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Sacha Baron Cohen Broke Character To Discuss The Rudy Giuliani Scene In The ‘Borat’ Sequel

Sacha Baron Cohen appeared as himself, not as Borat, on Good Morning America to discuss the Rudy Giuliani scene from Borat Subsequent Moviefilm, out today.

I will not describe “the Rudy Giuliani scene” (you can read about it here), because we’ve all suffered enough. Although not as much as the actress who plays Borat’s daughter, Maria Bakalova, who was in the hotel room with the disgraced former-mayor. When asked on GMA about what happened, she turned to Baron Cohen and replied, “I want to thank you, that I was sure that you were going to save me from everything.”

Giuliani has called the scene a “totally sensationalized” account and referred to Baron Cohen as a “stone-cold liar,” although he might also think Borat is a real person. It’s bizarre. But what does the actor, appearing out of character for the first time during the press tour (he previously responded as Borat), think about those accusations? “I would say that if the president’s lawyer found what he did there appropriate behavior, then heaven knows what he’s done with other female journalists in hotel rooms,” he said before suggesting that everyone should watch Borat Subsequent Moviefilm. “It is what it is. He did what he did, and make your own mind up. It was pretty clear to us.”

Baron Cohen said he was “quite concerned” for Bakalova during the scene, but that he was in a hideaway the entire scene so he could monitor what was happening. He said, “It’s my responsibility as a producer as well to ensure that the lead actor is looked after.

“I’ve always felt safe with our team, with our crew, with Sacha in my corner,” Bakalova said on GMA. “I actually never felt that I’ve been in danger. That’s why I’m lucky, because I had them.”

You can watch the interview below.

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Haim Got Robert Pattinson To Play An ‘Emotional Vampire’ For Their Spooky ‘Late Night’ Performance

Sometimes when artists perform on late-night shows, they’ll get a guest to join them. Those guests are usually other musicians, but for Haim’s appearance on Late Night With Seth Meyers last night, they got somebody who added to the performance in a different way: Robert Pattinson.

Following Meyers’ introduction, the band’s performance was prefaced by a short skit, which begins with a ringing phone. The call is from a contact named “Emotional Vampire,” which turns out to be Pattinson (who is of course famous for playing a vampire in Twilight). He leaves a late-night video message wondering if the person he’s calling is up, and from there, the band launches into their song, for which they look slightly zombified in their vintage wedding dresses.

The sisters also video chatted in for an interview with Meyers and they discussed how they got Pattinson on board: “The song that we’re doing is ‘3AM,’ and on record, it starts with a voicemail, someone calling at 3 a.m., and basically… it’s a booty call, right? So we needed someone to do this cameo who had game. Even when we were recording the album, we held auditions, so we thought this would be no different.” They said they tried to get Tom Hardy and Benedict Cumberbatch on board, but they didn’t hear back from either actor. Ultimately, Pattinson won the part.

Watch clips from the band’s appearance on Late Night above.

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All The Best New Hip-Hop Albums Coming Out This Week

The best new hip-hop albums coming out this week include projects from Clipping., Comethazine, Dej Loaf, Joyner Lucas, Junglepussy, Tobi, and YRN Murk.

If last week was a doozy, this week is even more jam-packed with new releases from multiple sub-genres of hip-hop and artists both new and established. All of what’s coming out is high-quality though — depending on your taste, of course — and worth checking out.

Here are all the best new hip-hop albums coming out this week.

Blacc Zacc — 803 Legend

Coming from Columbia, South Carolina, Blacc Zacc brings his own unique twist to the bass-heavy crunk rap the Dirty South is known for. With a flair for plainspoken but clever boasts and vivid storytelling, BZ looks to put a new landmark on the Southern Rap map, right in the wide-open lane South Carolina currently inhabits.

Caleb Giles — Meditations

The Bronx, New York native Caleb Giles returns for the third year in a row with his latest album, which once again draws on heavy introspection and hypnotic, revivalist soul loops to build a lyrical wonderland for fans of rappers like Earl Sweatshirt and MIKE.

