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Adam Sandler Tried To Cheer Up 2020 Graduates With His Own Graduation Night Story

I don’t remember who gave the commencement speech at my college graduation (some boring egghead, probably), but I do recall that it wasn’t Adam Sandler.

It should have been, though. We could all stand to listen to the Uncut Gems star, who’s amassed a reported $420 million fortune while dressed like he’s meeting the other dads for a game of “hoops” at the YMCA. That’s the American dream, right there. Sandler couldn’t give an in-person commencement speech to this year’s high school and college graduates, for obvious and unfortunate reasons, but he did try to cheer them up with a mini-sermon on Twitter. He also shared a picture of his cap-and-gown younger self.

“Hellooooo high school and college class of 2020. Holy cow. Way to go. You did it. You are officially smart. You worked hard and you deserve the respect. Sorry it’s a rough time to be graduating, but you know what I did the night of my high school graduation?” Sandler tweeted. “I sat at home with my parents and we all just stared at each other just like you’re doing now. Then the fun began. Love you all. Congratulations. Enjoy it and get ready to go save the world. We need you.” He signed the tweet, “Love, The Sandman.” Love you, too, buddy, as long as you make another Grown Ups movie.

Give the grads something to look forward to: more water park-based hijinks.

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Rob Brydon On ‘The Trip To Greece’ And His Top Five Meals From The Trip Series

Watching The Trip movies — which began with The Trip and continued through The Trip To Spain, The Trip To Italy, and now The Trip To Greece — is intensely calming in precisely the way that most comedies are not. Starring affable Welshman Rob Brydon and vaguely pompous Mancunian Steve Coogan as its semi-fictionalized Lennon-McCartney (with Brydon as the McCartney), The Trip follows two relatively rich guys as they travel Europe’s most beautiful sights eating gourmet food and doing impressions to each other. It’s not exactly Tolstoy but there are few things I’d rather watch.

The scenery is gorgeous, the stars affable, the stakes… almost impossibly low. That it isn’t life or death is exactly why The Trip series works. To put it another way, seeming so light on the surface allows The Trip to plumb occasional feelings of melancholy that wouldn’t work in most comedies. Its structure alone telegraphs it as something different. Directed by Michael Winterbottom since the beginning, each Trip season/movie runs as a six-part BBC series in the UK before becoming a movie most other places.

Curb Your Enthusiasm is probably The Trip‘s closest American comparison — improvised dialogue, famous-ish comedians playing fictionalized versions of themselves — but as much as I love it I’m not sure I could sit through 90 or 100 minutes of unbroken Curb. Compared to The Trip, Curb feels shouty and relentlessly adversarial.

Maybe that’s just The Trip‘s inherent Britishness. And certainly, that Britishness does make it a slightly tougher sell here. Not all of Coogan/Brydon’s impressions are of notables we instantly recognize. And then there’s Brydon himself. Truthfully I didn’t know who he was before The Trip, though I could tell he was meant to be somewhat famous. According to a British version of an interview much like this one, Brydon was “a presenter on a shopping channel and a regional radio DJ into his 30s – but after the success of 2000’s Marion and Geoff, closely followed by Human Remains, both co-written by Brydon and backed by Coogan’s production company, he’s been a near-constant presence on both stage and screen.”

I’m thankful I have those British interviews from which to draw, because “why are you famous” and “why aren’t you more well-known in America” aren’t questions I relish asking. Though it does feel like a very The Trip-esque dilemma. How much can anyone understand their own persona anyway?

Speaking of persona, Coogan and Brydon have always said that they are not their characters in The Trip. Though having spoken to Coogan as my last pre-quarantine interview and now Brydon, I can say that there is a bit of truth to them. Coogan comes off erudite and slightly closed off, Brydon approachable and self-effacing. There’s plenty of psychology to explore there, but I much prefer the basics. Like, are they really eating all that good food (yes) and are they really driving in those driving scenes (surprisingly, also yes).

So are you trapped at home? How’s the quarantine going for you?

Yeah, it’s going fine. We’re here at home. We’ve been having unusually good weather during this lockdown, so that’s meant that we’re basically camped into the garden and all is lovely.

Yes, it’s bittersweet. You have a lot of kids, right? How many are you sheltered with?

