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  • Peacock Needs More Hits. Could Halloween Horror Boost Its Catalog?

    Peacock Needs More Hits. Could Halloween Horror Boost Its Catalog?

    When Peacock became the streaming hub for the Tokyo Olympics in 2021, it didn’t quite go to plan, with users complaining about limited viewing options and a glitchy interface. It was, to quote NBCUniversal Media Group chairman Mark Lazarus, a “big digital middle finger,” as well as a microcosm of Peacock’s early days: a streamer that had yet to find its footing. Fast-forward to the summer of 2024, and Peacock’s coverage of the Paris Olympics was a rousing success on multiple fronts. For one, you could watch any event on the platform in addition to Gold Zone, which was basically the Olympian equivalent of NFL RedZone. More importantly, Peacock’s viewership rose by one-third in July, the highest growth for any streaming service that month. By any measure, Peacock delivered on the big stage.

    But while the streamer mastered its Olympics coverage, it’s not the kind of thing that’ll necessarily keep subscribers around for the long haul. (Some shrewd users might pay for Peacock for the duration of the Olympics, cancel it, and repeat the cycle in four years’ time.) Instead, what’ll really give Peacock a foothold in the Streaming Wars is a consistent stream (pun unintended) of must-watch programming. Depending on what you’re looking for, Peacock already has something to offer. On the sports front, NFL fans have access to Sunday Night Football, while soccer obsessives like myself get their Premier League fix on the platform. (Soon, Peacock will add NBA coverage to its sports catalog, which, unfortunately, comes at the expense of Inside the NBA, a show so sacred it should be protected in the Constitution.) There’s also plenty of reality TV to savor, from the Bravoverse to buzzy originals like The Traitors. But there’s one area where Peacock continues to flounder: scripted series.

    With the notable exception of Poker Face, the Peabody- and Emmy-nominated crime comedy from Rian Johnson, Peacock hasn’t created many scripted dramas capable of cutting through the noise. Some of its prestige efforts have simply been bad (Apples Never Fall), premiered at a time when subscribers’ attention was pulled elsewhere (Those About to Die coincided with the Paris Olympics), or, worse yet, were pretty good but never found a sizable audience (The Resort). It’s harder than ever for original shows to command attention when they aren’t available on Netflix or attached to big-name IP, so this isn’t a Peacock-specific problem. Still, it doesn’t bode well for future series, however good, if their popularity on the service feels so capped.

    Could capitalizing on spooky season change things for the better? From classic Universal monster movies—and their modern remakes—to Blumhouse hits like Get Out and M3GAN, NBCUniversal has long been a reliable home for horror. (Not to mention, there are enough horror fanatics out there to support a niche streamer catering to their interests, so demand for this stuff exists.) If the majority of Peacock’s prestige swings aren’t connecting with audiences, perhaps genre projects can move the needle.

    In the past two weeks, Peacock has put that theory to the test by premiering two high-profile horror series, Teacup and Hysteria!, which scratch a different itch within the genre. In the James Wan–produced Teacup, a ranch in rural Georgia becomes enveloped in a mysterious, invisible force field that traps its unlucky inhabitants, who soon realize they aren’t alone in the woods. No less an authority than Stephen King has praised Teacup as “all killer, no filler.” Meanwhile, Hysteria! takes place in small-town Michigan at the height of the ’80s satanic panic, as a high school heavy metal band exploits the cultural moment to rebrand and gain more followers—even if it puts a target on their back. (The series also boasts an ’80s horror icon in The Evil Dead’s Bruce Campbell, who plays the town’s police chief investigating a teenage boy’s disappearance.)

    Between the two shows, Teacup is the one that holds plenty of promise. The mystery-box component of having characters trapped by sinister forces is a compelling hook, but the key to Teacup’s longevity is whether the biggest questions surrounding the series will deliver satisfying answers. Without giving too much away, I actually think Teacup would generate more buzz if audiences knew more about what iconic horror properties the show was aping and how they fit into the larger story, which is largely absent from the marketing. Long story short: If the idea of John Carpenter’s The Thing taking place on a rural farm sounds intriguing, Teacup is well worth a watch. (As one would expect given the Carpenter comp, Teacup boasts some gnarly body horror for all you sickos out there.)

    Of course, The Thing is a tantalizing premise for single-location horror, but that makes it a better fit for a feature film rather than an eight-episode season of television. Teacup also has plenty of room for improvement, namely that its setup is far more interesting than any of the one-dimensional characters, who are mostly elevated by a talented ensemble that includes Yvonne Strahovski, Chaske Spencer, Scott Speedman, and Rob Morgan. The good news is that, should Teacup be renewed, its second season promises to have much bigger aspirations—expanding its scope to something more in the vein of Invasion of the Body Snatchers. But a series like Teacup needs an engaged audience to go along for the ride; a mystery box might not have a future if nobody wants to unpack it in the first place.

    Whereas Teacup’s biggest problem is that the show’s most marketable elements are withheld from viewers, Hysteria! fully embraces its similarities to the pop culture properties that inspired it. With an emphasis on punk teens and how a community views them while satanic panic is in the air, Hysteria! feels like Stranger Things’ Eddie Munson subplot stretched out to the length of a series, especially when it’s implied there’s a demonic presence making its way into the town. (That said, the sinister vibes are less Upside Down and more upside-down crosses.)

    Unfortunately, Hysteria! can’t quite decide what type of show it wants to be; story lines alternate between teens forming a satanic cult as a marketing stunt for their heavy metal band (fun!), a religious zealot dialing up paranoia among the locals (one-note and tiresome), and a mother (played by Julie Bowen) who fears something evil has rooted itself in her home (underdeveloped). For a horror series, Hysteria! also commits the cardinal sin of never being all that scary, even when characters are supposedly possessed or buried alive in a satanic ritual. It’s all a bit too unfocused—mildly creepy in one scene, mildly amusing in the next, always unsure of itself. As a result, Hysteria! is resigned to a fate that’s arguably worse than simply being bad: It’s forgettable.

    Forgettable isn’t what Peacock needs out of an original series, especially when almost every streamer on the market can boast some brand-defining hits. For some subscribers, Peacock is already filling a need, whether it’s through an impressive collection of reality TV or live sports offerings unique to its platform. (As long as NBCUniversal holds the rights to the Premier League, I’ll remain a loyal user.) But if Peacock is going to maintain a steady level of interest amid so many options, it can’t just rely on special events like the Olympics that come and go in a flash. Peacock is still making some headway in the Streaming Wars, but when it comes to scripted series, the service could stand to ruffle more feathers.

    Miles Surrey

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  • ‘Emails I Can’t Send’

    ‘Emails I Can’t Send’

    After having the two songs of the summer in “Espresso” and “Please Please Please,” Sabrina Carpenter is gearing up to release Short n’ Sweet. So first, Nora and Nathan go back to her album Emails I Can’t Send. They talk about her transition from a “lowercase pop girl” to an “uppercase pop girl” (1:00), her drama with Olivia Rodrigo and Joshua Bassett that led to songs like “Skin” and “Because I Liked a Boy” (29:54), and what they anticipate from her with this next album (41:53).

    Hosts: Nora Princiotti and Nathan Hubbard
    Producer: Kaya McMullen

    Subscribe: Spotify

    Nora Princiotti

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  • Can Togedemaru be shiny in Pokémon Go?

    Can Togedemaru be shiny in Pokémon Go?

    Togedemaru, the roly-poly Pokémon from Alola, can be found in the wild in Pokémon Go. Yes, Togedemaru can be shiny in Pokémon Go!

    Graphic: Julia Lee/Polygon | Source images: Niantic

    Togedemaru’s shiny form was launched alongside the “Strength of Steel” event, as part of the Ultra Unlock Part 2 for 2024. It doesn’t evolve and is the resident Pika-clone of its region (Alola) — so yes, it sure is cute.

    What is the shiny rate for Togedemaru in Pokémon Go?

    There’s currently not enough data about Togedemaru’s shiny rate to tell if it’s permaboosted or not.

    What can I do to attract more shiny Pokémon?