Clipping. — Visions Of Bodies Being Burned

Experimental hip-hop brings to mind visions of unusual soundscapes and off-kilter rhyme patterns and Clipping. is not only a big part of that, they’re also some of the sub-genres staunchest purveyors. Their latest is built up of all the material that wouldn’t fit on 2019’s There Existed An Addiction To Blood, but these aren’t throwaways. Rather, this is a companion of that album, as evidenced by their matching covers’ tooth and nail themes.

Comethazine — Bawskee 4

The St. Louis-born former XXL Freshman has been on a relentless release schedule, which makes sense considering the self-contained nature of his independent operation. Bawskee 4 is his second project of the year after Pandemic and is actually the fifth installment in his Bawskee series (as signified by its predecessor’s title, Bawskee 3.5).

Dej Loaf — Sell Sole II

It may be hard to wrap your head around, but Sell Sole II will be considered Dej Loaf’s debut album, despite being a fixture in hip-hop for eight years. The original Sell Sole came out in 2012 and since then, Dej has seen the highs and the lows of the game, getting her original debut shelved by Columbia Records despite a solid track record of hits including “Try Me,” “Back Up,” “Me U & Hennessey” and “Ryda.” Now, she’s back on her own terms, returning to the then-futuristic style that still sounds of a piece with where hip-hop is today.

Joyner Lucas — Evolution [EP]

Now that he’s gotten all his old records cleared out with ADHD, Joyner Lucas seems to be finding his stride. He promised that he had “zero intent to make mainstream records” with this project, which contains features from The Game and Ashanti.

Junglepussy — JP4

Two years removed from JP3, raunchy New York City rapper Junglepussy returns with another collection of fierce rhymes and spooky videos to accompany them — just in time for Halloween.

LA VanGogh — Shpeshftr

Breezing out of the Windy City, Chicago, VanGogh surprised me with the sonic quality of his intriguing beats and the rapid-fire wit of his rhymes. His flow is polished and poised and he has an interesting point of view.

Tobi — Elements, Vol. 1

Over the past several years, TOBi has generated an impressive buzz out of Canada with his music detailing his immigrant experience and crossing genres, incorporating dancehall, African music, hip-hop, and R&B.

Wesson Dessir — Apollo Archives

I can’t lie, this one spooked me at first. It seemed almost too geeky for even me, a second-gen, hardcore anime nerd and hip-hop backpacker with broad-spanning interests in Greek and Japanese mythology, philosophy, and Pan-Africanism. Then I realized that yes, this one covers all those bases pretty well. If Lupe Fiasco rapping about dinosaurs is your jam, Apollo Archives might just be one of your favorite projects this year.

YRN Murk — Cranberry Ways

Sprawling out of Migos’ YRN mantra — you may have noticed the acronym adorning many of their social handles — YRN Murk is difficult to find a whole lot of information on but like his compatriots, hails from Atlanta, embraces the finer points of trap rap, and relies heavily on a Lord Infamous-inspired triplet flow that should appeal to fans of the Quality Control brand.

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

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Fans Think Ariana Grande’s New Song ‘Positions’ Includes A Dig At Pete Davidson

Ariana Grande’s new song “Positions” has been out for a few hours now, and fans believe they have made an eyebrow-raising discovery while analyzing the lyrics.

Overall, the song seems to be about Grande’s commitment to boyfriend Dalton Gomez and her willingness to make the relationship work, as she sings on the chorus, “Switchin’ the positions for you / Cookin’ in the kitchen and I’m in the bedroom / I’m in the Olympics, way I’m jumpin’ through hoops / Know my love infinite, nothin’ I wouldn’t do / That I won’t do, switchin’ for you.” It’s some lyrics that come before those ones that are drawing attention, though.

The song’s opening words are, “Heaven sent you to me / I’m just hopin’ I don’t repeat history.” That doesn’t look like much on paper, but on the song, Grande takes an extended pause in the middle of “repeat.” So, it sounds like she’s saying “Pete,” which fans are perceiving as a nod to her failed relationship with Pete Davidson.

Some fans noticed this pretty quickly, and Twitter was flooded with Grande stans picking up what they believe the singer is putting down.