(Laughts) Yeah, that’s the number for me, “a lot.” I’ve got five, and the two youngest are here, 12 and eight. And homeschooling an eight-year-old… I wouldn’t wish it on my worst enemy.

Have you taken to the job of teacher very well?

No, that’s more my wife’s department, but, yeah, let’s not go there. It’s challenging.

Okay, so The Trip series is a show in the UK and, here, we get them as movies. When you watch it, do you watch them all in one go or broken into episodes?

Well, yeah, over here, they go out as episodes. Because I’m in it so much, I favor the episodes because I can maybe tolerate half an hour of me. I find a whole film where I’m rarely off the screen to be a bit rich, but I know that some people like them that way. I think I’d need an ego as big as the Rock of Gibraltar to like that. I’ll probably prefer watching just little bits and bobs.

Do you think there’s a reason that Americans are not trusted to experience this as a show?

(Laughs) I’ve never thought of it that way. No, I don’t know. It’s just, when we did the first one and the series, and then Michael, it was just Michael, he said, “Oh, I’m going to cut it as a film.” Because it’s not just America, it goes out as a film around Europe and Canada and Australia and New Zealand and all these places. But because Michael’s background is filmmaking, so I suppose… well, I’ve never really asked him. I try to be a go-with-the-flow kind of person. And I remember, when we did the first one, he said, “This is going to be a film as well and we’ll put it out in America.” I remember saying, “Yeah, right.” I didn’t think it would be, so I was surprised when it was and delightfully surprised at how well it’s gone down with you chaps.

Yeah, I’ve never seen it as a show, but I do enjoy them a lot as movies.

It is a different vibe, the film cut. I think you might find it interesting to watch it as a series as well.

I’ve been wanting to do that. Do you know if there are things that are added and taken away from the film version versus the series?

Well, no, there’s only stuff taken away, basically. Because the film is made from, if you think, there are six half hours all laid out and they just get squeezed together, so some stuff is lost. What you might find is that maybe some of your favorite bits from the film are longer in the series sometimes.

What elements of your personality do you think are heightened when you play this fictionalized version of yourself?

Well, oh, doing impressions. I don’t go around doing impressions all the time. And the niggliness with Steve, trying to undermine him, I don’t do that. In The Trip To Greece, I talk about Stan and Ollie as being “a great impression.” I don’t. I think [Steve Coogan as Stan Laurel] is a wonderful performance. And I say I went to the kitchen three times while watching it, that’s not true. The reality is I watched it and then sent him a text that was glowing in its praise. Those things are exaggerated. My idyllic home life is slightly played up by Michael, who always wants, whenever my wife and I are talking, she’s chiseling away at everything I say. That’s not the reality of my life. I don’t know if it’s the reality of anybody’s life, so I find those things hilarious. What else? And just the general being a bit of a dick, when we’re driving in the car in this and I’m bamboozling him with facts about Grease, the film. Now, the fact is I do know those facts about Grease, but I probably wouldn’t be offering them up.

There’s a lot of footage of restaurants and you guys eating good food. Do you actually get to eat the food that they show you eating?

Very much so. We eat each course three times, so we’ll have three starters before we go on to the main course and then three main courses and then three puddings, and they move the cameras around. We hone some material. If we’ve hit on a scene, we’ll hone it each time, get it better. Yeah, we do, we eat a lot.

That sounds like my dream. Are there particular meals that stand out in your mind over the course of doing this series? Do you have a top five?

Yeah. There was, in Spain, on the one where we visited the plastic dinosaur and Steve says, “Which one is the dinosaur?” when he’s taking a photo of me — the restaurant that was near there had an incredible stuffed potato. It was basically a jacket potato, but it was the Rolls-Royce of jacket potatoes, I remember that. And when we were in Italy, around the Amalfi coast, oh, yes, the food, the last meal in The Trip To Italy, which was on the isle of Capri, that was stunning, that was absolutely stunning.

Every single meal is very, very good because you’re at a level of restaurant where everything is very good. By the end of it, you have a yearning for simple food because you’ve been having this very rich, complex food, so you do just want beans on toast. But, yeah, it’s a real treat. Although, all the time we’re shooting the meals, there’s always a lot of improvised material there, so I’m really just thinking, “What am I going to say next?” I’m just thinking, “I’ve got to keep up with Steve. I’ve got to be funny. I’ve got to be interesting.” I’m not giving the food as much attention as it might look on screen.