    Not much, unfortunately. It appears to be random chance. Shiny Pokémon catch rates are set by developer Niantic, and they are typically only boosted during special events like Community Days or Safari Zones, or in Legendary Raids. There are no consumable items that boost shiny Pokémon rates.

    Where can I find a list of available shiny Pokémon?

    LeekDuck keeps a list of currently available shiny Pokémon. It’s a helpful visual guide that illustrates what all of the existing shiny Pokémon look like.

    For more tips, check out Polygon’s Pokémon Go guides.

    Julia Lee

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  • The Bikeriders, The Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes, and every movie new to streaming this week

    The Bikeriders, The Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes, and every movie new to streaming this week

    Each week on Polygon, we round up the most notable new releases to streaming and VOD, highlighting the biggest and best new movies for you to watch at home.

    This week, The Bikeriders, the new crime drama starring Jodie Comer (The Last Duel) and Austin Butler (Dune: Part Two), comes to VOD alongside The Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes and several other exciting new releases. That’s not all — there’s tons of other movies new to streaming to watch this weekend, like the hybrid animated period drama The Peasants on Netflix, the sci-fi drama The Animal Kingdom on Hulu, a documentary on the life and career of actress Faye Dunaway on Max, and much more.

    Here’s everything new that’s available to watch this weekend!


    New on Netflix

    The Peasants

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Netflix

    Image: Breakthru Films/Sony Pictures Classics

    Genre: Animated historical drama
    Run time: 1h 54m
    Directors: DK Welchman, Hugh Welchman
    Cast: Kamila Urzędowska, Robert Gulaczyk, Mirosław Baka

    Loving Vincent directing duo DK Welchman and Hugh Welchman return with yet another period drama composed of thousands of hand-painted images. Set in a 19th-century Polish village rife with feuding and gossip, a young woman named Jagna strives desperately to forge a life for herself beyond the expectations of those around her.

    New on Hulu

    The Animal Kingdom

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Hulu

    A bearded man with his arm around the shoulders of a teenage boy in The Animal Kingdom.

    Image: Magnet Releasing

    Genre: Sci-fi
    Run time: 2h 10m
    Director: Thomas Cailley
    Cast: Romain Duris, Paul Kircher, Adèle Exarchopoulos

    In a world where humans have been stricken with a genetic mutation that transforms them into animal hybrids, a desperate father (Romain Duris) takes his son (Paul Kircher) to search for his wife, who has disappeared into a nearby forest along with other similarly affected hybrids. Think Sweet Tooth meets The Lobster. Polygon had the opportunity to speak with Cailey about the origins and creature design of the film.

    New on Max

    Faye

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Max

    Genre: Documentary
    Run time: 1h 31m
    Director: Laurent Bouzereau

    This documentary looks back on the life and career of Faye Dunaway, the Academy Award-winning actress known for her iconic performances in such films as Bonnie and Clyde, Network, and Chinatown. Bouzereau’s film collects testimonies from Dunaway’s peers and admirers, as well as extensive interviews with Dunaway herself.

    New on Prime Video

    Divorce in the Black

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Prime Video

    Two people sit at a tense dinner

    Image: Prime Video

    Genre: Drama
    Run time: 2h 23m
    Director: Tyler Perry
    Cast: Meagan Good, Cory Hardrict, Joseph Lee Anderson

    Tyler Perry’s newest movie follows a young bank professional whose husband leaves her. At first she’s determined to fight for their marriage, but she soon realizes that her husband once sabotaged her chance at true love.

    New on Shudder

    Arcadian

    Where to watch: Available to stream on Shudder

    A man and two boys seated behind the wheel of a dilapidated vehicle in Arcadia.

    Photo: Patrick Redmond/RLJE Films

    Genre: Action horror
    Run time: 1h 31m
    Director: Benjamin Brewer
    Cast: Nicolas Cage, Jaeden Martell, Maxwell Jenkins

    If you already caught Nicolas Cage in Longlegs, here’s another Cageian drama for you. The actor stars as a father of two sons desperate to protect and raise his family in a near future Earth decimated by the arrival of a ferocious nocturnal creatures. When their father is wounded by one of these creatures, his sons must band together and call upon every lesson of their training in order to survive.

    From our review:

    Once the action really gets underway, though, Cage is largely absent, and muddy spatial relationships and confusing, hard-to-see action take a significant percentage of the power out of what should be an explosive final act. And once the film settles into a fairly standard chase-and-fight movie, its lack of more character depth or nuance, or more compelling relationships between the protagonists, limits what the filmmakers can do to make this story stand out from all the past projects it echoes. Arcadian does a few things remarkably well for a sci-fi/horror movie, but it needed a lot more to really spark: more commitment to its vaguely realized setting, more energy between the two very different brothers at its center, and above all, more Nicolas Cage — either version of him.

    New to rent

    Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    A gorilla from Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes snarls at the camera

    Image: 20th Century Studios

    Genre: Post-apocalyptic sci-fi
    Run time: 2h 25m
    Director: Wes Ball
    Cast: Owen Teague, Freya Allan, Kevin Durand

    Picking up 300 years after the events of Matt Reeves’ War of the Planet of the Apes, this new installment in the franchise follows Noa (Owen Teague), a young ape who embarks on a journey to rescue his tribe from Proximus Caesar (Kevin Durand), a maniacal ape who has twisted Caesar’s legacy to create an empire built on conquest and slavery.

    From our review:

    As a story, Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes rarely reaches above narrative competence. But because of its almost single-minded focus on the apes, its technical prowess in their rendering is always front and center. It is frankly incredible what the team at Wētā FX has done in conjunction with all of the film’s other effects artists to bring the apes to life, to give them all distinct body language, and to faithfully transpose actors’ every tic and subtle expression onto their faces. These are some of the most soulful digital creations ever seen in a blockbuster action movie, and it’s incredible to see them in a film that is so pedestrian.

    The Bikeriders

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    Austin Butler, with mussed-up hair, wearing a black sleeveless top, leans forward in a moody way in The Bikeriders

    Image: 20th Century Studios

    Genre: Crime drama
    Run time: 1h 56m
    Director: Jeff Nichols
    Cast: Jodie Comer, Austin Butler, Tom Hardy

    The Bikeriders follows a motorcycle club over the course of a decade, as they go from a simple gathering of enthusiasts to a hardened gang. Jodie Comer plays Kathy, a young woman who gets swept up in the biker gang world after meeting hotheaded Benny (Austin Butler).

    From our review:

    The Bikeriders is a film of old-fashioned, simple pleasures: great tunes, perfect costumes, myth-making shots, and a cast of great character actors really going for it. (Including, but not limited to, Michael Shannon, West Side Story’s Mike Faist, Justified’s Damon Herriman, and a completely unrecognizable Norman Reedus as a shaggy Californian wildman biker.) It’s a film about looking at the gorgeous, unknowable people on the screen — and that one gorgeous, unknowable person in particular — just as Hardy’s character does at one point with Marlon Brando in The Wild One, and thinking: What would it be like to be them?

    The Exorcism

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    Russell Crowe dressed as a priest with dried bile and blood covering his beard in The Exorcism.

    Image: Vertical Entertainment

    Genre: Horror thriller
    Run time: 1h 35m
    Director: Joshua John Miller
    Cast: Russell Crowe, Ryan Simpkins, Sam Worthington

    Russell Crowe plays an actor on the set of a supernatural horror film that resembles the original Exorcist movie. His mental state is in slow decline, and as his behavior becomes more erratic, his daughter begins to suspect that there might be a more sinister cause behind it than his previous substance addictions.

    The Garfield Movie

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    Jon Arbuckle shaves parmesan cheese over Garfield’s lasagna while Odie watches in a still from The Garfield Movie

    Image: Sony Pictures

    Genre: Adventure comedy
    Run time: 1h 41m
    Director: Mark Dindal
    Cast: Chris Pratt, Samuel L. Jackson, Hannah Waddingham

    It’s Chris Pratt! As Garfield! The lazy orange cat reunites with his long lost father Vic (voiced by Samuel L. Jackson, of all people). Along with Odie, Vic and Garfield plan a heist to a farm so that they can steal a lot of milk in order to appease the Persian cat crime boss that Vic works for. The movie comes by way of director Mark Dindal, best known for The Emperor’s New Groove.

