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Tag: Matthew McConaughey

  • 7 Great Audiobooks to Listen to This Month

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    Photo-Illustration: Vulture

    Every month, audiobook connoisseur Marshall Heyman listens to hours and hours of freshly published novels and nonfiction. He then recommends his favorite new titles, which often include juicy celebrity memoirs, buzzy literary fare, gripping thrillers, sweet romances, thoughtful essays, and even some poetry. He also provides his preferred listening speed for anyone else looking to maximize their audiobook intake. Check back next month for new releases.

    We Did OK, Kid, by Anthony Hopkins









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    Read by: Kenneth Branagh
    Length: 9 hrs, 5 mins
    Speed I listened: 2.2x

    A bonus of this audiobook is that, at the end of it, the 87-year-old double-Oscar winner takes over narrating duties from Kenneth Branagh and reads a few Shakespeare soliloquies and poems, like T.S. Eliot’s “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock.” Even if you don’t like that sort of thing, it’s amazing. Some of my other favorite takeaways from this memoir are: the title, which I just love; Hopkins’s unexpected use of the word “razzmatazz” and his stories about James Woods and Oliver Stone badmouthing Paul Sorvino as “that fatso” (and even worse) on the set of Nixon; and Hopkins’s admission that he’s probably on the autism spectrum but prefers the term “cold fish.” In the rest of the book, Branagh is an amazing narrator, mostly because there are a lot of times you think Hopkins himself is reading. It’s surreal.

    Unplugged, by Tom Freston









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    Read by: the author
    Length: 13 hrs, 1 min
    Speed I listened: 2.7x

    I don’t know how the former MTV honcho ends up on so many nude beaches, but there are more mentions of clothing-optional sand dunes in this memoir than in any book I’ve read or listened to in recent memory. That makes this memoir sound spicier than it is. Mostly, Freston just references the conversations he has on said nude beaches — not much else. Though I loved the inspiring words at the end of Unplugged, I’ll admit it. I’m here for the entertainment gossip about Vice founder Shane Smith, not Freston’s recollections of his trips on psychedelics or to Afghanistan. When it comes to Viacom chairman Sumner Redstone, who acquired MTV in the ’80s, Freston really goes for the jugular. That’s my kind of audiobook nude beach, anyway.

    Bread of Angels, by Patti Smith









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    Read by: the author
    Length: 8 hrs, 42 mins
    Speed I listened: 2x

    Patti Smith makes so many highfalutin references to poets and artists and other intellectual pursuits in her books that, half the time, I have no idea what she’s talking about. This memoir, which covers her childhood in South Jersey as well as some later adventures with photographer Robert Mapplethorpe and the playwright Sam Shepard, is no exception. That’s why I listen to her books instead of reading them. There’s also something so deliberate and weird about Smith’s speaking voice that relaxes me. Nothing beats her breaking into song in the audio of Just Kids, which is still the pinnacle of her oeuvre, but in Bread of Angels, I love how she makes the first E silent in “atelier” and turns the O sounds into “eh” at the end of the words “mosquito” and “pillow.”

    The White Hot, by Quiara Alegria Hughes









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    Read by: Daphne Rubin-Vega
    Length: 5 hrs, 16 mins.
    Speed I listened: 2x

    This novel, from the Pulitzer Prize–winning playwright, comes in the form of a letter from a mother to her daughter — an attempt to explain why she abandoned her many years prior. What makes this audiobook so listenable is the narration by Rubin-Vega, the original Mimi in Rent on Broadway. Her voice is sultry, and I listened to this in one white-hot shot because of her.

    Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone by J.K. Rowling









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    Read by: a full cast, including Cush Jumbo, Hugh Laurie, Riz Ahmed, Ruth Wilson, and Matthew Macfadyen
    Length: 8 hrs, 41 mins
    Speed I listened: 2.3x

    If you read this column, you know I haven’t had much luck connecting with Audible Originals. I’m also not a Potterhead. But this full-cast reading of the first novel in the series is a stellar example of the form. It’s certainly the best Audible Original I’ve heard, too. The cast is great, especially the interstitial narration by Cush Jumbo. It could be a budget thing. I can’t imagine licensing these novels comes cheap so, by extension, the production values and sound effects feel en pointe. It also could be a storytelling thing. Whatever you think about Rowling, she’s a very clever world-builder. This first journey made me want to continue listening to the subsequent dramatizations. They’ll be released one a month through May.

    Simply More, by Cynthia Erivo









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    Read by: the author
    Length: 3 hrs, 43 mins
    Speed I listened: 2.2x

    Cynthia Erivo is monumentally talented and impressive. I also think that, like Elphaba in Wicked, she can exude a holier-than-thou confidence that perhaps her monumental talent allows. I alternated between those feelings listening to this self-help book slash memoir. I appreciate its simplicity. Tiny pieces of fairly obvious advice — don’t listen to the haters, for instance; don’t take no for an answer — are mixed with anecdotes about Erivo’s rise to near-EGOT territory. Erivo is superhuman, so a lot of the advice she gives is easier said than done. But her speaking voice is as mellifluous as her singing voice, and there are moments of genuine realness, i.e., when she alludes to her complicated relationships with her sister, her mother, and her father.
    But maybe it’s just me. The subtitle to Simply More is “A book for anyone who’s been told they’re too much.” Guess what I’ve been told? Also, I appreciate that Erivo thanks her therapist in her acknowledgements.

    The Joy of Solitude, by Robert Coplan









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    Read by: Kevin R. Free
    Length: 8 hrs, 7 mins
    Speed I listened: 2.5x

    Are you really alone if you’re listening to an audiobook? I’ve been wondering that since I finished listening to this treatise on how we could all spend a little extra time by ourselves. Clearly if I’ve listened to this many audiobooks this month I spend a lot of time alone, so it’s nice to have a reminder — if, at over eight hours, an overlong one — that not only is it okay but it can actually be good for you.

    You Thought You Knew, by Kevin Federline









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    Read by: the author
    Length: 5 hrs, 53 mins
    Speed I listened: 2.7x

    The tabloid headlines may get exhausting, but I feel a lot of empathy for Britney Spears and her predicament. I hadn’t given much thought to her ex K-Fed, the father of her two sons, Sean Preston and Jayden James. I certainly never considered him impressive. Whether the information in his book is true or not — there are three sides to every story — listening to this tell-all certainly made me see the onetime backup dancer in a totally new way. Maybe this will be a controversial opinion, but, reader, I feel for him, and I think he comes off well here. He admits to plenty of mistakes — partying, for instance, in a lurid way that he shouldn’t have been. But in his telling, at least, he seems like a decent, hardworking dad (of, okay, six kids with three different moms) who found himself in an insane situation (i.e., falling for one of the world’s biggest pop stars). Then, after that life exploded, he tried to find a daily existence where his children could live as normal a life as possible.

    Future Boy: Back to the Future and My Journey Through the Space-Time Continuum, by Michael J. Fox









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    Read by: the author
    Length: 3 hrs, 30 mins
    Speed I listened: 2.3x

    This memoir has a very simple purview: Fox recalls making Back to the Future, which, if you can believe it, is celebrating its 40th anniversary. God, I feel so old. The movie was Fox’s first real big-screen break. He took over the role of Marty McFly after Eric Stoltz, who had already shot a month or so as the character, was fired. Not only that, but Fox was simultaneously filming the sitcom Growing Pains, too. The recollections of that crazy time make for an adorable book, full of sharp observations from Fox and some of the movie’s big players, who often appear in recorded interviews. Future Boy is more than just a trip down memory lane; it’s a book about perseverance and hard work. The memories, though, are very much worth it. Lea Thompson, for instance, gave the sitcom actor a hard time when they first started working together because she felt he stole the role from Stoltz. Meanwhile, Fox had trouble driving the DeLorean. “Let’s face it,” Fox says. “It was a shit car.”

    The Widow, by John Grisham









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    Read by: Michael Beck
    Length: 14 hrs, 23 mins
    Speed I listened: 2x

    Since I started writing this column, I’ve come to really appreciate it when Grisham publishes a new novel, and I liked his latest a lot. It’s about a small-town, rural Virginian lawyer named Simon Latch who helps an eccentric older woman, Eleanor Barnett, rewrite her will. She insists she’s worth millions from her late husband’s Coca-Cola and Walmart stock. When she turns up dead, he’s accused of murdering her. Simon and Eleanor are just great characters in what is being billed as Grisham’s “first-ever whodunit,” and having regular Grisham narrator Michael Beck read the mystery makes this production somehow suspenseful and cozy at the same time.

    Vagabond: A Memoir, by Tim Curry









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    Read by: the author
    Length: 10 hrs, 40 mins
    Speed I listened: 3.2x

    Curry, perhaps best known as Dr. Frank-N-Furter from Rocky Horror and Wadsworth the butler from Clue, suffered a stroke in 2012. He’s done quite a bit of voice-over work since, but the narration of his memoir is still slow, muted, and shaky. If you can get beyond that, there’s so much fascinating stuff, like his almost Dickensian relationship with his mother. Or how his experience playing Long John Silver in 1996’s Muppet Treasure Island was so positive he was “sad to go back to work with humans again.” Curry is extremely observant — about his circuitous career, his alcoholism, Bianca Jagger’s proclivity for carrying many different types of suntan lotion — that it’s hard not to enjoy this peripatetic ride.