If this really is a nod to Davidson, it wouldn’t be the first time either has referenced the other in their work. In the Netflix stand-up special Davidson released earlier this year, he was transparent about his dig at Grande when he commented on her appearance.

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Indiecast Debates The Indie Stars Of Our Next Decade

After quarantine set in, it wasn’t long before Adrianne Lenker got to work on some more music, opting for a solo project since she was unable to see her bandmates. While Big Thief apparently were able to reconvene and record a new album over the summer, Lenker has shared the result of her musical exploration at the beginning of quarantine, two new solo LPs titled songs and instrumentals. On the new episode of Indiecast, Steven Hyden and Ian Cohen dig into the lore around Lenker and her band Big Thief, as well as their prolific and acclaimed output over the last few years. The conversation centers around one central question: is Big Thief is a band or just a front for Lenker?

The episode’s second half is focused on Fake It Flowers, the debut album from 20-year-old rocker Beabadoobee. With catchy songs and big choruses, Hyden argues that Beabadoobee’s debut album solidifies her role in the modern indie rock canon as Stone Temple Pilots, where Soccer Mommy is Nirvana and Clairo is Pearl Jam.

In this week’s Recommendation Corner, Cohen is looking to the ’90s and plugging Ida’s 1996 album I Know About You, while Hyden is digging Optimisme, the new album from Songhoy Blues.

New episodes of Indiecast drop every Friday. Listen to Episode 13 below and subscribe wherever you get your podcasts here. Stay up to date and follow us on Instagram and Twitter.

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Here’s Everything New On Netflix This Week, Including ‘The Queen’s Gambit’ And More David Letterman

Netflix is still pouring out the movies and TV shows to binge this week, and we’re here to help you feel out what deserves a spot in your queue.

Godless director Scott Frank’s new meditation on what it means to be a champion is one of those picks. Starring Anya Taylor-Joy and a stellar supporting cast, the series is impressively intense and a slam-dunk bingewatch. There’s also new spooky mysteries from a Netflix revival series, a Rebecca movie remake, and more from the one and only David Letterman. You can’t go wrong by picking at least a few of these for the weekend.

Here’s everything coming to and leaving Netflix this week of Oct. 23.

The Queen’s Gambit (Netflix series streaming 10/23)

Yes, this is essentially a chess drama, but it’s a surprisingly interesting and tightly paced season worth binging. It’s also a meditation upon addiction and danger and what it means to be a champion, all wrapped up in a coming-of-age tale about a boozy chess grandmaster in the making. As fictional prodigy Beth Harmon, Anya Taylor-Joy’s piercing gaze is here to demonstrate how a board game can look like a battlefield in Scott Frank’s adaptation of the Walter Tevis novel. The supporting cast, including Marielle Heller as a tragic 1950s housewife, Moses Ingram as a kickass childhood friend, and Harry Melling and Thomas Brodie-Sangster as gameplay rivals, is also incredible.

Unsolved Mysteries: Vol. 2 (Netflix series streaming 10/19)

Following a successful summer revival, the second batch of cold-case deep dives are here to spook the hell out of you. We ranked the six episodes — which include a mysterious death in a luxury hotel, the disappearance and murder of a Washington insider, and a mass haunting following a tsunami — that invite citizen detectives to do their thing. This reinvigorated take on the classic series comes from the original creators (Cosgrove/Meurer Productions), who teamed up with the Stranger Things production company (21 Laps Entertainment), and hopefully, some justice and closure can be found for victims’ families.

My Next Guest Needs No Introduction With David Letterman (Netflix series streaming 10/21)

The venerable former late-night TV host returns for Season 3 episodes. This brand new crop of deep-dive conversations will feature Dave Chappelle talking about weed, along with Robert Downey Jr., Kim Kardashian West, Lizzo, and more.

Rebecca (Netflix film streaming 10/21)

Rebecca (Netflix film) — Armie Hammer and Lily James star in this fresh adaptation of Daphne du Maurier’s beloved 1938 gothic novel. Underneath it all, the film’s a psychological thriller about a bride who finds herself living in the shadow of a wealthy man’s first wife, the Rebecca of the title, after a high-speed courtship in Monte Carlo.