    The Convert

    Where to watch: Available to rent on Amazon, Apple, and Vudu

    A stern looking beared man with bruises on his face staring off at something in the distance with a large wooden totem behind him in The Convert.

    Image: MBK Productions/Magnolia Pictures

    Genre: Historical drama
    Run time: 1h 59m
    Director: Lee Tamahori
    Cast: Guy Pearce, Tioreore Ngatai-Melbourne, Antonio Te Maioha

    In this historical drama, a preacher comes to a remote outpost in New Zealand — only to get caught in the middle of a war between Māori tribes. It’s based on the 2011 novel Wulf by New Zealand author Hamish Clayton.

    Wildcat

    Maya Hawke as Flannery O’Connor reading a letter while standing next to her open mailbox in Wildcat.

    Image: Renovo Media Group/Oscilloscope Laboratories

    Genre: Biographical drama
    Run time: 1h 43m
    Director: Ethan Hawke
    Cast: Maya Hawke, Rafael Casal, Philip Ettinger

    Maya Hawke (Stranger Things) stars in her father Ethan Hawke’s latest film: a biographical drama centering on the life and struggles of the inimitable Southern Gothic author Flannery O’Connor. Wildcat follows O’Connor’s efforts to publish her first novel, interspersed with episodes reenacting characters and scenes inspired by the author’s own short stories.

    Toussaint Egan

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  • Cubs Fans Can Now Nosh on Pizza Bagels and Reubens Across From Wrigley Field

    Cubs Fans Can Now Nosh on Pizza Bagels and Reubens Across From Wrigley Field

    When Aaron Steingold opened his modern Jewish deli Steingold’s of Chicago in 2017, he already had baseball on the brain. A lifelong fan and self-described baseball historian who attended games at Yankee Stadium in the Bronx as a child, he harbored a dream of opening a location near Wrigley Field, the famed home of the Chicago Cubs.

    Seven years later, Steingold is swinging for the fences with Steingold’s Bagels & Nosh, a new location across the Friendly Confines inside the Hotel Zachary. Steingold’s features classic deli hits and playful new additions and officially opened its doors Thursday, July 11 in the 1,200-square-foot former home of West Town Bakery at 3630 N. Clark Street.

    “It’s always been a part of my long-term goals to open something closer to the ballpark,” says Steingold, nodding toward the longstanding romance between American Jews and the iconic game. “Nostalgia is a big part of our cuisine… and baseball is as Americana as it gets, so it’s a match made in heaven for us.”

    All but five of the deli’s 28 seats have a view of Wrigley Field.

    Steingold’s Bagels & Nosh aims to pull off a tricky balancing act of maintaining tradition — the subject of animated discussion among Jews for millennia — while surviving and thriving in the modern era. That means fans can count on staples like hot pastrami on rye, classic bagel and lox sandwiches (the deli’s number-one seller, says Steingold), latkes, and bagels in bulk. The dynamics of ballpark crowds and hotel guests have also prompted some fresh additions like the Traditional, a build-your-own sandwich with numerous meat, cheeses, and condiments to choose from, and customizable breakfast sandwiches with new vegetarian ingredients like culinary director Cara Peterson’s (whose experience includes working at New Orleans’ award-winning Shaya) red lentil patties. Steingold has offered Vienna Beef bagel dogs on and off for a few years, but at Bagels & Nosh, they’re a permanent menu item with brown mustard for dipping.

    In a sign of the times, Steingold has for the first time added gluten-free bagels to the lineup, sourced from California-based brand Original Sunshine, as well as a few additional vegetarian open-faced bagel sandwiches. “We’re hoping to not just be [associated] with the high-calorie, heavy-duty sandwiches that people probably know us for,” he says.

    A large neon sign that reads “Steingold’s” behind a deli counter.

    Design elements like subway tile lend the feel of a classic Ashkenazi-style deli.

    A deli case filled with baked goods and smoked fish.

    The Steingold’s team designed the tiny space for maximum speed and efficiency.

    That isn’t to say that Bagels & Nosh is a health food spot — Steingold tapped operations director Sean Courtney to design a drink menu, which includes a dozen mostly local draft beers, “easy-drinking” wines, and rotating boozy slushies like a frozen watermelon limonada that riffs on Middle Eastern mint lemonade. The team has plans for “deli-inspired” concoctions like a twist on a classic egg cream for the winter. In the coming weeks, the deli will kick off knock-and-drop service for hotel guests, delivering smoked fish platters and more to their doors.

    Explore Steingold’s Bagels & Nosh in the photographs below.

    Steingold’s Bagels & Nosh, 3630 N. Clark Street, open daily from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.

    A close-up of the door at Steingold’s Bagels & Nosh.

    Longtime collaborator Heart & Bone Signs applied all the gold leaf lettering.

    An exterior photo of Steingold’s Bagels & Nosh.

    A window inside Steingold’s Bagels & Nosh looking out on Wrigley Field.

    Naomi Waxman

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  • Can Morelull be shiny in Pokémon Go?

    Can Morelull be shiny in Pokémon Go?

    Morelull, the illuminating Pokémon from Alola, can be found in the wild in Pokémon Go. Yes, Morelull can be shiny in Pokémon Go!

    Graphic: Julia Lee/Polygon | Source images: Niantic

    Neither of these mushroom Pokémon see any use in raids, gyms, or PvP content. Their shinies are great, since they go from a spring coloring to a nice autumn red-yellow-brown.

    What is the shiny rate for Morelull in Pokémon Go?

    As per old research by the now-defunct website The Silph Road (via Wayback Machine), the shiny rate for Pokémon on a regular day is approximately one in 500. Morelull is not a confirmed Pokémon that gets a “permaboost” (meaning that it’s a rare spawn and thus gets a boosted shiny rate).

    What can I do to attract more shiny Pokémon?

    Not much, unfortunately. It appears to be random chance. Shiny Pokémon catch rates are set by developer Niantic, and they are typically only boosted during special events like Community Days or Safari Zones, or in Legendary Raids. There are no consumable items that boost shiny Pokémon rates.

    Where can I find a list of available shiny Pokémon?

    LeekDuck maintains a list of currently available shiny Pokémon. It’s a helpful visual guide that illustrates what all of the existing shiny Pokémon look like.

    For more tips, check out Polygon’s Pokémon Go guides.

    Julia Lee

    Source link

  • Bear with head stuck in metal milk can for month finally freed in Vermont, video shows

    Bear with head stuck in metal milk can for month finally freed in Vermont, video shows

    Rescuers in Vermont worked for three weeks to trap a black bear with a metal can stuck around its neck before they were finally able to sedate and free the animal.

    Rescuers in Vermont worked for three weeks to trap a black bear with a metal can stuck around its neck before they were finally able to sedate and free the animal.

    Photo from the Vermont Fish & Wildlife Department

    A black bear with a metal can stuck on its head eluded rescuers for more than three weeks until they were finally able to trap and help the animal.

    A video shared by the Vermont Fish and Wildlife Department on June 4 shows the bear being set free.

    Starting about a month ago, residents of Enosburgh began reporting sightings of a bear with a metal milk can wrapped around its neck like a cone, the department said on Facebook.

    While wildlife specialists aren’t sure how the bear got its head stuck, they orchestrated a plan to free it.

    “Trapping a bear is actually very tricky,” Vermont Fish and Wildlife spokesperson Josh Morse told McClatchy News.

    Property owners and game cameras had caught sight of the bear, helping direct the response team to good areas to set up traps for the roughly 250-pound creature, officials said.

    “Unfortunately, this was not a surprising report,” wildlife management program manager David Sausville said in an email. “There have been similar occurrences, biologists removed a can about 10 years ago from another bear.”

    The response team set up two culvert traps, which resemble large tubes, specifically designed for black bears, according to the wildlife department.

    The team first set the traps May 10 and moved them around as the bear changed locations, Sausville said.

    Every day someone had to check the traps and would update the team on a text thread, Sausville said. The group also organized around-the-clock staffing in case the bear entered one of the traps.

    Finally, on June 1, 22 days after the group laid the traps, game wardens, biologists and a local resident worked together to nab the bear, sedate it using drugs and get rid of the can.