    Hologram Boyfriends, by Mike Albo









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    Read by: the author
    Length: 6 hrs, 14 mins
    Speed I listened: 2.1x

    Mike Albo’s The Underminer (which he wrote with Virginia Heffernan) is one of my favorite books of the past two decades. It’s about those frenemies who always remind us, intentionally or not, of what losers we think we are. The Underminer is not meant as self-help, but it’s helped me through too many situations to count, with people in my life who just make me feel bad about myself. Hologram Boyfriends is an audio original that’s mostly about being a hopeless romantic in a gay dating world focused entirely on hookups. (Hello, me.) Some of this audiobook is performed live; some isn’t. The transitions between the two are a bit shaky, and so are the sound effects. But I felt super-seen listening to his essays here. I also laughed a lot. As an interesting companion piece, I’d suggest Jesse James Rose’s grittier memoir. Sorry I Keep Crying During Sex, though I found it more powerful as a read than as a listen.

    How to Be Less Miserable, by Lybi Ma









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    Read by: Emily Woo Zeller
    Length: 6 hrs, 27 mins
    Speed I listened: 1.9x

    If there was any self-help book title that went straight to my emotional core, it’s this one. I can’t say I’m so much less miserable since I listened to it, but I think I’m a little bit less miserable. And that’s no small victory. I don’t think Zeller is the most genial self-help narrator in the world, but I thank her profusely for reminding me to try to treat myself as a friend. To talk nicer to myself and to speak to myself with more compassion.

    Personal Branding for Introverts, by Goldie Chan









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    Read by: Ferdelle Capistrano 
    Length: 6 hrs, 10 mins
    Speed I listened: 2.6x

    Am I an extroverted introvert or an introverted extrovert? The jury’s out. But I do find it super-hard to promote myself and my work, including this column. (When Rami Malek told me he enjoyed reading it, I told him to stop fucking with me.) I hoped Personal Branding for Introverts by a writer who, I guess, became famous by posting videos on LinkedIn, would be a panacea toward fixing my problems. It wasn’t, though it helped remind me that I still need to work on defining the way I want to be seen by the world. It’s a bit hard to relate when Chan’s examples of introverts who’ve done well with just that include Taylor Swift, Keanu Reeves, and Rihanna, but maybe that’s my problem: I just need to be more like Taylor Swift, Keanu Reeves, and Rihanna.

    Gabrielle Hamilton, the chef behind the influential restaurant Prune and the author of Blood, Bones & Butter, returns with a compellingly written and read memoir. Next of Kin is about the ways even our family members undermine our personal success, hopes and dreams. (Undermining is clearly a theme in October’s audiobook recommendations!)

    Does This Make Me Funny?









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    Read by: the author
    Length: 8 hrs, 17 mins.
    Speed I listened: 2x.

    These essays from the Girls star and daughter of playwright David Mamet are disarmingly revealing. Like Zosia, I, too, sometimes feel like one of the most anxious people in the world, so I related to her struggles with her monkey mind. But it’s also impressive that she goes there — to her troubles as an outcast in school; to the deep insecurity of her parents (mom is actress Lindsay Crouse); to pretty bleak stories about her encounters with male Hollywood agents and, one assumes, Matt Weiner. I don’t know if this book makes Zosia Mamet funny, but it’s a terrific listen.

    All the Way to the River









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    Read by: the author
    Length: 10 hrs, 10 mins.
    Speed I listened: 2x

    This is an audiobook you can really sink your teeth into. I sped through it. I couldn’t turn it off. There’s Gilbert’s lucid writing and wrenching self-analysis, and then there’s her acute vocal narration. It’s the story of her longtime relationship with Rayya, a former-drug-addict hairstylist, and their almost vampiric symbiosis. (An excerpt appeared in New York Magazine.) At first I was super into the interstitial music between chapters. Then it became a bit repetitive and cloying — but at the end of the book, Gilbert announces that the music is one of Rayya’s original compositions which made it all worthwhile.

    Eternally Electric









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    Read by: the author
    Length: 9 hrs, 38 mins
    Speed I listened: 2.3x

    It can be a bit annoying how much the pop singer Debbie Gibson laughs while reading the audiobook version of her new memoir. Her jokes and anecdotes aren’t that funny. But her giggle regularly serves as a reminder of all the kid stars who didn’t mature into people bemused by their adult lives. That, to me, is a huge score for Debbie Gibson and made me want to keep listening to her journey — from very early stardom to The Apprentice, to touring with Tiffany, to driving around in her Kia with friends to find an outfit for some pre-Grammy parties. She also does an excellent Eartha Kitt, who starred opposite Gibson in a national tour of Rodgers & Hammersteins Cinderella.

    Pride and Prejudice









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    Read by: a full cast
    Length: 4 hrs, 34 mins
    Speed I listened: 1.4x

    I still haven’t found an Audible Original in which I feel completely immersed. Like all the other Originals I’ve tried, this version of Pride and Prejudice has awkward sound effects, slightly uncomfortable breathing and forced laughter, all in the background. What kept me listening here, though, was the promise of a pretty impressive cast that includes total babe Marisa Abela (Industry) as Elizabeth Bennett, and total babe Harris Dickinson (Babygirl) as Mr. Darcy. Even then, it’s still a mixed bag, just as all these productions seem to be; Abela is amazing, Dickinson barely blips on the radar. Otherwise, the stand-outs here are a screeching Marianne Jean Baptiste as Mrs. Bennett; Glenn Close in a wish-it-was-longer cameo; and Jessie Buckley, who, these days, seems to be great in everything.

    Night People









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    Read by: the author
    Length: 6 hrs, 57 mins
    Speed I listened: 2x

    I have a major crush on Mark Ronson and his slightly weird transatlantic accent now that I’ve finished the audiobook version of his memoir, subtitled “How to Be a DJ in ’90s New York City.” He had me at his lovely pronunciation of chuppah in a passage about his mother’s wedding to Foreigner’s Mick Jones in 1985. When Ronson reads an excerpt from Andy Warhol’s diaries, his vocal take on the infamous artist is to die for — as in, so good I swooned. While the book is generally a bit light on gossip, it’s dynamic on atmosphere. His description of the innumerable jackets friends would leave under his booth instead of at the coat check in his early days of working had me hollering.

    The Book of Sheen









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    Read by: the author
    Length: 8 hrs, 58 mins
    Speed I listened: 1.6x

    I expected this memoir to be much funnier and raunchier than Debbie Gibson’s, but it’s quite academic and sobering (excuse the pun). I respect that. Sheen seems to take the act of writing seriously. I think he’s shooting for something more like Open by Andre Agassi than a purely titillating tell-all, despite the stories of prostitutes and rehab. Though told in a literary tone, I’m not entirely sure Sheen really transcends the celebrity-autobiography genre. I still prefer Rob Lowe’s Stories I Only Tell My Friends. Still, Sheen’s Hollywood stories about working on Wall Street, for instance, kept me going. I also loved some words he uses, like “dabloonery,” for instance, and when he describes a time in his life as one of his “top three moments of awkward mcfuckness.” (Also worth noting? Sheen does an awesome impression of Nicolas Cage.)

    Poems & Prayers









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    Read by: the author
    Length: 2 hrs, 11 mins
    Speed I listened: 1.6

    I barely have a clue what Matthew McConaughey is talking about in most of this book, which consists of his writings over the past 40 years. But that’s what made it such a joy. (After listening, I realized it might be better to listen along with a copy of the text.) It’s unhinged in both a “Who in the hell does Matthew McConaughey think he is?” way as well as in a “Maybe this hot Texan actor really has the secret to life” way. I alternated between the two but mostly relished these bizarre poems, such as one called “Deuces.” McConaughey describes being stuck in the car while having to do a number 2. He finds a “roadside loo” and, it so happens, the janitor has just cleaned it. That “gave me faith/and relieved my doubt./See, I consider a porta-potty/an absolute win/long as the first butt in the mornin’s mine/on the porce-lin.” I mean, is this guy for real?

    About Time: Poems









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    Read by: the author
    Length: 1 hour, 17 mins
    Speed I listened: 1.5x

    This is mostly worth a listen as a companion piece to McConaughey’s new book. I appreciated that Duchovny seemed to put some actual thought into what a poem is, not that I could always follow what the Californication actor was trying to say. It turns out, it’s kind of just nice to have a mellow celebrity reading poems in your ear.

    I caught up on Wally Lamb’s The River Is Waiting, which came out earlier this summer. I liked the book quite a lot, even if it’s a real downer. The surprise here is Jeremy Sisto’s incredibly poignant narration.