Here’s a full list of what’s been added in the last week:

Avail. 10/18
ParaNorman

Avail. 10/19
Unsolved Mysteries: Volume 2

Avail. 10/20
Carol

Avail. 10/21
My Next Guest Needs No Introduction With David Letterman: Season 3
Rebecca

Avail. 10/22
Bending the Arc
Cadaver
The Hummingbird Project
Yes, God, Yes

Avail. 10/23
Barbarians
Move
Over the Moon
Perdida
The Queen’s Gambit

And here’s what’s leaving next week, so it’s your last chance:

Leaving 10/26
Battle: Los Angeles

Leaving 10/30
Kristy

Leaving 10/31
Ace Ventura: Pet Detective
Burlesque
Charlotte’s Web
Clash of the Titans
District 9
The Firm
Fun with Dick & Jane
The Girl with All the Gifts
Grandmaster
Highway to Heaven
: Seasons 1-5
The Interview
Just Friends
Magic Mike
Nacho Libre
The Naked Gun: From the Files of Police Squad!
The NeverEnding Story
The NeverEnding Story 2: The Next Chapter
Nights in Rodanthe
The Patriot
Set Up
The Silence of the Lambs
Sleepless in Seattle
Sleepy Hollow
Spaceballs
The Taking of Pelham 123
The Ugly Truth
Underworld
Underworld: Evolution
Underworld: Rise of the Lycans
Zathura

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Phoebe Bridgers Joins Bright Eyes For The Abortion Rights Protest Song ‘Miracle Of Life’

Conor Oberst and Phoebe Bridgers — the duo behind the supergroup Better Oblivion Community Center — have been active as a pair lately. Oberst joined Bridgers during a livestream for a mini BOCC reunion, and now Bridgers has teamed up with Oberst’s band Bright Eyes for a new single. The song is “Miracle Of Life,” a protest song about abortion rights that benefits Planned Parenthood. The song is currently exclusive to Bandcamp but will be made available on other streaming platforms beginning on October 28.

Lyrically, the song tells the story of a woman who doesn’t have easy access to abortion services: “We could be done with it tonight / The neighborhood doctor says it’s sanitized / Lay down on the hard cold ground / Crying’s such a soothing sound / Get cured with a coat hanger / Girl, you’re in America now.”

Oberst says of the song in a statement:

“This song should not exist in 2020 America. It is a protest song, I guess. Or maybe just a little story about what was, what still is in many parts of the world and what could be again here in this country if the GOP is successful in reshaping the Supreme Court and rolling back all of the hard fought progress made for reproductive rights in the last 50 years. Hopefully, if we all work together and vote, it will make this song sound as irrelevant and outdated as it should.”

Listen to “Miracle Of Life” above.

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Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Masterfully Corrected Trump After He Claimed She Knows ‘Nothing About The Climate’

During Thursday’s presidential debate, President Donald Trump criticized Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) for “knowing nothing about the climate,” a shot at her Green New Deal package. “You know who developed it? AOC plus three,” Trump said, the other three being Reps. Ayanna Pressley of Massachusetts, Ilhan Omar of Minnesota, and Rashida Tlaib of Michigan. “They know nothing about the climate. I mean, she’s got a good line of stuff, but she knows nothing about the climate, and they’re all hopping through hoops for AOC plus three. Not a real plan, it costs 100 trillion dollars.”

Mind you, this is the same Trump who nine leading conservation groups called “the worst president for our environment in history,” whose administration “has unleashed an unprecedented assault on our environment and the health of our communities.” But outside of the you-can’t-put-a-price-on-it benefits of, y’know, saving the planet, Ocasio-Cortez also took issue with Trump’s “plus three” comment.

“It’s actually AOC plus 115 because that’s how many House and Senate members have cosponsored the most ambitious climate legislation in American history. I am so deeply proud of & grateful for each + every one of my House and Senate colleagues who stand for our future & champion the #GreenNewDeal, the boldest climate plan in US history,” she tweeted, along with a link to the plan. Ocasio-Cortez also didn’t appreciate Trump (or any colleague) calling her by her nickname. She wrote, “I wonder if Republicans understand how much they advertise their disrespect of women in debates when they consistently call women members of Congress by nicknames or first names while using titles & last names when referring to men of = stature. Women notice. It conveys a lot.”

