Current:Home > ContactSignalHub-What's making us happy: A guide to your weekend reading, listening and viewing -ProfitLogic
SignalHub-What's making us happy: A guide to your weekend reading, listening and viewing
Fastexy Exchange View
Date:2025-04-06 11:11:58
This week,SignalHub we hunted monsters, learned how to be better movie watchers, and relished in a Met guard's love for art.
Here's what the NPR's Pop Culture Happy Hour crew was paying attention to — and what you should check out this weekend.
Scriptnotes podcast
Craig Mazin is the creator of The Last of Us, but he also has the most amazing podcast called Scriptnotes, which I discovered because I was listening to the podcast for The Last of Us. The podcast is also hosted by John August, who wrote Big Fish, and together he and Craig have this really beautiful chemistry. They're just really funny and light and also give you a lot of great insight into the WGA and what's happening there, if you're keeping track of the current ongoings in that situation. So I've been learning a lot from this podcast.
— Joelle Monique
Hysterical by Elissa Bassist
It's part memoir, part medical mystery, part cultural criticism. She started having issues with her physical voice and through looking for why that was happening and the health issues around that, came to understand how much of it was tied to trauma and her own efforts to kind of keep herself quiet over the years.
It just touches on so many things that I know women deal with in the world. It weaves the science in — in a great way where you're both reading about what this woman has gone through, but you're learning something at the same time.
— Daisy Rosario
His Dark Materials on HBO
What's making me happy this week is HBO's adaptation of the His Dark Materials trilogy, which I recently finished binging. I never read the books, because I grew up evangelical. There was a big boycott of that when I was growing up, because the main character Lyra gets pulled into basically a war against God and her father is out to kill God. It did a good job of pulling someone who was not into this world, into this world. The casting is fantastic. Ruth Wilson is just incredible as the evil Mrs. Coulter. I really also love James McAvoy in full bad dad mode. I didn't even hate his man bun, so I highly recommend the His Dark Materials adaptation. It's all on HBO.
— Mallory Yu
Oscar-nominated documentary short Haulout
What's making me happy this week is Haulout. That is an Oscar nominated documentary short. It is just 25 minutes long and directed by Evgenia Arbugaeva and Maxim Arbugaev. I think the less you know about this movie going in, the better. So I'll just say on a remote beach in Chukotka in the Siberian Arctic, which is basically the top of the world, there's a man named Maxime who sits in a lonely, ramshackle little hut, and he's waiting for something to happen. That something is a naturally occurring phenomenon. We spend some time with him and the general run of his days as he waits for it. Then one morning he opens his sad, rickety ass front door, and it's happening. What is happening is just remarkable. It's also tinged with sadness, because climate change plays a very central role in what's happening. The way the directors frame their shots and once the event is happening, the way they find little stories in it without imposing any kind of fake, tidy, anthropomorphic worldview on it is gorgeous. For one thing, it's fascinating. It's one of several Oscar nominated shorts available at www.newyorker.com/video.
— Glen Weldon
More recommendations from the Pop Culture Happy Hour newsletter
by Glen Weldon
Cunk on Earth is a Netflix series produced by Black Mirror's Charlie Brooker. It stars comedian Diane Morgan as the confident yet clueless TV host Philomena Cunk. The series satirizes nature and historical documentary series, with Morgan's presenter blathering on about important moments in human development and witlessly interviewing actual experts, most of whom are in on the joke. These expert segments are great, but my favorite bits of the show are the stretches where Cunk's getting her Attenborough on and pompously pontificating about the nature of Man. As she strolls along a windswept beach or through the ruins of some ancient civilization, she dryly delivers monologues packed to the gills with very, very dumb jokes, without ever giving the game away.
Much has been written and said about the passing of Burt Bacharach. By the time I was six or seven, the man's music had already become a staple of the "Easy Listening" radio station my parents played on every car ride. I'm not proud to say that for years I associated "Raindrops Keep Fallin' on my Head" and his other hits with low-level carsickness and the odor of my mother's Winston-Salems. It took a concerted effort on my part, once I reached my 20s, to disentangle those associations and appreciate his work. The news of his death triggered another association, too: A series of TV ads for vermouth that he did with his then-wife Angie Dickinson. The reason I can still quote them in their entirety is how much they fascinated a very young me – everything about them seemed adult and self-possessed and mysteriously unconcerned with anything having to do with kids. The way they fit into their clothes. The way the two of them traded off being the one who makes the sales pitch, commercial to commercial. The blasé way Bacharach tosses off the jingle, like he's composing it on the fly. The way it looks like they decided to throw a party and the theme is turtlenecks. The way they look at each other at the end of the ad and whisper, "yeah." I remember thinking, as a kid: This is sex. This is that sex thing everyone talks about. And I wasn't entirely wrong.
We've already discussed how I'm angling for the terrific 1973 mystery film The Last of Sheila to attain a kind of cultural currency in this, the year of its 50th anniversary. Sadly, the passing of Raquel Welch supplies a fresh news peg to urge you, yet again, to check it out. It's one of her most grounded, nuanced performances and she blends effortlessly into the film's ensemble cast.
NPR's Teresa Xie adapted the Pop Culture Happy Hour segment "What's Making Us Happy" into a digital page. If you like these suggestions, consider signing up for our newsletter to get recommendations every week. And listen to Pop Culture Happy Hour on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
veryGood! (1)
Related
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- 'Percy Jackson' cast teases Season 2, cheers fandom: 'This show's hitting'
- What Team USA medal milestones to watch for at Paris Olympics
- Harris will carry Biden’s economic record into the election. She hopes to turn it into an asset
- Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
- Warner Bros. Discovery sues NBA to secure media rights awarded to Amazon
- Nebraska Supreme Court upholds law restricting both medical care for transgender youth and abortion
- 'Deadpool & Wolverine': What to know before you see the Marvel sequel
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- Will Smith resurges rap career with new single 'Work of Art'
Ranking
- 'Survivor' 47 finale, part one recap: 2 players were sent home. Who's left in the game?
- Who Is Lady Deadpool? Actress Revealed Amid Blake Lively, Taylor Swift Cameo Rumors
- Canada soccer's use of drones could go back years, include men's national team
- Arkansas standoff ends with suspect dead after exchange of gunfire with law enforcement
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- 270 flights canceled in Frankfurt as environmental activists target airports across Europe
- Arkansas abortion measure’s signatures from volunteers alone would fall short, filing shows
- What Team USA medal milestones to watch for at Paris Olympics
Recommendation
Finally, good retirement news! Southwest pilots' plan is a bright spot, experts say
Who is the athlete in the Olympic opening ceremony video? Zinedine Zidane stars
'What We Do in the Shadows' teases unfamiliar final season
CAS ruling on Kamila Valieva case means US skaters can finally get gold medals
What to know about Tuesday’s US House primaries to replace Matt Gaetz and Mike Waltz
North Carolina regulators says nonprofit run by lieutenant governor’s wife owes the state $132K
Leagues Cup soccer schedule: How to watch, what to know about today's opening games
'Bridgerton' star visits 'Doctor Who' Christmas special; new spinoff coming