    Tart by Slutty Cheff









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    Read by: Charly Clive
    Length: 7 hrs, 53 mins.
    Speed I listened: 2.1x

    It’s August: You deserve a treat, like a big cone of soft-serve ice cream kind of book. This is a confident and brazen memoir about the sexual escapades of an up-and-coming female chef in the UK. Her pen name is annoying, but her book is a balls-out romp. (It’s read by a comedian too.)

    Gwyneth: The Biography by Amy Odell









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    Read by: Chanté McCormick
    Length: 13 hrs, 48 mins.
    Speed I listened: 2.4x

    There were some things I needed to remember about Gwyneth Paltrow, so I’m grateful for this new biography. For instance: that she was just 26 when she won her Oscar for Shakespeare in Love in that pink Ralph Lauren dress. That “Goop” is her initials with two “o”s in the middle. That she enjoyed being “teabagged” by Ben Affleck. I could have easily listened to 27 more hours of this biography, even if the narrator pronounces the l in Ralph Fiennes.

    Your Favorite Scary Movie, by Ashley Cullins









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    Read by: Roger L. Jackson
    Length: 9 hrs, 43 mins.
    Speed I listened: 2x

    I honestly can’t believe I listened to this whole book, which documents the making of the Scream movie franchise over the last three decades. When it comes to chronicles of Hollywood, the book is pretty thin and sycophantic. But remember: I could listen to over an entire day’s worth of content about Gwyneth Paltrow, so you’re not dealing with a full deck when it comes to me. A major selling point of the audio version of this book is that it’s read by Roger L. Jackson, the actor who plays the voice of Ghostface in all the Scream films. Every time he read a chapter title in that psychotic intonation, I melted.

    Are You Mad at Me?, by Meg Josephson









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    Read by: the author
    Length: 7 hrs, 2 mins.
    Speed I listened: 2.1x

    One reason I connect with (and need) this new (and excellent) self-help book is that I’m already worried Gwyneth Paltrow is mad at me for listening to her unauthorized biography and then writing about it. Gwyneth and I don’t know each other, though we once spoke on the phone. Clearly, I should listen to Meg Josephson’s book — about “how to stop focusing on what others think and start living for you” — at least once or twice more. As a guide to the new me (or you), Josephson is very genial and wise. It blew my mind when she said that I’m not responsible for the version of me that exists in other people’s heads.

    Read by: the author
    Length: 11 hrs, 26 mins.
    Speed I listened: 2.6x

    Read by: the author
    Length: 5 hrs, 41 mins.
    Speed I listened: 2.6x

    I’m still having withdrawal from Jennette McCurdy’s book, I’m Glad My Mom Died. (It actually just reappeared on the Times Best Sellers list, so I’m not the only one.) As was the case for me with McCurdy, I have no idea who Alyson Stoner was before this. I guess she was in the Jonas brothers–Demi Lovato Disney vehicle Camp Rock? McCurdy’s book is better, though Stoner’s tales of her own substance-abusing mother and horrific Hollywood experiences scratched an itch. It’s a good companion to the recently released audio of Jodie Sweetin’s UnSweetined, which has an equally excellent title. (It was first published in 2009.) Where Stoner’s book is sometimes too baggy and woke, Sweetin’s just feels like an appetizer to her real post–Full House misery. I especially loved when she refers to her husband as “not that one, not that one either, but the last one.”

    Semi-Well-Adjusted Despite Literally Everything, by Alyson Stoner









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    Unsweetined by Jodie Sweetin









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    Seduction Theory by Emily Adrian. Even if its elliptical style is slightly anathema to the audiobook format, it’s a funny novel about perception, campus crushes, and sex.

    Though I preferred Gareth Brown’s previous novel, The Book of Doors, I also enjoyed his recently published follow-up, The Society of Unknowable Objects. Both are in a grounded world of magical realism, somewhere between Matt Haig and Harry Potter.

    If You Don’t Like This, I Will Die, written and read by Lee Tilghman, affirms what I’ve always thought: that it must be really, really annoying to be an influencer.

    Bring the House Down by Charlotte Runcie









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    Read by: Isabelle Farah
    Length: 8 hrs, 10 mins.
    Speed I listened: 2x

    The milieu of this novel is niche; the gender politics are universal. It’s the tale of two critics (Alex and Haley) covering the Edinburgh Fringe. Alex does something a bit nasty. He beds an actress without telling her that he’s given her a one-star review in the next day’s paper. When the actress essentially gets Alex canceled, Haley needs to pick up the pieces. Farah narrates with great authority and humor, but that may be a given. She’s a British Lebanese comedian who’s brought three shows to the Fringe herself. Worth a try even if you’re not a theater nerd like I am.

    She Didn’t See It Coming by Shari Lapena









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    Read by: January LaVoy
    Length: 9 hrs, 48 mins.
    Speed I listened: 2x

    On an ordinary day, Bryden, a wife and mother working at home, just disappears from her “luxury” condominium in Albany. Her cell phone’s still there. Her car is still in the garage. Did the creepy guy with the shady past living on another floor kidnap her? Is the hot Tesla driver with whom Bryden got into a fender bender involved? This is a spoiler, but Bryden is found dead, stuffed in a suitcase, in her condo’s storage room. What does it say about me that this plot twist didn’t faze me? I don’t want to know. Still, this is a totally enjoyable, propulsive summer book. As a listen, it has enough misdirects and, yes, discussions of stuffing people in suitcases, to be a kind of a kick. Though one of the greater mysteries remains: What kind of amenities do luxury condos have in Albany?

    A Marriage at Sea by Sophie Elmhirst









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    Read by: Marisa Calin
    Length: 5 hrs, 50 mins.
    Speed I listened: 1.8x

    In the early 1970s, Maurice and Marilyn decide to sail away. Like escape their lives for real. A year into their journey, a whale knocks a hole in their boat. They’re at sea, on a rubber raft, for months, trying to survive. This nonfiction account is compelling, romantic, and, at just under six hours, a particularly good length for an audiobook. A caveat: I may have enjoyed it more because I listened to it while I was on a cruise in Iceland. I told everyone I knew on the ship to read or listen to it, too.

    The Woman in Suite 11 by Ruth Ware









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    Read by: Imogen Church
    Length: 15 hrs, 11 mins.
    Speed I listened: 2.4x

    You may remember the British travel writer Lo Blacklock from her first adventure on a luxury cruise ship in 2016’s The Woman in Cabin 10. In that installment, she witnessed a passenger being thrown overboard. In this follow-up, Lo has written a best-selling book about that crazy nightmare. Now she lives in New York. She’s married to a Times reporter, has a kid, and feels very much out of the travel journalism loop. Her hubby convinces her to attend the press opening of a hotel owned by a reclusive Swiss billionaire. If you can believe it, bad things start to happen when she gets there. I couldn’t necessarily follow all the callbacks to Cabin 10, but I still enjoyed the ride. Church is a great narrator when she’s tracking Lo’s misadventures or delving into a Swiss French accent, but she reads Lo’s husband as if he’s one of the Sopranos, and that’s a weird choice.

    Empire of the Elite by Michael Grynbaum









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    Read by: Jacques Roy
    Length: 11 hrs, 46 mins.
    Speed I listened: 2.2x

    There’s not much new I learned from this history of Condé Nast. But I may be an outlier, having worked there (at W and The New Yorker) for years. I’ll also have you know I scored 32 out of 32 on that recent “Could You Have Landed a Job at Vogue in the ’90s” quiz in the New York Times. Roy’s narration feels a bit pedestrian for what is meant to be a glamorous insider account, but I don’t know if I’ll ever turn down a book that includes a bowlful of anecdotes about Graydon Carter, Tina Brown, and Si Newhouse. This is my version of a comfort listen.

    Finding Grace by Loretta Rothschild









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    Read by: Fiona Button
    Length: 11 hrs, 24 mins.
    Speed I listened: 2.1x

    I don’t love a plot that hinges on a person keeping a secret for an extremely long time. That if he would just tell it, he wouldn’t cause so much emotional distress for himself and everyone else. (Think Monster’s Ball, Dear Evan Hansen.) So it’s a tribute to Rothschild and Button, her narrator, that I found this novel compelling and tender even if that secret-keeping struck me as far-fetched. The book starts with Tom losing his wife, Honor, and their daughter in a terrible, grisly incident. As narrated by Honor, we learn how Tom goes on. Add this to your stable of sweet-and-tart British novels like One Day by David Nicholls or Good Material by Dolly Alderton.

    So Far Gone by Jess Walter









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    Read by: Edoardo Ballerini
    Length: 8 hrs, 20 mins.
    Speed I listened: 1.9x

    Edoardo Ballerini is certainly one of the best-known audiobook readers, but his narration of this novel was the first time I really understood the hype. Walter is a frequent Ballerini collaborator; they created an audiobook original together. Here, Ballerini is a stand-in for Rhys Kinnick, an off-the-grid journalist who has to reclaim his grandchildren. Kinnick is one of those great curmudgeonly creations you just want to spend time with, and Ballerini brings him to humorous, relatable life.