This is especially true if your name is “Mike Pence.”

To learn more about the Green New Deal, click here.

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‘The Queen’s Gambit’ Star Anya Taylor-Joy On Finding Her Competitive Speed-Chess Groove And Applauding Passion

Anya Taylor-Joy can do more with just a stare than most actors can with a ten-page monologue. That’s the thought that continuously runs through my head while watching the actress decimate grown men over a chessboard during the seven-episode run of Netflix’s upcoming drama mini-series, The Queen’s Gambit.

As Beth Harmon, an orphan with a troubled past who begins as a chess prodigy and grows to become one the most talented and controversial players in Scott Frank’s re-working of the Walter Tevis classic novel, everything rests with Taylor-Joy. More specifically, with her face. It’s there we see the aftermath of a cutting knight-rook combo, the desperation of a Sicilian Defense, the turmoil after being forced to resign to a steely Russian opponent decades older than her. We see things other than chess in Taylor-Joy’s face too — like her character’s addiction to alcohol and tranquilizers, one that begins at a young age; her loneliness, her otherness as a woman competing in a male-dominated space in the ’60s, her genius, her madness.

Taylor-Joy’s mastered that non-verbal style of acting – it’s what’s elevated her performances in films like Autumn de Wilde’s Emma, Robert Eggers’ The Witch, and M. Night Shyamalan’s Split – but she doesn’t rely solely on it for The Queen’s Gambit, instead carrying the series with the quiet charisma and solid assuredness of someone who’s discovered what she’s supposed to be doing. The “how” of doing it though continues to evolve, and when we caught up with Taylor-Joy to talk about the show and her insane schedule — she’s back with Eggers filming The Northman, she just finished a stint on Edgar Wright’s Last Night in Soho, and she’s about to board George Miller’s Furiosa spin-off — the actress describes her rise to fame as a kind of homecoming and, maybe, a lesson in setting boundaries.

Even for someone who knows nothing about chess, this show was more than a bit addictive. What about this story hooked you?

I heard that Scott Frank wanted to talk to me about a project. There was no script, but there was a book. I was like, “Oh, Scott Frank. Incredibly talented. I’m down.” I also love to read. I inhaled that book so quickly and there was something… To use like the 2020 expression, I felt seen by this character. I was just like, “Whoa, okay. I really think I can tell this story with sensitivity and empathy.” Then Scott and I met. I ran to the meeting, and I don’t run anywhere. I was so excited that I had to run to meet this man. As soon as the door was opened, I was like, “It’s not all about chess and she needs to have red hair!” Scott was like, “I agree.” It was a very passionate, breathless discussion the first time that we met. I have to say, he, as a filmmaker and as a person, is incredible because we decided that we were going to do this, knowing that I would have played two characters prior to that, with basically no time off. I was going to do Emma, have a day off, do Last Night in Soho, have a day off, and then arrive to play Beth. Scott was so respectful, so cool and so caring for me as an individual, that I can’t imagine a better collaborator.

Beth is a genius, but her talent makes her “other,” and I think the nature of her lifestyle just adds to that. Did you identify with that part of her?

Big time. I think her inherent loneliness is the first thing that I was like, “Oh, this hurts to read, but also, I get it.”

I mean, we’re all a bit lonely right now.

Oh, absolutely. But I also think most people are inherently lonely it’s just, a lot of people don’t talk about it. Which is why I’m the first to stick up my hand and be like, “I was very lonely as a child.” I just had this deep faith and desire that there was a world one day where I was going to be able to inhabit it, I was going to have something to contribute, and the people around me would like me for the way that I was. I think Beth finds that in chess and I was lucky enough to find it in art. It did feel that way. I stepped onto my first set and I was like, “Oh, it all makes sense. This is where I’m supposed to be. This is where I feel safe, wanted, and cared for.” I think I love the scene where Beth sees a professional chess tournament for the first time, because she’s like, “Oh my God, I found my people.”

