Of a filmmaker who didn’t know at the time if he still had a career or not.

Since that important moment in Wright’s career, he’s made Baby Driver, a documentary on Sparks, and now what is, arguably (but barely arguably), his most ambitious film to date, Last Night in Soho.

In Last Night in Soho, Ellie (Thomasin McKenzie) moves to London to become a fashion designer. Ellie rents a room from a mysterious woman, Ms, Collins (Diana Rigg). Ellie starts seeing visions of the past, namely Sandie (Anya Taylor-Joy), a young singer trying to make it in London in the 1960s. Lines start to get blurred between who is Sandie and who is Ellie, and the movie takes a more and more sinister tone (with a final act we won’t spoil).

Wright has had the idea for this movie for over ten years now. And he explains the, let’s say, unique path to get to the point where he is now: as a filmmaker making original studio movies. Which, yes, is a true rarity nowadays. And if you’ve paid attention to Wright’s social media at all, you’ll see he’s been everywhere promoting this movie. If anything, he wants you to know – especially after “the movie that didn’t happen” – he doesn’t take any of this for granted.

Judging from your social media, I just don’t think you’re promoting this movie enough. I don’t think you’re just getting out there and showing it to people. What happened to your work ethic?

I know it might seem like I’m a tireless self-promoter, but on Monday morning I will explode into dust.

I don’t think you’re a tireless self-promoter. I do think you care about this movie.

Well, the tricky thing in this day and age is social media is, in some ways, is a great thing. And there’s this whole point where you kind of think, at some point, I think I will probably have to stop doing it myself. Because, obviously, that’s probably why some people go more corporate or just have an official account, because there’s a sort of point where you can’t answer everybody’s questions.

Right.

And I feel like I’ve become my own customer service department as well, which is fine because I like talking to fans, but I guess if somebody asks me a question, I feel – maybe it’s because I’m too English and polite – but I feel duty-bound to answer it. But then that on top of doing all the press, it’s been very intense. I feel like this promotion’s almost maybe been even more intense than previous ones, probably.

Oh, why’s that?

I don’t know how you feel, but doing sort of Zoom press is a sort of strangely intense kind of process.

I don’t love it, but you know, that’s where we are at…

Maybe it is as intense as previous press, maybe I’m just getting older and more tired.

Your Twitter has been part of your persona as a director for the last 12 years or whatever. That you are available and out there. So can that be a detriment?

I don’t know… And listen, on the flip side, the positives of it, it’s important I think to show up, especially now. As you know, I’m very passionate about exhibition and the theatrical experience. People get kind of bent out of shape about some comments about it, unless you see the movie on the big screen, you’re not seeing the movie. I wouldn’t say that. I would say: I would love you to have the opportunity to see it on the big screen. And when people sort of say, “Why can’t we stream it on the same day?” I’d be like, “Hey, I came from the UK where we had to wait nine months for my hit movie, so calm down.” You can see it in four weeks. Just calm down.

I think also, what is important to me is kind of showing up, because I think there is a thing where, especially in the kind of current climate like a big star or director tweeting, “Hey, check out my movie in cinemas,” from the confines of their mansion is a bit different from me turning up to a Q&A. I actually did a Q&A with John Krasinski where I moderated A Quiet Place Part II in London. I think U.S. cinemas only reopened, I know they sort of continued in a way…

It was scattershot, depending what state you were in.

And I think A Quiet Place Part II was one of the first kind of big movies to come back and be a hit and people showed up for it. But me and John did a Q&A at a cinema in London. He asked me to moderate. And just walking into the room and people are seeing that we were there, it was such a sort of a warm and sort of emotional response. Almost separate from the movie is the fact that we had showed up was obviously very important for the crowd, and important to me as well. You have to put your money where your mouth is. And if you’re going to tell people, “Come out to the cinema,” you’ve got to go yourself. I would do more if I could.

I don’t doubt you. You’ve been out there.

Then there’s a point like I think on November 1st where I crumble into CGI dust. You know how if you took Keith Richards’ bandanas off, you imagine that he’d just completely fall apart?

That’s you.

That’s what’s going to happen.

So when I spoke to Krysty Wilson-Cairns, she said you’ve had this idea for ten years. Which is around the time I spoke to you and Joe Cornish for Attack the Block. So it was that long ago?

I think the actual idea had been percolating even longer than that, but around that time is when I first said it aloud to my producers Nira Park and Rachel Prior. So I remember pitching the movie, the entire plot, to them before I shot The World’s End, yeah.

Why does it take so long? How does this take 10 years?

Because I did two other movies and [laughs] nearly made a third other one. I guess I made three other movies if you count Sparks. And this is just the order in which things come. Baby Driver was an idea that had been percolating for like 22 years before I made it. It’s like, I did The World’s End, I nearly did another movie. And then I did Baby Driver. You know, Baby Driver itself, that’s like three years work from getting the movie off the ground to sort of finishing the press, so these things take a lot of time. For a director, it’s a minimum two years, maybe three years. I guess the Coen Brothers were knocking them out quicker, but there are two of them and they don’t do any press, which is smart.

Krysty called this movie a Trojan horse, which I thought was really interesting. Baby Driver and Last Night in Soho are big swings. For the people who really know your earlier movies outside and in, do you almost have to prep them with something like Baby Driver first? In that, hey, this one isn’t the early movies, we’re doing something different here?