    Murder on Sex Island by Jo Firestone









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    Read by: the author
    Length: 5 hrs, 54 mins.
    Speed I listened: 2x

    Somehow — probably better not to ask why — Luella van Horn, the nom de plume of kooky Staten Island divorcée Marie Jones, gets hired to investigate a missing cast member of a reality show. In general, this is a pretty off-center “cozy mystery,” but it made me laugh a lot—as did Firestone’s dry observations about life, love, and reality television and her heightened, blousy narration. It surely helps that, as a comedian, Firestone knows how to deliver funny.

    Maybe This Will Save Me, by Tommy Dorfman









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    Read by: the author
    Length: 7 hrs, 57 mins.
    Speed I listened: 2.5x

    I barely knew who Tommy Dorfman was before I listened to this memoir. Dorfman is perhaps best known for the Netflix teen drama Thirteen Reasons Why, though she recently starred with Rachel Zegler in a revival of Romeo and Juliet on Broadway. I recognized Dorfman most from a 2021 paparazzi shot holding hands with the actor Lucas Hedges. Dorfman really takes Hedges to task here about his behavior during their time together, so I’m surprised more people aren’t talking about the book. It’s all pretty self-indulgent but extremely hard to stop listening to. And the indie-actor-gossip value is A-plus.

    Next to Heaven by James Frey









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    Read by: Gina Gershon
    Length: 10 hrs, 29 mins
    Speed I listened: 2.2x

    Frey modeled this soapy novel, set among the wealthy and bored residents of a Connecticut suburb, after the work of Jackie Collins. Just like most things that Frey writes, this ensemble drama consistently teeters between wry and perceptive and ridiculously bloated. Funnily enough, what kept me listening was Gershon who, as narrator, brings a groovy, louche voice to the proceedings, even if her pronunciation of French words feels a bit forced.

    Atmosphere by Taylor Jenkins Reid









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    Read by: Kristen DiMercurio and Julia Whelan
    Length: 9 hrs, 52 mins.
    Speed I listened: 2x

    This astronaut drama doesn’t quite have the fun factor of previous Jenkins Reid novels, but I still found it more enjoyable to listen to than when I started actually reading it a few months ago. The author of the far superior The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo and Carrie Soto Is Back takes outer space exploration and the stars a little too seriously, at least for my summer-reading speed. But lesser Jenkins Reid is still a treat, and the drama between the main character, Joan, a successful scientist, and her selfish sister Barbara is juicier than anything that takes place in a NASA shuttle over the course of the book.

    I also enjoyed: Soundtrack, an audiobook original by Jason Reynolds about a New York City band that finds success doing pop-up concerts in the subway. The creepiness of Aisling Rawle’s The Compound is only heightened by the English actress Lucy Boynton as narrator. The small cast narrating Leila Mottley’s The Girls Who Grew Big really accentuates the longing of the lost teenage mothers. Meanwhile, Happy Wife, by Meredith Lavender and Kendall Shores, about a Florida woman whose husband up and vanishes, could be the fun summer listen you’re looking for.

    ‘Who Knew’ by Barry Diller









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    Read by: the author
    Length: 12 hrs, 40 mins.
    Speed I listened: 2.4x

    Barry Diller has always terrified me, but this memoir makes him seem a little less intimidating. He’s just a guy — he describes himself at 42 years old as “something of an innocent” and later he’s worried about being a “mogul manqué” and “discarded like yesterday’s fish” — who’s never been able to express his inner life thanks to the fear of his homosexuality coming to public light and the emotional inertia of his upbringing. (His parents, he says, “never asked me a personal question” in all his life.) Me being me, I find the little things in this audiobook weirdly mesmerizing. For instance: his awkward pronunciation of “diaspora” and French expressions like “coup de foudre.” Wife Diane von Furstenberg awkwardly pipes in to re-create a few romantic letters she sent Diller over the years of their unusual courtship. The muted vitriol he vocalizes when describing Arnold Schwarzenegger as a “dumbfuck oaf” or addressing Rupert Murdoch (who ruined one of Diller’s big surprise birthday parties) as “you fucking asshole.” Call me crazy, but of everything here, in a section where Diller describes his lack of interest in Pixar, I perhaps found this detail most bemusing: “I didn’t get any of the charm of Toy Story.” Who doesn’t like Toy Story?

    The Tenant, by Freida McFadden









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    Read by: Will Damron and Christine Lakin
    Length: 8 hrs, 50 mins.
    Speed I listened: 2.2x

    Somehow this thriller is both preposterous and genius. When Blake loses his big marketing job, he worries about making the payments on the Upper West Side townhouse (!) where he lives with his fiancé Krista. Krista suggests they bring in a tenant, and they find Whitney, who seems normal until … Blake starts having allergic reactions to his clothing, he finds hair in his leftover Chinese food, and his life is generally ruined. The hair in the food thing is so gross (dumb) I can’t believe I hadn’t thought of it before ( brilliant). There’s an equally nightmarish moment involving maggots in a bed that just made me think, Touché Freida McFadden, whomever you are. I hope I haven’t ruined The Tenant for you, because I found listening to it a total hoot.

    Food Person by Adam Roberts









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    Read by: Mia Hutchinson-Shaw
    Length: 11 hrs, 15 mins.
    Speed I listened: 2x

    On rare occasions, I enjoy a book so much that, while listening to it, I develop an intellectual crush on the author. Then I gently stalk him on Instagram to try and deduce if he’s single. I’ll admit I did this with Adam Roberts. That’s because I fell in love with this very funny novel about Isabella, a boring food writer who tries to ghostwrite a cookbook slash memoir for a washed-up Mischa Barton–like star who barely ever eats but pretends to love to cook. It’s completely charming with on point references about celebrities and the food world. And it’s delightfully read by Hutchinson-Shaw. The author, however, lives in Brooklyn with his boyfriend. Sigh.

    Notes to John, by Joan Didion









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    Read by: Julianne Moore
    Length: 6 hrs, 33 mins.
    Speed I listened: 1.5x

    I used to idolize the relationship between Joan Didion and John Gregory Dunne. I loved both of their work — in particular the novels — and I imagined their partnership as the height of intellectual romance. That’s at least partly why I found this book (which came out in late April) fascinating. It comprises letters Joan wrote to John outlining in exacting detail sessions Didion had with a therapist to discuss their daughter Quintana’s alcoholism. It’s an intimate, telling window into all their lives. There’s an added layer of celebrity with Julianne Moore’s narration.

    Disco Witches of Fire Island by Blair Fell









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    Read by: Daniel Henning
    Length: 12 hrs, 42 mins
    Speed I listened: 1.9x

    In this clever ’80s-set supernatural romantic comedy, the disarmingly handsome underdog Joe moves to the Pines in Fire Island for the summer to let loose after losing his boyfriend to AIDS. Joe shacks up (platonically) with Howie and Lenny, local house cleaners who also happen to be part of a paranormal coven. Henning is a great guide to this loopy scene, even if his acting of the ancillary characters (in particular Howie and Lenny) can get a bit strident.This is such an enjoyable romp that his more annoying voices are easy to forgive.

    What Kind of Paradise by Janelle Brown









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    Read by: Peter Ganim and Helen Laser
    Length: 11 hrs, 42 mins.
    Speed I listened: 2x

    Jane lives in a remote cabin with her dad in Montana with few genuine connections to either technological or social advancements in the outside world. As she grows up, she starts to question this arrangement and, in the process, helps her father commit a strange crime. In the second part of the book, she unravels many of the lies he told her and needs to reconcile if he was justified in doing so. This is more of an introspective thriller than a twisty one, but its puzzles have really stayed with me. It’s a particularly good listen because the bulk of the story is told from Jane’s naive perspective.

    In a cross-section of this month’s themes, Keith McNally’s overlong but generally absorbing memoir, I Regret Almost Everything, has titillating gay awakenings and restaurant gossip, and it’s read by the actor Richard E. Grant.

    Even if the Florida jokes are maybe a bit too easy these days, Carl Hiassen’s Fever Beach, also read by Damron, made me laugh out loud.

    For better French pronunciations than Diller’s and some creepy recollections about Billy Joel, check out Christie Brinkley’s surprisingly self-aware Uptown Girl.

    Though I wish there were more crazy revelations in it, Rich Cohen’s Murder in the Dollhouse is at a cross section of things that fascinate me: the downtown theater scene, Brown University, and wealthy New Yorkers.

    The Griffin Sisters Greatest Hits by Jennifer Weiner









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    Read by: Dakota Fanning
    Length: 15 hrs., 32 mins.
    Speed I listened: 2.1x

    Yes, this novel owes a lot to Daisy Jones & the Six, but I still loved it. It’s set in two time periods. In the early aughts, Zoe (beautiful, ambitious) and her sister, Cassie (think a closed-off Mama Cass), find mainstream popularity as a kind of Tegan and Sara rock band. Twenty years after they split, Zoe’s daughter, Cherry, runs away to enter an American Idol competition. She tries to reconnect with her estranged Aunt Cassie, who now lives off the grid in Alaska. Dakota Fanning’s narration never distracts from the big, warm hug this novel gave me every time I returned to it and pressed play.