You’ve kind of mastered the art of non-verbal acting over the years, and that really comes into play here. How do you tap into such a complicated character while also making note of all these moves you need to be making.

I’m not a chess prodigy. I did not know how to play chess prior to this. I think one of the best pieces of advice I ever got with acting, particularly in screen acting, is if you’re having the right thoughts, then you do the right things. I am not an actor that goes and — with all respect to the actors that this works for, it just happens not to work for me — I don’t learn my lines at night, reading into a mirror, seeing the way that my face moves. I just learn the lines in the morning, connect the thoughts, and then if you’re having the thoughts your body naturally does what it’s supposed to do. So if the thought is, “Oh, you have no idea that I’m about to massively screw you right now with this rook move,” your body naturally gives off all those signals. It makes it super fun. The game of chess is like a mini-war on a board, so it makes sense that if you stick a camera between the two people that it’s going down with, it’s tense and exciting. Then it’s performed and you get the added kick of punctuating your feelings with chess moves and that feels great.

So how good at chess are you now?

I had to have a theoretical understanding of chess, just because I know what it means to the people that really care about it. As somebody who applauds passion, I didn’t feel like I could waltz on set knowing nothing about chess and just being like, “I’m going to pretend like I know what I’m doing.” I do think knowing the theory of chess and then being able to execute it for a full game are two very different things. I can possibly write a good little booklet on chess but I’m not the best player there ever was. For the process of filming, the number of games, the number of sequences that I had to learn… I think the second day I just went up to Scott and I was like, “You have to show me these games five minutes before we play them. Let me log them into my short-term memory. I’ll do it. Then I can throw that away and act,” because otherwise you just get really confused and you never sleep. Unfortunately, as human beings, we need to do that.

It’s almost like memorizing a dance or fight choreography then?

Completely. Thomas [Brodie-Sangster] and I had the best time in the speed chess matches because chess is historically a solitary game. But when you’re learning sequences, you have a dance partner. You cannot move until he moves. So we both felt very chuffed and very proud of ourselves whenever we would finish those sequences, because it was like, “Oh, we achieved something together. You were great. I was great. This was great.”

Did you ever get competitive with the guys off-set, because, from this show, it seems like chess can get very combative?

Again, in terms of playing the game for real, no. Scott Frank is very competitive. We played chess between takes on a couple of days and then we were like, “We need to stop. We need to focus on what we’re doing because we’re getting very aggressive towards each other.” [Laughs]

Right. Yelling at each other over a chessboard might not be the best for on-set morale.

Yeah. With Thomas, I didn’t realize I couldn’t be competitive about speed chess, but I can, and that was pretty fun. Just trying to always be the one that was quicker. I think that really worked for Benny and Beth’s relationship as well, because when they first meet it’s the first time that they’ve each met their intellectual equal, and that makes them both really excited and really ticked off at the same time. So yeah, that was really fun to play with.

It’s also nice that this is a show about a woman competing in a male-dominated space and it doesn’t constantly focus on her gender. It feels more progressive than you’d expect.

It was one of the things I loved most about her when she entered my life. She was like this weird space creature that wasn’t handed a book like, “You’re a girl, this is what you’re allowed to want.” She’s genuinely baffled by the fact that people keep being like, “This is really extraordinary that she’s a girl,” and she’s like, “No, I’m really, really good. That’s the bit that’s extraordinary about me.” I love getting to play that because we’re still dealing with it now. It’s going to take a long time before we figure it out. In the sixties, it was worse. So I love being able to portray a character that… I guess it’s not that she doesn’t see gender, it’s that she just doesn’t think it’s the most incredible thing about her. I hope we’re moving towards a society that doesn’t dictate what dreams you’re allowed to have or not have based on your gender, or what you identify as. I hope that’s where we’re moving to. I hope that audiences, in watching this story, get lulled into the same way of thinking and it becomes less about, “Oh, let’s watch this girl chess prodigy kick-ass,” and it’s more about, “Wow, this human is very talented and we care about her as an individual and not because of her gender.”