If you had to rank them, the food you had, Italy, Spain, Greece, what are your-

Oh, wow, here we go, how to make enemies. Oh, what, are you trying to get me banned from a country?

Of course.

I particularly liked Italy. It’s just my kind of thing, and what was interesting was, when I’ve been to Italy myself as a traveler, a tourist, holiday-maker, I found the food a little repetitive, but when I went on The Trip and the food was all curated for me, I was blown away by it. Yeah, I’m going to say Italy, and then I’m not going to give a descending order because someone is going to come last and I don’t want to do that.

Are there foods that you don’t like or that you don’t order?

I’ve got quite a broad palate these days. I’ve got things I can’t eat. I have trouble with yeast, it affects my skin and citrus affects my skin, so I have to avoid that. So bready things, no good for me because of the yeast, unless it’s sourdough. No, I wouldn’t avoid anything. People have noticed that I’ve ordered a hell of a lot of scallops over the years. I do tend to go for those starters quite often, but no.

Do you get to order what you want or do they choose?

Well, they’ll send us, in advance, when Michael is planning the series, he’ll send us the menus and we’ll choose. But then he might say, “Oh, this is a bit repetitive,” and he’ll say, “Could you have this instead?” And we’ll say, “Yes.” It’s not something that Steve or I devote any thought to because it’s a prop, essentially. It’s almost we pay no more attention to it than we would the furniture in the scene. We’re really just thinking about what we’re going to say.

Do you have to eat differently, when you’re being filmed, to maintain the dialogue and all that?

I’ve seen a few people on social media saying how I eat with my mouth open, that I talk with my mouth full, and I wouldn’t have believed it if I hadn’t looked at it myself. And yes, they’re right. It’s appalling. But I find that I want to eat the food because it’s very realistic and it helps convince that what you’re watching is real, but I also, of course, have got to try and get a word in edgewise with Steve. I think he eats less than I do. Yes, you do find me eating, and I’ve seen a few people say they’re appalled by it on Twitter and what have you, and I really wasn’t aware of it until I saw it.

In terms of your career before The Trip, I feel like I want to ask about it, but that it’s something that people in the UK would already know and I’m being disrespectful just asking–

Oh, be as disrespectful as you like.

What’re the Cliffs Notes of your career path before The Trip?

Before The Trip, well, I got known in Britain, first of all, for two shows, in 2000, called Marion and Geoff, which is a series of monologues about a minicab driver whose wife has left him, and then another series called Human Remains, which were six couples written and performed by me and Julia Davis. And both those shows won awards and suddenly changed my life. Then, after that, I’ve done a variety of different shows and what have you. The most notable one would be there’s a sitcom over here called Gavin & Stacey that was written by James Corden and Ruth Jones, and I’m one of the characters in that, and that ran for a long time and then stopped about nine years ago and recently came back for a Christmas special that broke all the viewing figures over here. And then there’s a panel show that I host on BBC One called Would I Lie to You that’s run for about 13 or 14 series, which is very popular. And then I popped up in the odd film. I was in Cinderella, Kenneth Branagh’s Cinderella. I did Holmes & Watson with the brilliant Will Ferrell and John C. Reilly. Not the hit we’d hoped, but a wonderful experience making it, just fantastic. And, over here, well, not just here, I toured in Australia and New Zealand with my stand-up show. And when this hit, I was just touring with a band. I got a band together because I love singing, and I was touring with a band, doing a show with music and comedy, and that’s what I want to get back to as soon as I can.

When you were younger and in school and whatnot, was the goal acting or comedy or…?

I think it was acting, performing, comedy — all of it, really. What I didn’t anticipate was writing. I didn’t start to write until I was well into my late twenties, really. I never really had the confidence. And then I’ve written some of this stuff usually with someone else. I think I work best with another person. But, yeah, I always wanted to perform. I always wanted to act, make people laugh.

Now that you’re doing stand-up and touring around, where are your biggest audiences when you’re doing stand-up around the world?