    Flesh by David Szalay









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    Read by: Daniel Weyman
    Length: 9 hrs., 25 mins.
    Speed I listened: 2.2x

    This is another novel I just loved this month, and it couldn’t be any more different from Jennifer Weiner’s. Like Szalay’s other very good fiction, this one is about men dealing with the strange disappointments of life. Flesh tracks the ups and downs of István, from the accident he causes as a teenager in Hungary to his life on the sidelines as a limo driver for rich businessmen in London. István doesn’t say much, but he’s such a compelling figure. When he does speak, often just responding “Okay,” the actor Daniel Weyman (Gandalf on Amazon Prime’s The Rings of Power) captures him perfectly.

    Turning to Birds by Lili Taylor









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    Read by: the author
    Length: 4 hrs., 16 mins.
    Speed I listened: 1.7x

    I didn’t know I cared about birds or that I cared about Lili Taylor (Mystic Pizza, Say Anything) until I listened to this memoir about the actress discovering community in the world of bird watching. Taylor’s voice and personality is so quirky and recognizably off-center that I just so enjoyed spending a few hours in her presence. Even if I must admit I still don’t really care about birds. Sorry, Lili. I know you tried.

    Sky Daddy, by Kate Folk









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    Read by: Kristen Sieh
    Length: 9 hrs., 23 mins.
    Speed I listened: 2x

    Like me, you probably initially hear the conceit of this novel and think, Pass. It’s about Linda, a middling worker in San Francisco, who gets her ya-yas from flying on planes. As in she’s sexually attracted to jumbo jets, notably one she has been trying to reconnect with since she was a kid. She’d like to marry it. The plane. Yes, it’s ridiculous. Yes, it’s a metaphor for the confusions of sexuality. And yes, partially thanks to Sieh’s straightforward and honest reading, I also thought this book was touching and a total and complete hoot.

    My Next Breath, by Jeremy Renner









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    Read by: the author
    Length: 6 hrs., 35 mins.
    Speed I listened: 1.8x

    Jeremy Renner, the action star, house-flipper, and self-proclaimed “pain in the ass to many,” says he did not want to write this memoir, which details his near-fatal accident in January 2023 with a 14,000-pound snowplow. I’m not sure I wanted to listen to it either, but I’m very glad I did. His description of his recovery is life affirming and just pretty incredible. His narration is particularly harrowing. There are occasional cuts to 911 calls on the day of the incident, and you can even hear Renner fighting to stay alive in the background. I’m of the mind that not every celebrity needs a memoir, but this one’s worth it.

    Time Anxiety by Chris Guillebeau









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    Read by: the author
    Length: 5 hrs., 11 mins.
    Speed I listened: 1.6x

    Every blue moon or so, a self-help-ish book comes along that truly seems like it can help our complicated, messy lives. This is one of them. I can’t urge you enough to listen to Time Anxiety. Guillebeau, a seemingly very affable fellow with quite a bit of common sense, explains that we’re all very focused on “managing time,” but when it comes to brass tacks, time really can’t be managed. His advice is practical and doable. Things like: Stop evaluating your productivity based on a single day. Instead, look at a whole month. Learn to leave things unfinished (lame books, boring audiobooks, uninteresting Netflix series). Don’t waste hours and hours looking for the best flight options, “just book the fucking ticket.” Write a “to dread” list instead of a “to do” list, and get the things done on it quickly and with as little pain as possible. One thing I’d like to do with my time this year is make Guillebeau my friend, and I feel like I’m already on the path forward. At the end of the audiobook he says, “Thank you. You’re awesome. I’m so glad we spent this time together.” Me too!

    Even if Lauren Ambrose’s narration is consistently amazing, I was starting to get bored with Nita Prose’s Maid series, but her latest, The Maid’s Secret, is a solid triple. There’s some great skewering of Antiques Roadshow, and our seemingly neurodivergent protagonist, Molly, becomes a minor celebrity.

    I would probably listen to Harriet Walter (the mom on Succession) read the phone book, but I’d much prefer to listen to her perform a novel like The Usual Desire to Kill, by Camilla Barnes. Propulsive plot this does not have, but brittle British witticisms it certainly does.

    After a stellar first half, the plot gets way, way off track in The Last Session, by Julia Bartz, but I love a novel about therapy and I still enjoyed the listen.

    I’ve had problems getting into books by Emily Henry, but I survived — and enjoyed — A Great Big Beautiful Life, probably because it has a bit of The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo in it. Everyone’s cribbing from Taylor Jenkins Reid and with good reason!

    Careless People, by Sarah Wynn-Williams









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    Read by: the author
    Length: 13 hrs, 16 mins.
    Speed I listened: 2.2x

    This is a completely fascinating memoir by a former Facebook employee (in international relations and public policy) about her journey at the company. Wynn-Williams leaves no asshole behind, not Mark Zuckerberg or Sheryl Sandberg, which makes the book, titled after a description of Tom and Daisy in The Great Gatsby, compelling and, well, perfectly relatable. The author’s charming New Zealand accent heightens the listenability, even when she takes a few too many diversions or gets on her soapbox.

    Raising Hare by Chloe Dalton









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    Read by: Louise Brealey
    Length: 6 hrs, 26 mins.
    Speed I listened: 1.8x

    Anyone who knows me can attest that I’m not an animal guy. At all. But from the moment it started, I was both rapt and moved by this memoir of an overworked Londoner who saves and raises a leveret at her country home during the pandemic. More than most self-help books I’ve listened to recently, this carefully observed book made me very conscious of taking time to breathe and appreciate the world around me. Even if it definitely did not convince me to get a bunny as a pet.

    Wild Dark Shore by Charlotte McConaghy









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    Read by: a multicast
    Length: 9 hrs, 35 mins.
    Speed I listened: 2.1x

    Not that I’m one to forget its existence, but listening to books often reminds me of my misanthropic side. A novel like this hits that sweet spot. Dominic Salt, a widower, and his three kids are the last inhabitants on Shearwater, an island near Antarctica that was once teeming with researchers. And then, suddenly, a woman washes ashore, and she’s looking for her husband. It’s all very romantic, which clashes with my bitter distrust of people, but, I guess, one can’t exist without the other. Each character has his or her own narrator, which keeps this briskly moving along.

    All the Other Mothers Hate Me by Sarah Harman









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    Read by: Georgina Sadler
    Length: 11 hrs, 15 mins.
    Speed I listened: 2x

    In this comic thriller, Florence Grimes, a former girl-bander who lives in Notting Hill, thinks her 10-year-old son, Dylan, might have something to do with the disappearance of his classmate, Alfie. I listened to this book while I was in London recently, which may have amplified my enjoyment. Even if the last act is a bit muddy, I enjoyed Grimes’s hyperactive narration, as performed by Sadler.

    Say Everything by Ione Skye









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    Read by: the author
    Length: 8 hrs, 37 mins.
    Speed I listened: 2.2x

    I’m dating myself, but I saw Say Anything (1989) in the movie theater with my mom. Obviously the actress Ione Skye was a big deal then as John Cusack’s love interest, but I can’t say I’ve given her a ton of thought since. That said, I found this memoir surprisingly sexy and up-front. Especially fascinating are Skye’s descriptions of her romantic dalliances, including with the actor Keanu Reeves (attempted, at least); Beastie Boy Adam Horovitz (married him); singer Anthony Kiedis (dated), and interior designer David Netto (had a kid).

    It’s actually a decent month for book-club books: Broken Country by Clare Leslie Hall (Reese’s pick) is a very well-narrated throwback period mystery/thriller with an ending that I didn’t expect. I found the memoir The Tell by Amy Griffin (Oprah’s pick), about a wealthy New York mom of four who uncovers old, upsetting memories, totally riveting — especially because of Griffin’s cogent and immediate reading of it. And though Sophie Stava’s Count My Lies (Good Morning America’s pick) defies some probability, I was really taken in by its two female narrators: a rich woman and a poor one who poses as her nanny. Who’s Ripley-ing whom? There’s a nice, final turn of the screw there.

    Though it’s an occasionally circuitous slow burn, I was rapt by the experience of listening to Dream Count by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. And Graydon Carter’s When the Going Was Good made me super nostalgic for my salad days at Condé Nast, even if I didn’t learn much new.

    We All Live Here, by Jojo Moyes









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    Read by: Jenna Coleman
    Length: 12 hrs, 38 mins
    Speed I listened: 2x

    I usually savor a new Jojo Moyes novel in print. This time, I gave her latest a listen, and I loved the experience just as much. In this one, a divorced mom finds herself with a complicated full house when her estranged (and broke) father comes back to live with her, her stepfather, and her daughters. Charming, funny, warm, unexpected — like all of the Jojo Moyes canon, it’s a delight.