You’ve been incredibly busy over the last couple of years, and you just signed on to George Miller’s Furiosa spin-off. You mentioned realizing the need for sleep with this project. Have you learned how to take care of yourself a bit better because of this series?

You really hit the nail on the head there. I learned that with Beth. In January, I was like, I might need to actually eat a vegetable if I’m going to survive this year. That might be something that I need to do. Then by the time I got to play Beth, it was like… I’d never existed on much sleep, and for the first time ever, I was like, “It is 8:00 p.m. I am up at three. I am going to bed. I cannot talk to another individual. I need to sit at home with my thoughts, otherwise, I’m not going to be able to play this character correctly.” Having that enforced on me, as a way for me to play the character, was a really clever way that my brain taught me about boundaries. Because I could do it for Beth, but I hadn’t been able to do it for myself before. Now post-Beth, I’m like, “Oh, I really love people. I am an extroverted introvert, but I require time to read and time to be by myself in nature. If I don’t have that, I’m not as good a friend as I want to be.” It’s what people talk about on the airplane: you have to put on your own oxygen mask first if you’re going to help anybody else. I think Beth taught me about the oxygen mask.

Netflix’s ‘The Queen’s Gambit’ premieres on Oct. 23rd.

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In ‘Borat Subsequent Moviefilm,’ The ‘Victims’ Have Become The Performers

At one point in Sacha Baron Cohen’s follow up to Borat (2006), Borat Subsequent Movie Film (aka Delivery of Prodigious Bribe to American Regime for Make Benefit Once Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan), the pandemic hits and our hero ends up holed up in a remote (yet spacious and well appointed) cabin with two guys, who tell Borat earnestly that Hillary Clinton kidnaps children to drink their blood and harvest adrenochrome. It’s a scene that makes us ask an internal question we probably never did the first time around: who is performing for who here?

In the first installment, on the heels of HBO’s Da Ali G Show, the American version of the already wildly popular guerilla prank show Cohen had been doing in the UK, the boundaries between staged and spontaneous were already a little blurry. What must he have told these people to get them to appear? But for the most part we could trust that people’s reactions to this simple, backwards foreigner from a mysterious former Soviet Stan were more or less genuine. Cohen played on the West’s casual assumptions about the former Eastern Bloc (mixed with genuine ignorance and trusting instincts) to expose their receptiveness to misogyny, superstitious Anti-Semitism, and poop — but also their general friendliness and willingness to help a fellow man. Getting an entire mega church to participate in a call and response by calling out “Do Jesus love my retard brother?” was a signature bit (along with the tamer but funnier, “Do Jesus love my neighbor Nusultan Tuliakhbar? —Nobody love my neighbor Nusultan Tuliakhbar!”)

This exposure of ugly strains in the national character was what got the most ink, even if it wasn’t the number one goal — Cohen is a humanist anarchist and subversive by nature, but I suspect that for the former student of French master-clown Philippe Gaulier (yes, Cohen attended a “prestigious French clown school”), laughs and spectacle trump politics, if only slightly. The thrill of discovering something new about our fellow man, good or bad, was a big part of Borat‘s appeal. You never quite knew what was going to happen. Whether it be a rodeo crowd’s half-cheering reaction to “I hope George W. Bush kills every man, woman, and child in Iraq, down to the lizards!” or a driving instructor who mostly just treats a horny Borat with kindness, good advice, and straightforward humanity. (“Look, you can’t do that here, okay?”)

In Borat Subsequent Movie Film, whose ostensible plot is about a now-disgraced Borat Sagdiev trying to deliver a famous chimp porn star to Mike Pence as a gift from the Kazakh premier, not only has casual racism and misogyny in public become far less shocking, but it’s much, much harder to tell who is performing for the camera. In the 14 years since the first movie, the kind of conservatism Cohen seems to delight in exposing has gone from at least somewhat ideological to almost entirely performative. It was always fairly hypocritical, but these days absolutely no one is buying that God and country crap from people lining up behind a thrice-divorced WWE heel in a billowy suit whose disrespect of veterans has spawned at least five separate controversies. What once may have at least seemed like genuine belief is now transparently just a cudgel.