    They placed cloth over the bear’s eyes and snout as they cut away at the can, the video shows. The team pried it away, protecting the animal from the jagged edges, and the bear was free.

    The roughly 250-pound black bear got its head stuck in an old metal milk can, Vermont wildlife officials said.
    The roughly 250-pound black bear got its head stuck in an old metal milk can, Vermont wildlife officials said. Photo from the Vermont Fish & Wildlife Department

    “The can surely had an impact on the bear’s hearing and vision, but overall it appeared quite healthy and only had a few minor scratches,” the department said in the video.

    A video taken after the operation shows the bear snapping out of its stupor and getting to its feet before bolting in the woods, can-free.

    Black bears, which are the smallest of the three North American bear species, are the only type of bear found in Vermont.

    “If you live in Vermont, you live in bear country, and we are all responsible for discouraging bears from seeing our yards as food sources,” the department said. “Coexistence is key for bears’ future in Vermont and our part in that includes keeping our food, compost and waste items cleaned up or secure.”

    Enosburgh is a small town in northern Vermont near the Canadian border.

    Olivia Lloyd

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  • Can Clefairy be shiny in Pokémon Go?

    Can Clefairy be shiny in Pokémon Go?

    Clefairy, the fairy Pokémon from Kanto, can be found in the wild in Pokémon Go. Yes, Clefairy can be shiny in Pokémon Go!

    Graphic: Julia Lee/Polygon | Source images: Niantic

    The Clefairy family doesn’t see any use in PvE content (raids and gyms), but Clefable does see some use in PvP Ultra League for those interested.

    Its shiny is a simple one, but it gets the point across. It gives more of an alien vibe to the Pokémon that comes from the moon.

    What is the shiny rate for Clefairy in Pokémon Go?

    As per old research by the now-defunct website The Silph Road (via Wayback Machine), the shiny rate for Pokémon on a regular day is approximately one in 500. Clefairy is not a confirmed Pokémon that gets a “permaboost” (meaning that it’s a rare spawn and thus gets a boosted shiny rate).

    What can I do to attract more shiny Pokémon?

    Not much, unfortunately. It appears to be random chance. Shiny Pokémon catch rates are set by developer Niantic, and they are typically only boosted during special events like Community Days or Safari Zones, or in Legendary Raids. There are no consumable items that boost shiny Pokémon rates.

    Where can I find a list of available shiny Pokémon?

    LeekDuck keeps a list of currently available shiny Pokémon. It’s a helpful visual guide that illustrates what all of the existing shiny Pokémon look like.

    For more tips, check out Polygon’s Pokémon Go guides.

    Julia Lee

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  • Can Trubbish be shiny in Pokémon Go?

    Can Trubbish be shiny in Pokémon Go?

    Trubbish, the trash bag Pokémon from Unova, can be found in the wild in Pokémon Go. Yes, Trubbish can be shiny in Pokémon Go!

    Graphic: Julia Lee/Polygon | Image sources: Niantic/The Pokémon Company

    Neither Trubbish nor Garbodor see any meta use in PvE or PvP, though Garbodor has some really niche uses in some PvP leagues. As meta Pokémon, these guys go into the trash. As Pokémon themselves, they deserve love, care, and a wonderful home.

    What is the shiny rate for Trubbish in Pokémon Go?

    As per old research by the now-defunct website The Silph Road (via Wayback Machine), the shiny rate for Pokémon on a regular day is approximately one in 500. Trubbish is not a confirmed Pokémon that gets a “permaboost” (meaning that it’s a rare spawn and thus gets a boosted shiny rate).

    What can I do to attract more shiny Pokémon?

    Not much, unfortunately. It appears to be random chance. Shiny Pokémon catch rates are set by developer Niantic, and they are typically only boosted during special events like Community Days or Safari Zones, or in Legendary Raids. There are no consumable items that boost shiny Pokémon rates.

    Where can I find a list of available shiny Pokémon?

    LeekDuck keeps a list of currently available shiny Pokémon. It’s a helpful visual guide that illustrates what all of the existing shiny Pokémon look like.

    For more tips, check out Polygon’s Pokémon Go guides.

    Julia Lee

    Source link

  • Can IMAX Save Movie Theaters?

    Can IMAX Save Movie Theaters?

    Matt is joined by IMAX CEO Rich Gelfond to discuss the complicated state of movie theaters and the growing importance of premium large-format screens like IMAX. Rich reveals just how much certain movies have benefitted from IMAX sales, which movies are getting the most IMAX screens this spring and summer, and what to do about the glut of empty multiplexes across the country. Matt finishes the show with an opening-weekend box office prediction for Alex Garland’s newest film, Civil War.

    For a 20 percent discount on Matt’s Hollywood insider newsletter, What I’m Hearing …, click here.

    Email us your thoughts!

    Host: Matt Belloni
    Guest: Rich Gelfond
    Producers: Craig Horlbeck and Jessie Lopez
    Theme Song: Devon Renaldo

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    Matthew Belloni

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  • 3 years in, Hellblade 2 on Xbox Series X finally gives us a next-gen moment

    3 years in, Hellblade 2 on Xbox Series X finally gives us a next-gen moment

    This console generation has been pretty short of “next-gen moments” — those dazzling, techy epiphanies when you see a game do things that were inconceivable on earlier hardware. You can make a case for Ratchet & Clank: Rift Apart’s lightning-fast loading or Starfield’s potato physics, but there have been relatively few instances where you can watch the future arrive in real time.

    There are a few reasons for this. One is that console supply issues and pandemic-driven development delays led to an unusually long cross-generational phase. Until last year, most games were still being released on PlayStation 4 and Xbox One as well as their successors. Another is that Unreal Engine 5, the latest iteration of Epic Games’ ubiquitous graphics engine, lagged a little behind the new console generation, and large-scale UE5 productions have been slow to appear, with a couple of exceptions.

    All of this is why I wasn’t expecting to experience a next-gen moment when I traveled to Cambridge, U.K., to visit the Ninja Theory studio and play Senua’s Saga: Hellblade 2. But I got one. It’s an astonishingly lifelike narrative action game that applies UE5’s tech, Microsoft’s resources (the company owns Ninja Theory), and the unique processes of a smallish team of technical artists to create something at once grounded and vividly hyperreal. There’s nothing else quite like it.

    This won’t come as a total surprise if you played 2017’s Hellblade: Senua’s Sacrifice. Both Hellblade games blend horrific, quasi-mythological action with a realistic approach to the psychology of their heroine, Senua, an eighth-century Celtic warrior with psychosis. Both games have a photoreal visual style with heavy emphasis on performance capture — an area Ninja Theory has specialized in since collaborating with Andy Serkis on its 2007 action game Heavenly Sword.

    Quite a lot has changed for Ninja Theory since 2017, however. In 2018, the studio was acquired by Microsoft. It hasn’t grown much since — with 100 people, around 80 of whom are working on Hellblade 2, this remains a modestly sized team — but Microsoft’s investment is evident in beautiful new offices with a large, dedicated motion capture studio (and, at the insistence of some extremely British local planning regulations, an in-house pub). On my visit, there was no sign or mention of Ninja Theory’s flamboyant founder and Hellblade writer-director Tameem Antoniades. An Xbox spokesperson later confirmed to Polygon that he is no longer with the studio. Antoniades was involved in Hellblade 2 in the early stages, but the game now has a trio of creative leads: environment art director Dan Attwell, visual effects director Mark Slater-Tunstill, and audio director David Garcia.

    You would expect a dedication to craft in any game led by three technical artists, but that still wouldn’t prepare you for the extraordinary lengths Ninja Theory is going to in its pursuit of realism. In Hellblade 2, Senua journeys to Iceland on the hunt for Norse slavers who are decimating her community in the northern British Isles. As press toured the studio, Attwell explained that the route of her adventure had been plotted in the real world, and locations were captured using a mixture of satellite imaging, drone footage, procedural generation, and photogrammetry. The team spent weeks on location in Iceland, studying the landscape, photographing rocks, and piloting drones. They also studied building techniques of the time and virtually constructed doors out of 3D-scanned planks of wood, rather than modeling them. They even made their own rough wood carvings and scanned them in.