    Memorial Days by Geraldine Brooks









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    Read by: the author
    Length: 4 hrs, 56 mins.
    Speed I listened: 2x

    Everything seemed fine, and then suddenly, on Memorial Day 2019, the writer Geraldine Brooks got a call that her 60-year-old husband, the journalist Tony Horwitz, had dropped dead. This memoir alternates between the history of their marriage and the grief she attempts to work through while on a remote Australian island. Part of what’s thrilling about the audio production is how Brooks’s lyrical accent elevates her lovely and spare prose.

    Three Days in June, by Anne Tyler









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    Read by: J. Smith-Cameron
    Length: 4 hrs, 23 mins.
    Speed I listened: 1.8x

    I’ve never been an Anne Tyler reader, but the brisk length of her latest novel made a listen particularly appealing. An added bonus: The book is narrated by actress J. Smith-Cameron from Succession. She’s the awkward mother of a bride who doesn’t really think her daughter should get married to the groom. The weight of this one really sneaks up on you. Or, at least, it snuck up on me.

    This is a Love Story by Jessica Soffer









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    Read by: Marin Ireland
    Length: 8 hrs
    Speed I listened: 2x

    I’m not a huge fan of the actress Marin Ireland as a narrator. But I found that her voice slipped away whenever the narrative of this family — a Philip Roth-like writer, his artist wife, and their gallerist son — perked up, and that’s quite often. It takes a minute to get used to the form the book takes, as it’s told from several different perspectives. But otherwise, this is a moving and compelling Manhattan story.

    Source Code by Bill Gates









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    Read by: Wil Wheaton
    Length: 11 hrs, 41 mins.
    Speed I listened: 2x

    I’m usually not that keen on a memoir that’s not read by the author, but I’m glad I gave Bill Gates’s new book a pass. (It’s read by the actor Wil Wheaton, who, thanks to narrating Ready Player One and The Martian, has become almost synonymous with heady and slightly dorky audiobooks.) I found Gates’s self-analysis here quite relatable and his journey from precocious kid to major player in the tech world very compelling. My favorite detail is that his favorite drink to order while in college was a Shirley Temple.

    I excitedly tore through the nearly 23 hours of Lorne, by Susan Morrison, in a weekend. (I was her assistant for three years.) The surprising grotesquery of Victorian Psycho, by Virginia Feito, made me laugh out loud. Chelsea Handler did too, in her new memoir I’ll Have What She’s Having, which also convinced me I could use a life-lessons master class from the comedian. And I’m always here for thoughtful analysis about gossip, which is why I enjoyed You Didn’t Hear This From Me, by Kelsey McKinney.

    Presumed Guilty, by Scott Turow









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    Read by: Grover Gardner
    Length: 20 hrs, 11 mins.
    Speed I listened: 2.1x

    I normally bristle at a 20-hour audiobook, but I found this second sequel to Turow’s 1987 thriller Presumed Innocent (first a Harrison Ford movie, which I have seen; more recently, a Jake Gyllenhaal Apple series I haven’t) completely gripping. Early on, I thought Grover Gardner’s voice was a bit fuddy-duddy, but I got used to it. In this installment, our protagonist Rusty chooses to defend his stepson, who is accused of murder. He’s now in his late 70s, and his company is addictive as ever.

    Playworld by Adam Ross









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    Read by: the author
    Length: 22 hrs, 9 mins.
    Speed I listened: 2x

    It’s so unlike me, but here’s another 20-plus-hour audiobook that I couldn’t turn off. Well, that’s not completely true. A few hours into the saga of Griffin — a child actor growing up in New York City in 1980 — I was frustrated that he was caught between the sexual advances of two adults, one an older female family friend, the other his wrestling coach. But the book takes off when Griffin is cast in a movie by a Woody Allen–esque director. Ross, a former child actor himself, is an engaging reader of what must be a semi-autobiographical roman à clef.

    The Three Lives of Cate Kay by Kate Fagan









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    Read by: Marin Ireland and others
    Length: 9 hrs, 52 mins.
    Speed I listened: 2.2x

    For a while, the actress Marin Ireland was reading every big audiobook, and I just got tired of listening to her voice. So it’s a testament to the author and this novel that I found it so compelling. The book, a Reese Witherspoon pick about a best-selling writer and her hidden, tumultuous past, shares some similar DNA with The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo (which I loved), and that’s definitely not a bad thing.

    Wild West Village by Lola Kirke









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    Read by: the author
    Length: 5 hrs, 35 mins.
    Speed I listened: 1.9x

    I thought the actress/singer Lola Kirke was great in Mozart in the Jungle and Mistress America. I had a fun afternoon writing about her when I worked at The Wall Street Journal. But in the last few years, she’s dropped off the Hollywood scene. She focused more on country music and, one assumes, writing this very honest, sometimes even shocking, book of essays about growing up in New York City in a dysfunctional family of eccentrics. In fact, the most pedestrian thing about the book is the title. Otherwise, Kirke comes off wise and introspective. She even got under my skin.

    In Gad We Trust by Josh Gad









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    Length: 8 hrs, 4 mins.
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    I didn’t want to like this memoir by the actor behind the voice of Olaf in Frozen and from The Book of Mormon, but almost immediately, Gad won me over. Or, Sacha Baron Cohen did, reading a short foreword in which the artist sometimes known as Borat says he’s wearing “very noisy clogs.” Gad is pretty name-droppy. Friends include Anne Hathaway, Bryce Dallas Howard, Johnny Depp, the late Chadwick Boseman, and pretty much anyone with whom he’s ever co-starred. Besides Cohen, Mel Brooks and Ron Howard pop in for seemingly unnecessary vocal cameos. But Gad is awfully charming, whether he’s detailing his tempestuous relationship with stage director James Lapine, his rise on the high-school forensics circuit, or his endearing emotions toward his growing daughters. We’d probably be friends, too. Josh — call me.

    The Life Cycle of the Common Octopus, by Emma Knight, is a charming novel about the British class system and coming of age at college in Scotland.

    In the department of challenging relationships between daughters and their mothers, I enjoyed both the singer Neko Case’s The Harder I Fight the More I Love You and Shari Franke’s The House of My Mother, as painful as both could occasionally be.

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    Marshall Heyman

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  • Austin’s Formula 1 Weekend Was a High-Octane Rodeo of Speed and Spectacle

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    Race winner Max Verstappen of the Netherlands and Oracle Red Bull Racing. Mark Sutton – Formula 1/Formula 1 via Getty Images

    Formula 1 is back in Austin, the “Home of Horsepower.” Instead of riding bucking broncos, the world’s fastest drivers are revving 1000 horsepower V6 engines around one of the year’s trickiest tracks.

    During race weekend (October 17-19) in Austin, the city is plastered with F1 imagery, from posters of Lando Norris’ face alongside 6th Street to the full range of Pirelli tires that adorn the lobby of the Thompson Hotel.  

    It’s the one weekend in Austin where lines around the block aren’t solely reserved for BBQ restaurants. Instead, Formula 1 fanatics queue for fans zones set up around the city like, the Atlassian Williams Racing Fan Zone where they can drive esports simulators, Lewis Hamilton’s Plus 44 store pop-up and former F1 driver Daniel Ricciardo’s Enchanté pop-up.

    Matthew McConaughey participates in the grid tour before the start of the United States Formula One Grand Prix at the Circuit of the Americas in Austin, Texas. AFP via Getty Images

    Digital luxury lifestyle concierge service Velocity Black is the official luxury lifestyle partner of the Aston Martin Aramco Formula 1 team, and members get access to some of the weekend’s most exclusive offerings, including the team’s hospitality suite in The Paddock Club, a hot lap, garage tours, pit lane walks and a lunch at the Aston Martin House, where drivers casually walk by as you munch on brisket croquettes and local tostadas.

    “Whether it be VIP hospitality, garage tours and hot lap access at F1 races, fine dining experiences or exclusive entertainment, we are committed to unlocking truly unforgettable moments across the globe,” says Sylvain Langrand, CEO of Velocity Black. 

    Malin Akerman and Brittany Snow attend the Uber One Rodeo. Getty Images for Uber

    Off the track, there was a private dinner at the iconic Franklin Barbecue with an intimate live performance by Grammy Award-winner Gary Clark Jr. And should members want to beat the Austin traffic, Velocity Black  arranges helicopter transports to and from the circuit.

    “F1 and Austin have acclimated to each other,” legendary BBQ pitmaster Aaron Franklin told Observer at a private dinner for Velocity Black members. “Now, people come here specifically for F1, and are more interested in the local scene and local culture. We had the McLaren team here last night, and they’re all just a bunch of really cool nerds. I love meeting people during race weekend that I wouldn’t normally have the chance to meet.”

    Roller coasters dot The Circuit Of The Americas (COTA) and it seems like the mandatory dress code is cowboy hats and boots. When cars aren’t rounding the circuit, musical performances throughout the weekend include Kygo and Garth Brooks, Turnpike Troubadours, as well as local Austin talent.

    This year, Austin was a sprint weekend, meaning there was an extra mini-race with more points on the line for the championship battle. Track temperatures weren’t the only scorching hot thing on Saturday, as the sprint race was off to a spicy start. The crowd gasped as both McLarens made contact, forcing them out of the sprint race and any chance at points. Overall, a bad day for Oscar Piastri, currently leading the driver’s championship, as he only placed P6 in qualifying, while his teammate and championship rival, Lando Norris, came in at P2.