I mean, the honest thing is that I just feel grateful for the chance to kind of take swings at all. You know, in this climate, the industry in some ways is at its most risk-averse, certainly in terms of, maybe, studio films. There’s a lot of focus on IP and the original movies on the slate are kind of … less. So, when I introduced the movie on Monday at the premiere in front of Universal and Focus and everybody, I said, “I don’t take any of this for granted. The fact that I get to make original movies and they get shown around the world, I’m well aware of how lucky I am, and I sort of grab the opportunity with both hands.”

And that’s how I feel, in a way. I think in a strange way, after Baby Driver – because this idea had been, like I said, percolating for a long time – I just felt like I really want to do this now because I want to do something different. I feel like after Baby Driver, I could maybe afford to kind of do something radically different. The idea of doing something a bit darker and more serious, and also in an area of London that I spend more time in than any other area of London? It is something that just was kind of calling me. And the idea and the story … you either have to give into it or not, you know?

I swore I wasn’t going to bring it up, but you brought it up first, the whole “movie that didn’t happen”…

[Laughs] Actually I take it back…

I know it probably doesn’t work this way, but from the outside looking in, after that doesn’t work out, you take these massive swings with Last Night in Soho and Baby Driver. It’s hard for me not to sit there and think, if I were you, I’d be thinking, “You know what? Screw you, watch this.” But is there actually any of that?

I think the thing is, I mean, I was [pauses] … you know, I can’t tell this story. It’s a good one. I’ll tell you over coffee some time.

Ah, okay.

You know, I think to answer your question… I mean, I think it’s just having the opportunity. I was very heartened by the fact that immediately, you know, people got in touch with me in terms of “what do you want to do next.” And I had Baby Driver already written. And so, the toughest part of it, at the time, was sort of the year between kind of leaving the other project and trying to get Baby Driver off the ground. And that was a point where it might have looked courageous from the outside in terms of, “Oh, Edgar Wright’s going to take a big swing with an original movie.” But there are also the things that you don’t see. The panic of, “Oh my god, what am I going to do if this doesn’t get green lit?”

Right…

Then I’ve really got egg on my face and I’ve spent a year developing it. So then you start kind of thinking, okay, what else can I do? Or just start sort of taking writing jobs and stuff because you’re just putting all of your chips on one thing. And I mean, I think the thing is, I don’t think of it in terms of I’m sort of taking courageous big swings against the machine or anything. It’s more the thing of being given the opportunity to do so: you have to take it.

And if there’s anything sad in the current climate, and I don’t want to mention any names or be too sort of negative and stuff, but there are filmmakers that I feel just kind of got lost in the franchise machine that I would rather see doing original movies, but that isn’t their fault. You know, that might be the thing of they can’t get those things made. Because there would be an alternate reality, which would be this close to Baby Driver, like, “Ah, we can’t make it work with the budget and can’t get the right actors in and it’s not happening.” And then I’d be like, “Now what the fuck am I going to do?”

So, you know, the chances of that happening are high. And so that’s what I mean when I don’t take it for granted. You know that I’m not complacent about what I do whatsoever. And I know from director friends, people who are kind of working on some passion project, and it just not coming together. And that’s a sort of a side of the business that fans don’t see. And you know, there’s a director that you think, “Why haven’t we heard from so-and-so in a while?” Well, they’ve probably been working harder than they ever have and it’s been not coming together and that part of the business is really tough because getting any movie made is really difficult. So, with all that said, being able to make this movie after Baby Driver? I just consider it a gift because I get to do something that is very sort of personal and idiosyncratic to me, something I really wanted to do. Something that’s British set.

And I have this profound thing when I was watching it. We had the premiere at the Academy Museum on Monday. And the sound in there was amazing and lots of filmmakers and celebrities and people that I knew are there. I was also just looking at it thinking, “I’m watching London in Hollywood.” And I’ll never get over that. I think I felt the same way when I watched Shaun of the Dead or Hot Fuzz in the Arclight or the Cinerama Dome. It’s like, I’m sitting here in Hollywood watching my suburb in North London, or watching my hometown. There’s something about that where just the chance to be an international filmmaker, in the sense of, I have a film that’s London-set, going day and date in the UK and US. I know that’s a big deal and I don’t take it for granted. What it does mean is I have to do twice the amount of work on social media. It’s the only drawback.

You can contact Mike Ryan directly on Twitter.

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Mariah Carey Teams Up With Apple TV+ For The Holiday Special ‘Mariah’s Christmas: The Magic Continues’

Spooky season is officially over, meaning it’s time for Mariah Carey to shine as the reigning Queen of Christmas. The singer ushered in the start of the holidays on Monday by smashing some jack-o’-lanterns with a candy cane. But no holiday season is complete without a showstopping TV special, and Mariah’s got that covered as well.

The singer announced Tuesday that she’s teaming up with Apple TV+ for the exclusive special, Mariah’s Christmas: The Magic Continues. The special will feature a performance by Mariah alongside Grammy Award-winning singer Khalid and famed gospel crooner Kirk Franklin. The trio will give a rendition of their new song “Fall In Love At Christmas,” which was announced Monday and officially drops on Friday.

Per a report from Billboard, Mariah is acting as one of the special’s executive producers, which is fitting seeing as it’s certainly not the first time the singer has starred in a Christmas special. Mariah’s Christmas: The Magic Continues was directed by Joseph Kahn, who is also an executive producer on the special and has worked with major pop stars like Taylor Swift, Britney Spears, and Lady Gaga in the past.

Mariah’s Christmas: The Magic Continues will be available for streaming on Apple TV+ next month. Watch it here.