    Character art director Dan Crossland showed us real costumes that had been made to fit the actors by a London-based costume designer using period-appropriate techniques, and then scanned in by the studio. Behind Crossland’s desk there was a mannequin plastered in mesh, putty, feathers, and deconstructed scraps of fabric — a spooky, hand-sculpted prototype enemy design.

    Image: Ninja Theory/Xbox Game Studios

    Over in the combat team’s section, principal action designer Benoit Macon, a very tall and ebullient Frenchman, explained that the game’s fight sequences weren’t traditionally animated, but 100% mo-capped. I watched stunt professionals act out finishing moves on the performance capture stage while animation director Guy Midgley shot them in a close, roving handheld style, using a phone in a lightweight rig.

    The playable results of this fully mo-capped fighting system are quite unique. Combat in Hellblade 2 is one on one only, slow-paced, and very brutal. In the fight scenes of the demo I played — which also featured pattern-spotting puzzles and some atmospheric, grueling traversal — there’s a heightened sense of threat as Senua faces hulking and aggressive opponents, and the characters loom large in the unusually tight camera angles. This might not be the over-the-top combat of DmC: Devil May Cry, but it’s still very effective.

    In a small, soundproofed studio on the top floor, Garcia worked with the two voice actors playing the Furies, which is how Senua thinks of the voices in her head who keep up a constant commentary on the action and her state of mind. (As with the first game, scriptwriter Lara Derham has worked with psychology professor Paul Fletcher and with people who have experienced psychosis on the portrayal of the condition’s effects.) The actors prowled around a binaural microphone — essentially a mannequin head with microphones for ears — hissing and murmuring their lines as if at Senua herself. Garcia, a Spaniard with an infectious sense of wonder, is called a “genius” by his co-workers. His growling, chattering soundscapes are players’ principal point of access into Senua’s state of mind, and they’re as overwhelming now as they were in 2017.

    Senua, seen from the waist up, holds a sword with her back to the player. She faces an indistinct enemy holding a fiery sword whose appearance is fractured

    Image: Ninja Theory/Xbox Game Studios

    The lengths to which Ninja Theory is going to ground this digital video game in physical reality might seem quixotic — even contradictory — but the proof is in the playing. The game, which I played on Xbox Series X, looks stunning, whether it’s rendering the black, smoking slopes of an Icelandic volcano or the pale, haunted eyes of Senua performer Melina Juergens. But beyond that, Hellblade 2 has a tactile immediacy that seems to operate at an almost subconscious level. Ninja Theory’s artists are seeking an emotional connection with the player that, they believe, can only form if the player thinks that what they are seeing is real.

    “I think that the human mind does [a thing where] you think you know what something looks like, but then actually, when you look at what that thing is, in reality there’s way more chaos in it. It’s not quite the same as what you picture in your head,” Slater-Tunstill said. “If you were just sculpting off the top of your head, the environments or the characters or whatever, it just is going to lose some of that nature, some of that chaos.”

    Attwell said that Unreal Engine 5 has made this realist approach more more achievable, both because of the level of fidelity available in the engine’s Nanite geometry system, and because “the turnaround between scanning the thing and putting it in the level is drastically cut, and you can spend that time finessing.”

    “You can think more about the composition,” Slater-Tunstill agreed. “And with the kind of lighting volumetrics we can now do, everything just beds in much better. It’s more believable.”

    Overall, the sense from the Ninja Theory team is that UE5 has removed a lot of barriers for video game artists, and that players are only just starting to see the results. “It feels like the graphical leap that we’ve managed with this is like… We’re on the trajectory we wanted,” Attwell said.

    Senua grimaces while stabbing an enemy with her sword in Hellblade 2. They are lit harshly from the right against a plain blue background.

    Image: Ninja Theory/Xbox Game Studios

    You only need to lay eyes on Hellblade 2 briefly to understand that you’re seeing the next evolution of game technology. It’s not just the engine, though — there are a bunch of factors aligning to make Hellblade 2 a tech showcase. For one, the game design is extremely focused. This isn’t some wild open-world simulation; it’s a linear, narrative-first action game. As an Xbox first-party studio, Ninja Theory has the luxury of building for fewer formats. Also, it’s been given the time to experiment. Touring the studio, Microsoft’s investment in Ninja Theory starts to make a lot of sense. The tech giant hasn’t just acquired a boutique developer, but also an R&D unit that explores the technical and artistic frontiers of a specific game-making process.

    The result is a game made with an unusual degree of focus. Hellblade 2 won’t necessarily be to everyone’s taste with its slow pace, deliberate inputs, and highly scripted, cinematic presentation. It struck me as a modern successor to something like the 1983 interactive animation Dragon’s Lair. As intense and dramatic as the section I played was, it remains to be seen whether the game’s story — a more outward journey for a more mentally balanced Senua — can connect as deeply as Hellblade’s trip into her darkest fears. But there’s no doubting the craft on display, or the immersive sense of presence this game has. It may be a sequel, but it feels like the start of something — like a true next-gen experience should.

    Senua’s Saga: Hellblade 2 will be released May 21 on Windows PC and Xbox Series X.

    Oli Welsh

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  • The Halo TV show making the humans the villains completely misses the point

    The Halo TV show making the humans the villains completely misses the point

    It’s become increasingly clear that the Halo TV show has a villain problem. This may seem impossible for a series that’s supposed to be about a hostile race of aliens led by liars who exploit religious fanaticism, but instead the show can’t stop focusing on human bickering, bizarrely relegating the galaxy-conquering aliens to an afterthought for both the characters in the show and the audience.

    I could talk about how Halo’s centering of humans as the bad guys behind every plot cheapens one of the few fascinating moral complexities of the Halo games and books — that the Spartans were built for fundamentally inhumane treatment of rebel fighters and then accidentally found justification in a surprise alien invasion. But it’s more fair and even more damning to talk about all of this on the Halo TV show’s own terms. And on those terms, I simply have no fucking idea why there are even aliens in this show to begin with.

    In an effort to underline the badness of humanity, Halo has completely sidelined the Covenant, throwing the entire show off course and spinning wildly into space. Even the Covenant’s grand invasion of Reach in the show is just another human plot, one of a thousand ways the TV show wants to prove that the human bureaucrats are evil, something we’ve known since the earliest moments of the show’s first season.

    But all this emphasis on humanity’s sins begs a critical question: Almost two full seasons into Halo, what point is it trying to make, exactly? Season 2’s seventh episode, “Thermopylae,” seems to offer some attempt at answering that question, when Makee (Charlie Murphy) pleads with Chief to stop helping humanity so that the two of them can settle Halo on their own and make it a paradise, rather than letting either side use it as a civilization-destroying weapon. Setting aside the silliness that is this version of Halo being so constantly tempted to recast Master Chief (Pablo Schreiber) as the lead of a domestic drama, Makee’s statement still leaves a gap in our understanding of what this show is doing. If the point is “war makes monsters of us all,” then shouldn’t we see that equally in both the human and Covenant factions? And even more pressingly, why won’t anyone acknowledge that the Covenant are the ones who threatened extinction first and based their whole galactic conquest on the Prophets’ lie about a Great Journey that would take them from the galaxy?

    Photo: Adrienn Szabo/Paramount Plus

    We’re subjected to half a dozen scenes each episode of humanity’s reckless and evil leaders making civilization-shaping choices — particularly the ongoing machinations of Admiral Margaret Parangosky (Shabana Azmi), one of the worst and least compelling characters in recent TV memory, thanks to her consistently baffling decisions and seemingly lack of strategy and communication. (Put simply: She’s here to antagonize every other character, with no real character of her own.) Meanwhile we only get to see the Covenant’s side from the point of view of Makee and the criminally underdeveloped Arbiter. Sure, we hear them say that the Prophets might be full of shit and that the Great Journey might be a lie, but it remains a complete mystery why the alien’s genuinely compelling similarity to Earth’s own corrupt and lying authorities is drawn with such a faint line. Perhaps drawing those connections more clearly would help us make sense of why Master Chief has fought more humans in Halo season 2 than he has Covenant.