Well, I did three nights at the Sydney Opera House on this last tour. I think we could have done more if we wanted to. I suppose Wales, I’m Welsh, so when I play Wales, I think I did seven nights at one of the big venues in Wales, in Cardiff. I’m not an arena comedian, I play theaters, so the biggest of those would be, say, 3000 seats, but I could do a few nights. But I prefer an 1100 or a 1400 seater. Although, actually, it’s not the capacity, it’s the shape of the venue is what really dictates it. In Britain, we have these theaters that were designed by a guy called Frank Matcham — they’re the traditional English, British theaters, and they’re wonderful for comedy. You’re very close to the audience. The seats are not especially comfortable, so your audience stays alert the whole time. A lot of the modern theaters, the seats are a night out in themselves and you’re competing with the bloody seat for what’s the most enjoyable part of the evening.

You want your audience to be uncomfortable, that’s what you’re saying?

Yeah. Well, there’s a famous thing where David Letterman always wanted the studio to be kept cold because it kept the audience alert, and there’s a lot of truth in that.

You mentioned eating while you guys are performing these, what about the driving? Is any of the driving real or are you stationary during those?

No, lots of it is real, more and more actually in The Trip to Greece. But when we started the series, a fair bit of it will be on what they call a low loader, where they put it on a low truck and pull you along. But now the cameras have gotten so small… I think it was almost all real driving in The Trip to Greece. There’s certainly never any green screen.

That’s interesting. I almost felt dumb asking that because I was like, “Oh, of course, it’s a green screen. It’s always a green screen when they’re driving.”

No, no. The driving is interesting as an actor because, a bit like eating, it’s real and it switches off a part of your brain and it helps you to be free. If you’re driving, I think it helps your acting because part of your brain is taken up with doing that.

‘The Trip To Greece’ is available now on VOD. Vince Mancini is on Twitter. You can access his archive of reviews here.

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People On TikTok Are Showing Off Their Parents’ Bathrooms And I Want To Live In Them


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Primavera Sound’s Rescheduled 2021 Lineup Is Led By Gorillaz, Tame Impala, And Charli XCX

In March, Primavera Sound made the difficult but necessary decision to postpone this year’s festival, and earlier this month, they realized they would have to push their 20th anniversary celebration back even further, all the way to 2021. Now, with the event set for June 2021, Primavera Sound has unveiled the poster for the festival, and it is led by Gorillaz, Tame Impala, Charli XCX, Pavement, The Strokes, and others.

Earlier this month, the festival announced, “Today, Primavera Sound announces the most difficult decision in its history: finally we will not be able to celebrate our 20th anniversary during 2020. In the face of the evolution of the Covid-19 health crisis, we find ourselves obliged to postpone the next edition of Primavera Sound Barcelona, for reasons of force majeure, until next year: from 2nd to 6th June 2021.”

Now they’ve shared the lineup for the postponed fest, and aside from the aforementioned artists, it also includes 100 Gecs, Bad Bunny, Brockhampton, Caroline Polachek, Chromatics, Disclosure, FKA Twigs, Idles, Jamie xx, Jamila Woods, Jorja Smith, The National, Rapsody, DJ Shadow, Tyler The Creator, Yo La Tengo, Young Thug, and others.

Check out the new poster below.

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

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Ellie Goulding Announces Her Two-Part Album ‘Brightest Blue’ With Features From Juice WRLD And More

Last November marked the 10-year anniversary of Ellie Goulding’s debut studio album, Lights. Today, the UK singer announced she is using all she’s learned in her decade-spanning career for a forthcoming two-part album. Titled Brightest Blue, the record includes many of her previously-released singles, including her track with the late rapper Juice WRLD.

Following her single “Power,” which Goulding released just last week, the singer has finally shed a light onto her next release. Brightest Blue boasts many big-name features from Juice WRLD to Diplo and will be her latest studio effort since her 2015 album Delirium.

Reflecting on her thoughts about the first half of the record, Goulding says that it mirrors her vulnerability: “It acknowledges a complex world where relationships still dictate our happiness and heartbreak and can still be the most painful thing in the world, no matter how enlightened you are. The tracks also symbolize growing up and becoming a woman.”