The footage of Cohen that leaked out prior to release saw him performing at a right-wing rally. In the movie, we can now see Borat (disguised as a character called, amazingly, “Country Steve”) surrounded by people open carrying assault rifles, walking around in military fatigues, clad in your bog-standard pro-Trump, anti-Dem t-shirts, and other regalia. It feels, as it almost always does these days, more like a group of people LARPing in a park than a political gathering. Politics has goals and desired outcomes. These people are merely solidifying identity. Trump is a television character to them, and they enjoy the show. They bond over their shared enjoyment of the show.

There is no ideology beyond antagonism toward a perceived enemy — which is to say, I doubt any of them would even be there without the possibility of libs to trigger. Which is further to say, they’re all doing a Borat bit now, playing a character to get a rise out people or to prove a point. The people Sacha Baron Cohen delights in provoking have spent the last 14 years desperately trying to become the provocateurs.

So when two “country” looking guys (who like almost all supposedly working-class Trump fanatics appear to be driving around in $40,000 trucks) try to explain how and why Hillary Clinton harvests children, the shock isn’t so much “wow I can’t believe someone believes this” it’s “how far are these guys willing to go for the bit?”

What did Borat tell these guys that made them want to host him at their house and sign the waiver? Surely it was more than just them being nice. These kinds of questions require answers more in 2020 than they did in 2006. They don’t seem like bystanders anymore. Meanwhile, when Borat goes to a debutante ball at one point, I could’ve sworn I saw one of the guys from the first Borat‘s Southern society dinner there (the guy on the far right in this picture). What the hell did they tell that guy to get him to participate twice? I’m genuinely curious.

Cohen is still the same genius he was before, a David Blaine character who shrinks from no celebrity or situation, who will not only put himself in legitimate danger for a bit (literally doing comedy at the point of a gun, and not for the first time), but always seems to have the perfect one-liner queued up for maximum effect — like assuring Rudy Giuliani of his “tight back pussy.” Mostly it’s the world that has changed. For that and a handful of other reasons (like that Borat is too famous to do bits as Borat now, and not wanting to repeat himself, and probably a COVID-abbreviated shooting schedule) Cohen has to work a little harder for laughs now. Or even for surprise. He was always at least as much a social experiment as he was a comedian and these days staging a social experiment is complicated by the feeling that we’re all living in a social experiment all the time.

There’s also the fact that decent-sized chunks of this movie don’t even have Cohen in them. His daughter, Sandra Jessica Parker Sagdiev-Drummond (played by Maria Bakalova) does the heavy lifting in two or three scenes as Borat’s bumpkin daughter, who dreams of “a fancy wife cage” like Melania’s and has been schooled to fear the teeth in her vagine. That she can create situations every bit as awkward as Cohen, the kind that make you cover your eyes but keep watching, is a testament to her poise and bravery. It takes a special kind of person to be able to see those situations through. Yet she’s not quite Sacha Cohen — lacking the same sense of perfect one-liner — because… well, no one is.

When Borat Subsequent Movie Film is on, it’s as transfixing as ever. You don’t watch it like you would comedy, expecting regular and consistent laughs. You watch it like you would porn, where you know all the wonder and spontaneity are mostly staged but remain transfixed regardless, anticipating those fleeting moments when the mask slips off and a character’s true feelings are revealed. There are longer stretches where that doesn’t come (heh), but that’s mostly okay. Just as before, Borat uncovers craziness and kindness in almost equal measure — one moment with a Holocaust survivor in a synagogue, in particular, was so sweet (contrived or not) that it almost brought me to tears.

Yet if Borat Subsequent Movie Film feels scattered in comparison to its predecessor, that’s perhaps because the American body politic isn’t nearly as coherent as it once was. It’s hard not to feel like Walter from The Big Lebowski looking back on the Bush years — substituting neocons for “the man in the black pajamas,” a “worthy f*ckin’ adversary.” Say what you will about the tenets of vulgar imperialism, dude, at least it was an ethos. Turns out, it’s a lot harder to expose a belief system that is essentially nihilistic.

Borat Subsequent Movie Film’ is available October 23rd on Amazon Prime. Vince Mancini is on Twitter. You can access his archive of reviews here.