    Despite the moment-to-moment conflict rarely making sense, or seeming to lead anywhere, it hasn’t stopped the show from introducing more plot threads or drip-feeding longtime series fans with new bits of recognizable lore. For instance, this latest episode gave us our most meaningful look yet at the Forerunners, though they haven’t been named quite yet. It also hinted at yet another alien faction that could soon arrive, but we’ll have to wait and see if that thread goes anywhere.

    All these new introductions do little to lessen the feeling of narrative cheapness that surrounds Halo, however. As more ideas and plots get introduced, it only serves to underline how little sense any of this really makes. Sure, we know the Covenant are knocking on humanity’s front door, but the sudden diversion of every character in the show now converging on a need to capture “the Halo,” as they keep calling it, feels like it came out of nowhere. Which is a pretty astounding feat of messy storytelling considering it’s the object the entire franchise is named after.

    Halo season 2 is now streaming on Paramount Plus. The season finale will be released on Thursday, March 21.

    Austen Goslin

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  • Persona 3 Reload’s ending, explained

    Persona 3 Reload’s ending, explained

    Persona 3 Reload is a long game with an emotional ending — made more emotional by the sheer amount of time you’ve spent in this world and with these characters. If you got the game’s true ending, you may still find yourself watching the credits and asking: Wait, is there anything I could’ve done differently?

    In this Persona 3 Reload guide, we’ll walk you through the ending of the game, the fate of the game’s protagonist (Makoto Yuki), what influence you have over its outcome (if any), and how it all connects to Episode Aigis — the upcoming epilogue expansion.

    [Spoiler Warning: This post contains major spoilers for the true ending of Persona 3 Reload and some minor spoilers for “The Answer” epilogue from Persona 3 FES, which is being remade into the upcoming Episode Aigis DLC for Persona 3 Reload. If you want to stay as spoiler-free as possible, bookmark this guide and return to it once you see the credits roll. In the meantime, check out our guides for classroom answers and social link requirements.]

    Graphic: Polygon | Source images: Atlus/Sega


    Is the protagonist dead at the end of Persona 3 Reload?

    The protagonist uses the Great Seal ability in Persona 3 Reload

    Image: Atlus/Sega via Polygon

    Yes. When the protagonist falls asleep in Aigis’ lap, as all his friends are rushing up to the rooftop of the school, he passes away. This happens regardless of whether you choose the “……” option or the “Close them” option when the game tells you your eyes feel heavy. The blue butterfly fluttering away is meant to symbolize the character’s death in that moment.

    OK, but how do we know for sure? Well, that answer — funnily enough — comes from the game’s epilogue expansion called “The Answer,” which is a part of Persona 3 FES. That expansion is not part of Persona 3 Reload, but it’s coming in September of 2024 as the Episode Aigis DLC.

    In “The Answer” — and presumably Episode Aigis, based on how faithful Reload is to Persona 3 FES — you play as Aigis a few weeks after graduation and the death of the Leader character (which the game explicitly calls out). If you look back at the final battle against Nyx, the protagonist uses the Universe Persona to perform the Great Seal ability. The cost for casting Great Seal is equal to the Leader’s max health, suggesting that he gave everything to stop Nyx.

    The death is a little bit more complex than that, but we’ll leave you to discover those answers in Episode Aigis. Just trust for now that — unless Atlus makes an absolutely massive change to the story — the Leader is dead.


    Can you save the Leader in Persona 3 Reload?

    The protagonist rests and dies on Aigis’ lap in Persona 3 Reload

    Image: Atlus/Sega via Polygon

    No, technically. While you can choose to get the bad ending for Persona 3 Reload and kill Ryoji back in December, it’s understood that everyone on Earth will eventually die in that reality — even if you never see it. In order for everyone else to survive in Persona 3 Reload, the Leader must give up their own life to stop Nyx.

    Sacrifice is part of the main story thrust of Persona 3 Reload, with many players losing loved ones to heroic moments of sacrifice. Yukari and Mitsuru’s fathers are both great examples of this theming at work. By dying for his friends and the world, the protagonist’s death completes the sacrificial theme.

    Enjoy the game’s beautiful final moments knowing that you did nothing wrong here. You got the game’s good — albeit bittersweet — ending.

    Ryan Gilliam

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  • Chicago’s Ukrainian Community Can’t Get Enough of This New Lincoln Park Cafe

    Chicago’s Ukrainian Community Can’t Get Enough of This New Lincoln Park Cafe

    When Ukrainian couple Artur and Iryna Yuzvik opened their first U.S. coffee shop in late January in Lincoln Park, they tried to moderate their expectations. Their brand, Soloway Coffee, was a new entrant in Chicago’s dense and competitive coffee scene, and they weren’t sure if local caffeine aficionados would embrace their approach.

    Whatever fears the couple — also behind roastery and cafe chain Karma Kava in their hometown of Ternopil, Ukraine — harbored were put to rest almost immediately after the doors swung open at 2275 N. Lincoln Avenue. “We learned about long lines in Ukraine, but that’s nothing like here,” says Artur Yuzvik. “It was crazy, six or seven hours of a nonstop line.”

    Soloway Coffee owners Artur (left) and Iryna Yuzvik.
    Soloway Coffee

    Chicagoans aren’t the only ones beating a path to Soloway. One woman drove to Lincoln Park from Pennsylvania to get her hands on a Dotyk dripper, a sculptural ceramic brewing device sold at the cafe that’s made with clay from the city of Slovyansk in the Donbas region of eastern Ukraine, an area decimated by Russian military actions over the past two years. Ukrainian Americans are visiting the cafe from states like Wisconsin, Connecticut, and New York, with some “driving for five or six hours to refresh their memories of home [in Ukraine],” Artur Yuzvik says.

    The Chicago area is home to the second-largest Ukrainian American population in the U.S., with 54,000 people identifying as having Ukrainian ancestry. The community has dwelled in Chicago for more than a century, and recently, a fresh crop of Ukrainian American chefs has brought new attention to the country’s cuisine at spots like Anelya in Avondale and Pierogi Kitchen in Bucktown. On the East Coast, another Ukrainian coffee entrepreneur is putting down roots. Maks Isakov owned a coffee company in Vinnytsya, Ukraine, but was forced to abandon his business and flee the country when the Russian military invaded. He’s since founded Kavka Coffee in Camden, Maine.

    In Chicago, the enormity of the response from customers has prompted the Yuzviks to accelerate their expansion. They plan to soon sign a lease for a second location but aren’t yet ready to announce the address or neighborhood, divulging only that it will be “nearby” the original. They also say that it will be an all-day affair that transitions from morning to evening and will feature a large selection of sweets.

    A cafe filled with people.

    Soloway now only allows computers at two tables near the windows.
    Soloway Coffee

    At the original cafe, the couple has partnered with Chicago carb whiz Dan “the Baker” Koester on a menu of pastries like chewy cinnamon knots, flakey croissants (strawberry, lemon, and almond), and impossibly creamy burnt Basque cheesecake (“ugly outside but pretty inside,” Artur Yuzvik says). There’s also a selection of savory items including sandwiches and avocado burrata toast, though they plan to expand that lineup significantly and add more fresh produce. An outdoor patio, which the owners call “summer seating,” will open in May or June with more than two dozen seats. It’ll kick off with a borscht pop-up that aims to evoke memories of the traditional Ukrainian soup with a contemporary culinary flair. They’ve held numerous pop-ups in Ukraine and hope to continue that practice in Chicago.

    The first few months have been instructive for the Yuzviks, who say they were surprised to discover that their American customers tend to avoid sugary treats in the morning, instead ordering croissants and cheesecake around 2 p.m. They also hadn’t expected demand for iced drinks in the winter, but say they’ve seen entire families order cold brew on some of the chilliest days of the year.

    A table and stool inside a cafe.

    The cafe’s design is sleek and minimalistic.
    Soloway Coffee

    A shelf of coffee beans and jewelry.

    Iryna Yuzvik designs and sells coffee-themed jewelry.
    Soloway Coffee

    The most significant lesson since the cafe’s debut, however, emerged from a conversation the couple overheard among customers waiting in line. The group mentioned that employees at Chicago’s lauded Metric Coffee had praised Soloway and encouraged them to visit. The Yuzviks are friendly with Metric founders Xavier Alexander and Darko Arandjelovic and leaned on them for beans when they unexpectedly sold out weeks before the next shipment was due to arrive. Still, the idea of a coffee shop directing their customers elsewhere was entirely unexpected.