About the second half of the album, Goulding says it “encapsulates my confident, brave and fearless side and features all my recent collaborations. I often find myself writing about my thoughts and emotions in a way that I know will be catchy and memorable. I will always seek to use my voice in ways that no one would ever expect and look to collaborate with the least likely, exciting and eclectic group of other artists.”

While the record will see a physical release in stores, Goulding and her team worked to manufacture packaging using environmentally-friendly materials in order to minimize a carbon footprint. “Great progress has been made on this and I’m pleased we’ve been able to push the industry forwards, but we are still pushing to do more,” Goulding said.

Check out Goulding’s Brightest Blue cover art and tracklist below.

Interscope

Side A — Brightest Blue
1. “Start” Feat. Serpentwithfeet
2. “Power”
3. “How Deep Is Too Deep”
4. “Cyan”
5. “Love I’m Given”
6. “New Heights”
7. “Ode To Myself”
8. “Woman”
9. “Tides”
10. “Wine Drunk”
11. “Bleach”
12. “Flux”
13. “Brightest Blue”

Side B — EG.0
1. “Overture”
2. “Worry About Me” Feat. Blackbear
3. “Slow Grenade” Feat. Lauv
4. “Close To Me” Feat. Diplo & Swae Lee
5. “Hate Me” Feat. Juice WRLD

Brightest Blue is out 7/17 via Interscope. Pre-order it here.

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Report: Sony Will Showcase PlayStation 5 Games During A Virtual Event Sometime Soon

The latest chapter of the console wars will be written sometime this year by Microsoft and Sony. Both have announced that the latest editions of their signature consoles will drop in the coming months — Microsoft plans to release the Xbox Series X sometime in late-2020, while Sony’s PlayStation 5 will hit shelves during that same period of time.

Details have been trickling out for both consoles for quite some time, and in the coming days, Sony will give us a glimpse into the games that will appear on its new platform. According to Bloomberg, the company plans on holding an event sometime soon to showcase PlayStation 5 releases.

The virtual event could be held June 3, though some people also cautioned that plans have been in flux and that the date may change. Other PlayStation 5 events may follow in the coming weeks and months, and Sony is not expected to reveal every essential detail on the console during its first presentation.

Previously, Sony has announced some of the details on the controller that the system will use. As Bloomberg mentioned, Xbox has used frequent streams to announce details on games that will appear on its new console, using the opportunity to promote games like Madden and the newest Assassin’s Creed that will be compatible with the Xbox Series X. We’ll have to wait and see if Sony will follow a similar path forward with its game releases, or if this upcoming event will be a one-time thing.

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Beyonce Congratulates Megan Thee Stallion On Her First No. 1 Song With A Lovely Gift

Megan Thee Stallion has been celebrating for the past couple days, and for a great reason: Yesterday, it was revealed that “Savage” (more specifically, the remix featuring Beyonce) finally made its way to the top of the Billboard Hot 100 chart. This is Megan’s first No. 1 song, and in light of that, she got a nice congratulatory message from her collaborator.

Yesterday, Megan took to her Instagram Story to show off the flowers that Beyonce got for her after her big achievement. The gift was also accompanied by a note that read, “Congrats on your number one, queen. Love, B.”

After the news broke yesterday, Megan shared multiple celebratory posts. In one, she wrote, “HOTTIES WE ARE NUMBER 1 ON THE HOT 100 FOR THEE FIRST TIME EVERRRR [fire emojis] WE F*CKING DID IT [crying emojis] thank you god [praying emojis] this is our first but it damn sure won’t be our last ! I love y’all so much [blue heart emojis] HOUSTON WE GOT ONE.” She added in another, “Hotties we’re number 1 on billboard and number 1 at urban and rhythmic radio. thank y’all. We did this sh*t together. Shout out to everyone who’s been going hard for these wins #realhotgirlsh*t”

“Savage” topping the charts of course comes a couple weeks after it initially competed for the No. 1 spot with Doja Cat and Nicki Minaj but ultimately finished second.