    Glen Powell on the grid during the F1 Grand Prix of United States at Circuit of The Americas. Formula 1 via Getty Images

    And on race day, COTA was hot as H-E double toothpicks, but celebrities still lined the track, including Matthew McConaughey, Glen Powell, Malin Akerman and Adele. Max Verstappen dominated, winning the race with Lando Norris coming in second and Charles LeClerc third. There were plenty of overtakes and on-track action, but no red flags. Although the race wasn’t as exciting as the sprint, it was consequential for the driver’s championship, with Lando narrowing the gap to Oscar Piastri by 14 points.

    And as the sun set on Austin, the city was electric with bars packed with F1 fans, and private events and parties, like the Esses Magazine one-year anniversary party with two special guests, as the Visa Cash App RB drivers Isack Hadjar and Liam Lawson made an appearance. At the One Party by Uber, a musical performance by the Zac Brown Band opened with a traditional Texas rodeo.

    While partaking in a BBQ dinner, another Texas tradition, Jak Crawford, an F2 driver and Texas native told Observer, “My favorite thing about race weekend in Austin is the food. The brisket, it’s so good here.” While he hasn’t raced here yet he says, “I can’t wait to drive here, it can be a really tricky circuit.”

    Austin’s Formula 1 Weekend Was a High-Octane Rodeo of Speed and Spectacle

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    Katie Lockhart

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  • Did Matthew McConaughey’s The Lost Bus copy a background score from Prabhas’ Salaar?

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    Salaar: Part 1 – Ceasefire, starring Prabhas in the lead role, hit the big screens on December 22, 2023. Now, nearly two years since its release, it appears that a section of the film’s background score may have been copied in a Hollywood movie.

    Did the makers of The Lost Bus copy the background score from Salaar?

    According to several reports, the background score for Prabhas’ Salaar was allegedly copied in the Matthew McConaughey starrer The Lost Bus. The makers of the Hollywood movie recently unveiled an “Inside Look” video of the film, which appears to feature the same or very similar score.

    Around the 1:10 mark in the video, a track plays that closely resembles the background score from Salaar: Part 1 – Ceasefire, originally composed by Ravi Basrur. The striking similarity of the soundtrack has caught the attention of various netizens, who are calling it out as a copy.

    Watch the video here:

    Reacting to the alleged copy, one fan wrote, “This is what salaar bgm done… Hollywood copied our darling bgm!”

    Another user commented, “You guys copied bgm from Indian movie salaar.”

    Here are the reactions:

    More about Salaar

    Salaar: Part 1 – Ceasefire is a Telugu-language epic neo noir action thriller starring Prabhas and Prithviraj Sukumaran in the lead roles. Set in the fictional dystopian city-state of Khansaar, where monarchy exists, the film narrates the story of two friends, Deva, an exiled prince, and Varadha, the incumbent prince, whose bond is tested by politics, power, and betrayal.

    After years of being apart, Khansaar and Varadha face the threat of a coup d’état in the absence of Varadha’s father, Raja Mannar. In hopes of fighting back, he enlists with the help of his friend Deva, setting up inevitable bloodshed.

    On the other hand, The Lost Bus is an American survival drama starring Matthew McConaughey and America Ferrera in the lead roles. Directed by Paul Greengrass, the film is based on a real-life incident involving a bus driver, Kevin McKay, who bravely led a school bus of 22 students and a few teachers to safety through the 2018 Camp Fire in Northern California.

    The film was released directly on Apple TV+ on October 3, 2025, and has received positive reviews from critics.

    ALSO READ: Pradeep Ranganathan reacts to being compared to the likes of Dhanush: ‘I do not believe…’

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  • Matthew McConaughey Talks More About Shooting That Iconic One-Take ‘Interstellar’ Moment

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    Matthew McConaughey looked back on filming that pivotal crying scene in Interstellar, where a drastic time jump occurs to his space-traveler lead role in Christopher Nolan’s powerful sci-fi epic. 

    In a career retrospective video with Vanity Fair, McConaughey reacted to his emotional reaction as Cooper, an astronaut who, after a nearly failed mission on a water planet experiencing extreme time dilation (an hour there is seven years on Earth), ends up losing 23 years of his young children’s lives in a matter of a few hours.

    The actor talked about his prep for the heartbreaking moment: “It was the first scene up. I had gotten good rest that weekend, and I had had a pretty humble, good weekend. I was with my family,” McConaughey explained, touching on the fact that ultimately, the key scene was a one-and-done moment: the first take is what audiences eventually saw in the film.

    “We got in, and Nolan was going to set up, they were about to play the tape. ‘Let’s rehearse the tape.’ I went, ‘Ah, ah.’ I remember, I think I had a note. I’d written, ‘See you first,’” McConaughey continued. “I handed it to Chris. All of a sudden, things came over, and cameras were there, and we played the tape. And again, this is that first take; that’s what we used.”

    Of course, that moment would go on to be one of Interstellar‘s most memorable, not just for its dramatic connection in the film, but also for how it spun off into its own life as a viral internet reaction meme, used to convey everything from somber experiences to overblown fictional tragedy striking any given fandom.

    “I didn’t have to go to a place. I did think about, and I did try to understand, what if one day you go to work, and [then] you were gone for 10 years. When Casey Affleck and Chastain come on [playing Cooper’s grown up children], the dread of having to miss that in my own life with my own kids, I just reacted.” McConaughey elaborated. “Which is what I’ve learned I like to do… there’s things like that. Because I’ve consistently tried to [be like], ‘Let’s just do the first take.’ Because everything after take one is acting, for real. We can improve stuff in take two, but everything after take one, if you’re fully relaxed and just reacting—everything after take one is acting. I didn’t want to know what was coming.

    “I wanted to just… that’s all about relaxing, then. That’s just me relaxing, then what happens, happened.”

    And what happened was one of the most iconic moments in McConaughey’s career—memery or otherwise.

    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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    Sabina Graves

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  • Matthew McConaughey swears queen-size bed helped marriage of 13 years

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    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    Don’t sleep on Matthew McConaughey’s biggest relationship secret.

    The Academy Award-winning actor, who has been married to wife Camila Alves for 13 years, has a simple recipe for maintaining a healthy marriage. 

    McConaughey, 55, put pen to paper and offered a few of his life lessons in his new book, “Poems & Prayers.” He told Fox News Digital that one small change in his household helped him further connect with the lady in his life. 

    In an excerpt from his new book, McConaughey encouraged couples to downsize their mattress to “get ahead.”

    MATTHEW MCCONAUGHEY LOST OUT ON ‘TITANIC’ LEAD ROLE AFTER REFUSING DIRECTOR’S REQUEST: BOOK

    Matthew McConaughey insisted on one trick that helps his marriage with wife Camila Alves. (Kevork Djansezian)

    “The best thing you can / do for your / marriage,” he penned. “One way to surely / get ahead, / is get rid of that / king-­size mattress, / and sleep in a / queen-­size bed.”

    McConaughey delved into the reason why a smaller bed could provide a more fruitful connection.

    WATCH: MATTHEW MCCONAUGHEY REVEALS MARRIAGE SUCCESS SECRET

    “We have kids and we go to our friend’s house and he has one of these double king-size beds put together and all the kids sleep in the bed,” McConaughey told Fox News Digital. “The wife’s on one side with her side table and the husband’s on the other side and it’s great when you got all three kids, but all of a sudden the kids get too big. They’re out of the bed.”

    The cover of Matthew McConaughey's book.

    The front cover of Matthew McConaughey’s new book. (Courtesy of Robbie Fimmano)

    MATTHEW MCCONAUGHEY’S BLUNT ADVICE TO TEENAGE SON AS HE BEGINS ACTING CAREER

    “I wake up one morning … I’m looking over there and Camilla’s like a football field away man. Then you go to bed at night, like you want to snuggle up and … ‘Well, we’ve got to cover you up. Come about 12 feet and I’ll come 12 feet.’”

    He added, “You’re like, man, this damn king-size bed is not good for the marriage, man. Get rid of that son of a b—-. So we got a queen size where we’re shoulder to shoulder. I’m telling you, it’s good for your marriage.”

    Matthew McConaughey in a white jacket and blue undershirt matches his wife in a light blue plunging dress with cutouts at the shoulders in Austin, Texas

    Matthew McConaughey and Camila Alves married in 2012. (Rick Kern/WireImage)

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    “We got a queen size where we’re shoulder to shoulder. I’m telling you, it’s good for your marriage.”

    — Matthew McConaughey

    The “Dazed and Confused” actor noted that there’s “no room” for any kids in the bed.

    Themes throughout McConaughey’s latest written work include love stories, faith, doubt, compassion and forgiveness. “Poems & Prayers” features writings inspired by both proverbs and the Old Testament, in addition to intentions and words of affirmation. 

    Maintaining healthy family relationships not only as a father to three children, but also as a partner to Camilla, is important to McConaughey.