    “We were shocked and surprised,” Iryna Yuzvik says in Ukrainian, which her husband translates into English. “In Ukraine, it’s a bit different. In the U.S., it’s more about good relations and more friendly business.”

    Soloway Coffee, 2275 N. Lincoln Avenue, Open 7 a.m. to 5 p.m daily.

    Iryna Yuzvik smiles and poses while holding a tray of food.

    Soloway Coffee founder Iryna Yuzvik.
    Soloway Coffee

    A minimalistic cafe space.

    Soloway Coffee

    An employee in an apron stands behind the counter.

    Soloway Coffee

    A person pushes a tray of baked goods into an oven.

    The cheesecake is made with a Yuzvik family recipe.

    A ham sandwich on a plate.

    Ham sandwich (Swiss, parmesan, basil oil).
    Soloway Coffee

    A plate of avocado burrata toast.

    Avocado burrata toast (guacamole, scrambled eggs, arugula, cucumber).
    Soloway Coffee

    Naomi Waxman

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  • Martin Scorsese’s Super Bowl Commercial? You Can Thank His Daughter for That.

    Martin Scorsese’s Super Bowl Commercial? You Can Thank His Daughter for That.


    In his six decades of directing, Martin Scorsese has earned 10 Best Director Academy Award nominations and taken home the award once (for a little indie flick called The Departed). His films dominate every “best of all time” list—and some, like Goodfellas, have become a religion unto themselves. But despite the millions of people who have seen his films—including his most recent opus, Killers of the Flower Moon—Sunday marked his debut in a whole new genre, to one of his biggest audiences yet: the alien-filled Super Bowl commercial.

    Titled “Hello Down There,” the 90-second short film for website builder Squarespace—which debuted midway through the second quarter of Sunday’s game—sees clueless young New Yorkers too distracted by cat videos to notice the UFOs casually gliding over them. The spot’s logline reads, “What does a highly advanced civilization have to do to get noticed around here?”

    As it turns out, the answer lies in TikTok. Or, at least, for Scorsese, it has. As the epitome of advanced civilization—what else would you call the person who directed Raging Bull—Scorsese has recently been noticed by Gen Z in a whole new way, becoming the parasocial cinephile grandpa to thousands of chronically online youngsters.

    This is, of course, the handiwork of Francesca Scorsese. The director’s 24-year-old daughter has followed in his footsteps as a video maven, but her medium isn’t film, it’s vertical video. And her muse isn’t Robert De Niro or Leonardo DiCaprio—it turns out, it’s her dad. Over the past year, Francesca has become his de facto PR rep for “the youth”: his ambassador and translator for a generation that doesn’t necessarily have John Huston’s first picture or Truffaut’s Antoine Doinel saga down rote.

    Francesca first featured Scorsese in a TikTok in 2021, asking him to identify different female beauty items based on their photos. (Memorably, he mistook nipple pasties for earbuds.) Early reviews were overwhelmingly positive, with comments like “omg it’s Martin Scorsese from Shark Tale” and “This guy seems like he would make pretty decent movies idk why tho.” (Presumably, those were sarcastic—at least we hope.) Since then, Francesca has upped Scorsese’s screen time on her account, which now has over 200,000 followers and 4.8 million likes. Last summer, she went viral with a 30-second “trailer” of her dad, a compilation of short clips of the director playing with puppies, laughing with old pal Robert De Niro, and strutting around in a slick business suit, with the caption: “He’s a certified silly goose.”

    Francesca’s content often taps into Scorsese’s storied career and encyclopedic film knowledge, from a video of him “auditioning” their schnauzer, Oscar (and lauding him as a revelatory talent), to another in which he power ranks popular movies. In her videos, Scorsese is no longer a famous director with dozens of canonical projects under his belt; he’s just a guy. More specifically, he’s an incredibly adorable old guy who loves father-daughter handshakes, twinning with his dog, and watching 2001: A Space Odyssey.

    The revelation of Francesca’s videos is their ability to subvert our expectations of how a legendary filmmaker acts and participates in internet culture. For many Gen Zers, the name “Martin Scorsese” may evoke an edgy boyfriend’s Taxi Driver poster, an uncle’s old DVD collection, or a mental image of that short guy always standing next to Leonardo DiCaprio, but these are just vague associations. Sure, Scorsese is the genius behind Mean Streets and The Wolf of Wall Street, but this hardly counts for a zeitgeist-hungry generation that communicates chiefly through memes and irony.

    There has to be something more—some kind of hook—and that’s exactly what Francesca has uncovered. With pitch-perfect humor and TikTok trend savvy, she has single-handedly shaped her dad into a memeable, shareable internet figure (the highest rung of Gen Z adoration).

    The comments sections of her TikToks are laden with young users begging to be adopted into their family, referring to Scorsese as “grandpa” and praising his commitment to Dance Moms–inspired bits. As one TikTok user commented, “martin scorsese and francesca have figured out what the tiktok peeps want…and it is exactly this.”

    If anything perfectly captures Gen Z’s newfound fondness for Marty (as the cool kids call him), it’s Francesca’s video introducing him to internet slang terms. Because Scorsese’s brain presumably functions solely in film quotes and box office stats, Francesca helps him out with context clues like “Watching a movie in 70 mm hits different” and “The King of Comedy was slept on.” There’s nothing like the look on Scorsese’s face when he registers the meaning of the latter, forlornly recalling how “people hated it when it came out. … It was the flop of the year.” (Viewers then gave shout-outs to The King of Comedy in the comments to ease his spirits—perhaps another sign of how hipster film kids do, indeed, have fine taste.)

    At the heart of claims that Francesca has done the Lord’s work—or, better yet, deserves an honorary Oscar—there’s a very genuine gratitude for the conversations her posts are creating. With Killers of the Flower Moon in its second theatrical run and up for 10 Oscars next month, Scorsese has been active on the press circuit and now has some internet virality to boot. While there’s no way to quantify the effect Francesca’s TikToks may have had on Killers’ box office performance, it’s difficult to imagine that her videos have not at least piqued the interest of a few otherwise indifferent Gen Zers. (Even if 30-second TikToks pale next to his 206-minute 1920s epic.)

    In fact, when the film first hit theaters in October, fans were quick to sing her praises on Twitter and suggest she work her viral social media magic to promote the film. In reference to last year’s SAG strike, which prevented actors from promoting their projects, one tweet stated that “Francesca Scorsese emerged and is carrying killers of the flower moon promo on her back.” An exaggeration? Certainly. But an unfounded one? Absolutely not.

    Francesca has always been candid about being a huge fan of her dad’s work—she’s partial to The Irishman and The Wolf of Wall Street—and it’s hard to not melt at the evident love and admiration behind every TikTok she “forces” him into. She’s strategic with her content, but never in a way that feels insincere or overly calculated. This is no clout-chasing ruse that will end with an eye roll. Rather, one gets the sense that Francesca is her dad’s biggest cheerleader.

    Look no further than the fact that she seemingly recently convinced him to create a Letterboxd account, where he now shares curated film lists with his nearly 340,000 followers. This came after numerous commenters requested that she get Scorsese on the popular film review app. Even Letterboxd itself was in on the TikTok action, commenting from a verified company account, “Marty has taste,” on the video of him ranking films in a tournament bracket.

    Francesca may be the queen bee of film TikTok, but her content speaks to something more than just having a dad with a cinema institute named after him. As the new hub of pop culture, TikTok has the growing power to widen Gen Z’s cinematic horizons. Look no further than Turner Classic Movies’ 800,000-plus followers, or the rise of the “Wes Anderson Challenge,” which saw new Anderson converts channeling his distinctive style in 30-second videos. The most exciting aspect of “filmtok” is, perhaps, that it exists at all, especially considering the platform. Here is a limitless exploration space for kids who may not be aspect ratio experts but will at least do a proper double take when Martin Scorsese inexplicably appears on their For You pages.