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Gunna Takes A Space Journey In His Futuristic ‘Rockstar Bikers & Chains’ Video

Gunna and Wheezy take an intergalactic space trip in the video for “Rockstar Bikers & Chains,” the latest single from Gunna’s new album, Wunna. With imagery inspired by Michael and Janet Jackson’s groundbreaking “Scream” video, Gunna and his producer Wheezy rock out in a gleaming spacecraft. Although their dance moves don’t come close to their inspirations’ — although that’s nothing to be ashamed of — they make up for it with some flashy props of their own — including a flamethrower guitar straight out of Mad Max Fury Road wielded by Wheezy.

“Rockstar Bikers & Chains” is the latest single from the Wunna promo run, which also included the Jamaica-set video for the title track and lead single “Skybox,” as well as a pair of Young Thug collaborations, “Dollaz On My Head” and “Quarantine Clean,” which doesn’t appear on the album. The latest video certainly puts the focus back where it needs to be after Gunna accidentally posted one to his Instagram Story that depicted the rapper during an awkward moment that had fans concerned for his well-being. Hopefully, he’ll stick to music videos for the duration of the promo run.

Watch the “Rockstar Bikers & Chains” video above.

Wunna is out now on Young Stoner Life Records / 300 Entertainment. Get it here.

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

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Bright Eyes Preview Their Comeback Album With The Apocalyptic Single ‘One And Done’

Bright Eyes have a comeback album on the way, but thanks to the coronavirus pandemic, it’s not clear when the project will actually drop. Regardless, Conor Oberst and company have been releasing new songs from it, and today, they’ve returned with “One And Done.” The contemplative and apocalyptic song (which was written before the current global situation) tells the story of a singer in the midst of what appears to be the final days of life as humanity knows it.

Oberst paints a picture, singing, “This whole town looks empty but we knew it wouldn’t last / Behind bulletproof windows they’re still wiring the cash / Whatever they could scrape up, whatever that they had / There’s a lot of mouths to feed through this famine.”

Oberst recently spoke with The 1975’s Matty Healy about the new Bright Eyes album, saying, “I would say that loss is a pretty big theme in the new songs. I guess it always was to a certain extent. […] I’ve lost friends and I’ve lost people over the years, but […] when you lose one of your brothers, it’s kind of a whole different ball game when it comes to the way it impacts. It impacted me psychologically and my parents, just everybody. It’s just a life-changing event where this thing that had always been a foundation of your life is gone. Trying to pick up the pieces and move on from that, you know, it’s a hard thing.”

The band has yet to confirm a new release date for their comeback album, but they assured fans back in March that regardless of what happens, it will be out in 2020. They wrote, “We, like so many others, had many plans for 2020. We will be releasing a new album this year no matter what. We also have lots of touring plans which we are now reassessing. We will keep you informed as things progress. We very much want to get on the road and hope to see you all in person sooner rather than later.”

Listen to “One And Done” above.

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‘Space Force’ Works Best When It Isn’t Trying To Recapture The Magic Of ‘The Office’

As you’re no doubt aware, we’re living in strange times, and I’m not even talking about our current global pandemic situation of which we shall not speak, for at least the next handful of minutes. I’m referring to the so-called United States “Space Force,” which is a thing that (apparently) exists in our reality. I’m still as surprised as anyone else about that development, and it’s not worth rehashing how that fifth branch of the U.S. Armed Forces came to be. Yet the better news is that this real-life “WTF” inspired a launching point for the reteaming of The Office‘s Steve Carell and creator Greg Daniels. The resulting Netflix series, understandably, aims to resurrect the magic while also trying hard to be The Not-Office. The end result is sometimes messy and manic.

On some level, one has to acknowledge that The Office comparisons are inevitable, and it feels like the show was too conscious of this incoming criticism, to its detriment. Carell and Daniels, because of their previous success, are also bound by it until Space Force can prove that it’s shifted into a different gear. Yet given that all nine seasons of The Office are still streaming on Netflix (until later this year), viewers are more than equipped to judge from that high-up standard. Also, yes, we’ve got another workplace comedy from Daniels, who’s now co-creating with Carell, and Ben Schwartz is also onboard to bring the Parks and Recreation vibes. Mostly, though, the show hopes to be a different beast than both previous hits. It’s a tough spot to be in, man, since Space Force (as a Daniels-Carell project) exists because of The Office, but it’s bound to that predecessor even while aiming at different stars.

Look, Space Force is an okay and watchable series, although uneven. If one takes the whole first season (there’s a tee-up for a sophomore turn) into account, the biggest problem is that the show doesn’t immediately reckon with its own identity. At moments, it feels like it’s flirting with the being a bigger-budgeted, higher-concept incarnation of the Office without the mockumentary structure. The show also takes stabs at Dr. Strangelove levels of farcical madness, only without Stanley Kubrick’s masterful helming of characters who belly-flop into sheer stupidity despite certain failure as an outcome. The show also sometimes feels like a twisted family comedy, but Space Force begins to know itself after a handful of episodes, when it starts edging toward an equilibrium.

Netflix

Carell, of course, is making his return to comedic TV (following Apple TV+’s The Morning Show) to portray the unwitting leader of the U.S. Space Force. Officially, he’s the U.S. Air Force’s highly decorated General Mark R. Naird, who packs up his (also reluctant) family for an incredibly not-scenic, but secret, Colorado base to sign off on billion-dollar missions that spectacularly fail. He’s assisted and opposed by an ensemble cast of recognizable and even iconic presences. John Malkovich (!), Ben Schwartz, Jimmy O. Yang, Tawny Newsome, Lisa Kudrow, Jane Lynch, Patrick Warburton, Noah Emmerich, and Diedrich Bader all pop into and out of the frame at a sometimes dizzying pace. It’s a lot to take in — this cast and this show. As a result, Space Force attempts to be a lot right out of the gate and only starts to succeed when it stops being so “extra.”

A lot of the try-hard feel comes from Carell leaning into Michael Scott mode during scattered, shouty moments that linger past their screentime. Naird’s development feels too arrested until around the midseason point, when he spends an episode in a moon-simulation base. Magically, his struggles then become compelling and watchable and even relatable, and that’s when the show’s writing becomes crisper and other characters more well-rounded. It’s an odd turning point for the show, and a welcome one, since the first episodes of this Netflix series didn’t grab me. Yet it was a relief to see Naird become something other than a (to be blunt) pompous prick who does unfunny things like tasking a monkey with equipment repairs. Once those quirk-stunts stop happening, Space Force becomes a different, better show, although the less-than-smooth introduction may mean that people don’t get that far. Likewise, those who surround Naird start to gain characteristics that move beyond surface level development.

Those players would include the great John Malkovich as Dr. Mallory, the Space Force head scientist and voice of reason; Ben Schwartz as an F-bomb hurling media director whose name and aura suggests The Mooch; and Jimmy O. Yang’s scientist, who’s the closest to being the brains of the operation. Meanwhile, the women of this series are woefully underused for awhile, other than Naird’s daughter, played beautifully by Diana Silvers. It feels like Lisa Kudrow gets the shaft as Naird’s wife, and Tawny Newsome (who plays a Space Force captain that is initially relegated to being Naird’s personal pilot) also isn’t allowed to shine until quite late in the season.

Netflix

One key strength of Space Force is an unexpected one. Due to the inspiration for its high concept, I expected the show to be much more inherently political than it turns out to be. That’s a relief, although the series doesn’t shy away from an overall critique of governmental ineptitude and appalling, billion-dollar levels of waste. The T-word never surfaces, although it’s plenty clear that the show’s mad-tweeting POTUS (who wants to put “boobs” on the moon, and it might be a typo) is you-know-who. Likewise, the show’s handling of space warfare manages to treat the subject with such absurdity that one would be hard-pressed to find it politically offensive on either side of the coin.

Space Force‘s debut season has a lot going for it, but when one has an incredible cast, an obviously generous budget, and polished production values, those assets can be both a blessing and a curse while a show tries to find its (space) legs. Likewise, the co-creators’ legacies make this a tricky show to evaluate when nostalgia gets involved. When it comes to The Office, affection runs so high (throughout multiple audience generations) that people might forget that its first season wasn’t so wonderful. The show took awhile to catch hold of hearts and minds, and I wonder if Space Force should initially be allowed that same latitude. Is such audience leniency possible in 2020? I’m not sure, though my suspicion is that people will feel very strongly (in a positive or negative sense) about a show that’s more than alright, although not spectacular.

Netflix’s ‘Space Force’ streams on May 29.