    A single search of #filmtok yields a truly staggering range of content, from Nicolas Cage reaction memes to red-carpet interviews to a surely long-requested compilation of Disney actors who later played serial killers. The beauty of TikTok is that all these types of content coexist (semi) peacefully, letting users fall down rabbit holes of their choice or stumble across one of the world’s greatest filmmakers guessing what “sneaky link” means. (Spoiler alert: not personal peccadilloes.) Whether you seek genuine advice from a renowned screenwriter or simply discover a director while doom-scrolling, TikTok is the intergenerational playground for all kinds of film lore and know-how.

    While it’s safe to say that Scorsese himself is not exactly a fan of TikTok, he certainly recognizes its value to younger generations on some level. In an interview with the Los Angeles Times, the director swore that he really has no idea what’s happening when Francesca records him for “those things.” He did, however, acknowledge the wide acclaim of their “Oscar the Dog” audition video, noting that “the one we did with the dog, that was known.” And though he may shake his head disapprovingly while Francesca lip-synchs to the Kardashians, there’s always a glint in his eye, a sliver of awareness that says, “Hey, if the kids are into it, why not?” The man knows that an audience is an audience, on TikTok or anywhere else, and more importantly, he trusts his daughter to do a damn good job entertaining them.

    With Marty’s Big Game debut in the rearview and the Oscars fast approaching, the father-daughter team has resumed its rightful place in the spotlight. In a teaser for the “Hello Down There” ad released by Squarespace last Monday, Francesca helps her dad transition from TikTok to the final frontier of media literacy: website building.

    “Marty & Francesca Make a Website” plays like an extended cut of the duo’s TikToks, with the same delightful back-and-forth unique to a Baby Boomer learning anything technological. In the video, Francesca encourages her dad to make a website that shows his directorial vision of an “intergalactic plea for connection,” but this proves easier said than done. (“URL,” especially, becomes a term of immense confusion.)

    However, by the end of the video, Francesca has, once again, helped her dad share his work with younger generations, this time with a font that, to Marty’s approving eye, expresses the “yearning” of his ad’s aliens. The spot ends with Scorsese telling Francesca that their website “slaps,” proving himself a star pupil of Gen Z lingo. “I really regret ever teaching you that,” Francesca replies, but her smile says just the opposite.

    Holyn Thigpen is an arts and culture writer based in Atlanta. She holds an MA in English from Trinity College Dublin and spends her free time googling Nicolas Cage.





    Holyn Thigpen

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  • Can Barboach be shiny in Pokémon Go?

    Can Barboach be shiny in Pokémon Go?

    Barboach, the whiskers Pokémon from Hoenn, can be found in the wild in Pokémon Go. Yes, Barboach can be shiny in Pokémon Go!

    Graphic: Julia Lee/Polygon | Source images: Niantic

    Whiscash sees some use in Great League PvP, but outside of that, Barboach and its evolution don’t have much meta use.

    What is the shiny rate for Barboach in Pokémon Go?

    As per old research by the now-defunct website The Silph Road (via Wayback Machine), the shiny rate for Pokémon on a regular day is approximately one in 500. Barboach is not a confirmed Pokémon that gets a “permaboost” (meaning that it’s a rare spawn and thus gets a boosted shiny rate).

    What can I do to attract more shiny Pokémon?

    Not much, unfortunately. It appears to be random chance. Shiny Pokémon catch rates are set by developer Niantic, and they are typically only boosted during special events like Community Days or Safari Zones, or in Legendary Raids. There are no consumable items that boost shiny Pokémon rates.

    Where can I find a list of available shiny Pokémon?

    LeekDuck keeps a list of currently available shiny Pokémon. It’s a helpful visual guide that illustrates what all of the existing shiny Pokémon look like.

    For more tips, check out Polygon’s Pokémon Go guides.

    Julia Lee

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  • Can ‘Ted’ Save the TV Comedy?

    Can ‘Ted’ Save the TV Comedy?

    Universal Pictures

    Is comedy dead? Can ‘Ted’ fix it? Is this show even watchable without the devil’s lettuce? Charles and Logan raise these questions and more!

    Charles and Logan dive into Seth MacFarlane’s grimy quasi-sitcom Ted, which acts as a prequel to the 2012 movie Ted and 2015 sequel Ted 2. Is comedy dead? Can Ted fix it? Is this show even watchable without the devil’s lettuce? After discussing these pressing questions, they talk about the other trashy shows they’ve guiltily (or not) partaken in recently.

    Hosts: Charles Holmes and Logan Murdock
    Producer: Sasha Ashall

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / Stitcher

    Charles Holmes

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  • Can Eevee be shiny in Pokémon Go?

    Can Eevee be shiny in Pokémon Go?

    Eevee, the evolution Pokémon from Kanto, can be found in the wild in Pokémon Go. Yes, Eevee can be shiny in Pokémon Go!

    Graphic: Julia Lee/Polygon | Image sources: Niantic/The Pokémon Company

    Ah, yes, Eevee, the most annoying Pokémon to evolve in Pokémon Go (though Dusk Form Lycanroc might be up there, too). Depending on which “Eeveelution” you want, the Eevee evolution method can be pretty bad. If you’ve already used the name tricks — which allows you to evolve your Eevee into a specific evolution if you name it something specific — Vaporeon, Jolteon, and Flareon are all RNG. The others, however, require more specific methods, like using a Glacial Lure for Glaceon. If you have shiny Eevee and specifically want a shiny Vaporeon… good luck!

    What is the shiny rate for Eevee in Pokémon Go?

    As per old research by the now-defunct website The Silph Road (via Wayback Machine), the shiny rate for Pokémon on a regular day is approximately one in 500. Eevee is not a confirmed Pokémon that gets a “permaboost” (meaning that it’s a rare spawn and thus gets a boosted shiny rate).

    What can I do to attract more shiny Pokémon?

    Not much, unfortunately. It appears to be random chance. Shiny Pokémon catch rates are set by developer Niantic, and they are typically only boosted during special events like Community Days or Safari Zones, or in Legendary Raids. There are no consumable items that boost shiny Pokémon rates.

    Where can I find a list of available shiny Pokémon?

    LeekDuck keeps a list of currently available shiny Pokémon. It’s a helpful visual guide that illustrates what all of the existing shiny Pokémon look like.

    For more tips, check out Polygon’s Pokémon Go guides.

    Julia Lee

    Source link

  • beguiled unaided fermented

    beguiled unaided fermented

    Have you taken the VHS pill yet? A few years ago I started collecting VHS tapes as kind of a joke. But then I realized you can snag CRT TV’s for next to nothing, if not free on marketplace. Next thing I know I am watching Raiders of the lost ark on a luxury 90s media setup with over 700 more classic titles. My wife and I do weekly movie nights now and the kids are watching magic school bus. N64, pS1, movies, all look better on the native hardware. Take the VHS pill and join us in the last good era the world knew.

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  • Can Snorunt be shiny in Pokémon Go?

    Can Snorunt be shiny in Pokémon Go?

    Snorunt, the snow hat Pokémon from Hoenn, can be found in the wild in Pokémon Go. Yes, Snowrunt can be shiny in Pokémon Go!

    Graphic: Julia Lee/Polygon | Source images: Niantic

    Note that if you have a Snorunt, it can only evolve into a Froslass if it’s female. If you’re specifically hunting for a shiny Froslass, you’ll need to win an additional 50/50 coin flip to get the right gender. Good luck!

    What is the shiny rate for Snorunt in Pokémon Go?

    As per old research by the now-defunct website The Silph Road (via Wayback Machine), the shiny rate for Pokémon on a regular day is approximately one in 500. Snorunt is not a confirmed Pokémon that gets a “permaboost” (meaning that it’s a rare spawn and thus gets a boosted shiny rate).

    What can I do to attract more shiny Pokémon?

    Not much, unfortunately. It appears to be random chance. Shiny Pokémon catch rates are set by developer Niantic, and they are typically only boosted during special events like Community Days or Safari Zones, or in Legendary Raids. There are no consumable items that boost shiny Pokémon rates.

    Where can I find a list of available shiny Pokémon?

    LeekDuck keeps a list of currently available shiny Pokémon. It’s a helpful visual guide that illustrates what all of the existing shiny Pokémon look like.

    For more tips, check out Polygon’s Pokémon Go guides.

    Julia Lee

    Source link