    Matthew McConaughey and his children walk the red carpet at the 2024 Mack, Jack & McConaughey Gala

    McConaughey and his wife share three children together. (Photo by Rick Kern/Getty Images)

    When McConaughey and Camila married in 2012, the family moved from California to Texas. The couple share three children: Levi, Vida and Livingston.

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    “You’ve got kids, so you don’t … you’re spending as much time being a good mother and father of them, but you also gotta make sure – and I can do a better job of this – of going, ‘No, this is our time.’ You can’t 100% live with the kids as a parent,” McConaughey said. 

    WATCH: MATTHEW MCCONAUGHEY PRIORITIZES HIS RELATIONSHIP WITH CAMILLA ALVES

    “You gotta make to remember that one of the best examples you can give the kids of how to treat a woman or a man or how to someone they end up falling in love with down the line is how you treat their mother and how the mother treats the father.”

    Alves and McConaughey are so committed to finding time for each other that they launched their own alcohol brand in 2023, Pantalones Organic Tequila. They regularly star in cheeky campaign ads for the company, which offers three varieties of tequila.

    “You gotta make to remember that one of the best examples you can give the kids of how to treat a woman or a man or how to someone they end up falling in love with down the line is how you treat their mother and how the mother treats the father.”

    — Matthew McConaughey

    Matthew McConaughey and wife Camila in white tennis outfits look back at the camera on tennis court with their bums blurred

    Matthew McConaughey and Camila Alves go pantless in an advertisement for their tequila brand. (PANTALONES ORGANIC TEQUILA)

    Matthew McConaughey and Camila Alves playing croquet without pants.

    The couple regularly go pantless for their tequila brand ads. (PANTALONES ORGANIC TEQUILA)

    “We enjoy ourselves,” McConaughey said. “You know, like the tequila, we put damn good juice in a bottle. We were formal. We were buttoned up on that. As soon as we got good juice and a bottle, he said, pants off.”

    “Let’s have a good time with the ads.”

    “Poems & Prayers” is available now.

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  • Matthew McConaughey Says He’s “Peddling Belief” as a Writer and—Maybe—a Politician

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    It reminds me of this quote I heard from the director Mark Waters. We were having an argument about a scene, and I didn’t want to do this one thing that he wanted to do. He finally goes, “Okay, that’s fine.” He goes, “You know what, McConaughey? You’re seldom wrong, but there’s more than one way to be right.” I’m like, “Oh, touché. You got me.”

    I don’t think she’s read that one yet. I think she’ll get a kick out of that one. She’ll go, “Oh, I remember. I bet you I know when you wrote this.”

    She hasn’t read the full book yet?

    Well, I don’t know if she has. She may tell me afterwards she has. She’s been pretty mum about it. She’s read some and likes quite a few, but she hasn’t brought that one up. I think it’s a side of me that she’d be glad I’m sharing. Poems and prayers are almost the opposite of certainty. I can be very academic and pragmatic and practical. I’m not saying that’s a bad thing, but that can be exhausting. Not only for ourselves, but others. It’s like, “Hey, come on, man. Take the rough edges off a little bit. We’re jiving here.”

    What was making you feel cynical?

    The world, the news, the amount of sirens I’m hearing going by. The amount of times I was seeing people, adults, mothers, fathers, thinking it was fine to just be completely irresponsible and almost bad examples for their kids, and thinking that was just fine and be like, “They’ll be fine.”

    Irresponsible in what way?

    “Hey, win at all costs, no rules to this game called life, just win, lie, cheat, steal and if they’re trying to score on it, move the goalpost while the ball’s in the air, it’s fine.”

    Hey, what? Hang on a minute. “If you get yours, however you can git it, takin’ the shortcut, you win in life.” No. I’m not ready to purchase that for myself, for us, or as a thing to be teaching our children.

    You have a section in the book called “Man Up,” and several of the poems address questions of what it means to be a good man. There are a lot of conversations, from all directions, about a so-called crisis of masculinity in America. What do you think of that?

    I think there’s a crisis of masculinity. I think there’s a crisis of femininity. I think there’s a crisis of humanity. I know I’ve talked to many young men that don’t have a bearing, don’t have a compass, don’t have a North Star that they’re looking toward with how to act, treat others and themselves, how to treat friendships, how to treat relationships, expectations on themselves—going through things very sloppily.

    They’re going, “What’s the reward if I do it well? What’s the reward for being a character-filled man?” Let’s talk about that. There is reward for that. And on the sexual topic, a really wonderful thing—it’s really, really good for women to have more good men.

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    Keziah Weir

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  • The Lost Bus Is an Instant Disaster-Movie Classic

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    The agitated, ominous vibration of giant power lines and quaking transmission towers feels like a Greek chorus throughout Paul Greengrass’s intense new wildfire thriller, The Lost Bus. Over the course of the film, Greengrass regularly cuts away to the churning cables and metal structures, as well as to the roaring flames of the 2018 Camp Fire, as the blaze makes its way across the mountains and cliffs of Northern California. This helps us follow the spread of this real-life disaster, and it also conveys the puniness and impotence of the mortals fighting it. Based on real-life stories from the Camp Fire (still the deadliest wildfire in California history), The Lost Bus, which just premiered at the Toronto Film Festival ahead of a short September theatrical release and an October 3 debut on Apple TV+, offers plenty of suspense and heroism. But it’s all tempered by the knowledge that these fires are inescapable, growing, and unstoppable.

    At heart, The Lost Bus is a disaster movie — a great one — and it has some of the classic moves of a disaster movie, complete with the slightly on-the-nose narrative shorthand designed to introduce characters quickly and efficiently. Greengrass cuts across a number of arenas and people, including the various fire crews trying to deal with this rapidly deteriorating situation, but the central narrative belongs to Kevin McKay (Matthew McConaughey), a down-on-his luck school-bus driver in Paradise, California, who returned here after his life fell apart elsewhere. Kevin is already having one of the worst days of his life even before everything burns down: His dog is dying, his teenage son is home sick from school (and also hates him), his mom is elderly and out of it, and his ex-wife is berating him on the phone. He’s also missed his bus’s inspection appointments, he’s running out of money, and his supervisor thinks he’s a flake. Once the flames come roaring into town, however, Kevin will be the only one in a position to drive a busload of elementary-schoolers, along with their teacher, Mary Ludwig (America Ferrera), through the downright biblical flames and out to safety. It’s Speed meets the end of the world.

    McConaughey was made for parts like this: the good old boy facing extraordinary circumstances. He knows exactly how to sell this character and his desperation — not with confidence, but with a “damn the torpedoes, I’ll try anything once” bravado. Honestly, they should cast him in every disaster movie. Plus, he makes a fine match with Ferrera, whose teacher must exude outward calm for the benefit of her kids while she’s not-so-secretly freaking out inside. (Both Kevin and Mary have their own kids elsewhere that they’re also worried sick about.) As everything falls apart around them in ways both big and small, we enjoy watching these two opposites butt heads and quibble and then learn to function as a team.

    The film feels like a homecoming for Greengrass, who cut his teeth in the world of you-are-there television documentaries before helping redefine the modern action movie with the handheld urgency of hits like The Bourne Supremacy and The Bourne Ultimatum. The director also carried that approach over to docudramas like United 93, Captain Phillips, and July 22 (as well as his earlier, masterful Bloody Sunday, the movie that put him on the map back in 2002). But the “shaky cam” style ran its course some years ago; his last effort was the stately and old-fashioned Tom Hanks western News of the World, a beautiful picture whose release got swallowed up by the COVID-19 pandemic.

    In The Lost Bus, Greengrass combines his thriller side with his reportorial side. He films Kevin and Mary and the schoolkids’ journey through hellfire as a no-holds-barred action spectacle full of immediacy and awe, complete with hair’s-breadth escapes and incredible visions of destruction. (It’s frankly a shame that The Lost Bus isn’t getting a wider theatrical release; it was clearly made to be a big-screen experience.) Some incidents have been a bit sensationalized, but Kevin and Mary’s heroism was very real, as evidenced in Lizzie Johnson’s exhaustively researched and absorbing 2021 nonfiction book Paradise: One Town’s Struggle to Survive an American Wildfire, on which the film is loosely based. To that end, the film also offers a more diffuse and heavily researched portrait of what goes into battling a wildfire, and Greengrass’s vérité style lends authenticity to the scenes of fire chiefs strategizing, of ground crews and air crews trying to combat the blazes and save lives. The picture thus combines the excitement of an old-school disaster spectacle with a fly-on-the-wall portrait of institutions struggling to function in the face of a calamity. The effect is singular: We enjoy the thrill ride immensely, but it’s the realism that sticks with us. Movies end, but the fires are here to stay.


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    Bilge Ebiri

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  • Trauma Rules in Bosnian Coming-of-Age Drama ‘Otter’

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    Based on a short story and script by Stefan Bosković, Bosnian helmer Srdan Vuletić’s Otter (Vidra) tells the story of a 16-year-old girl named Hana who has to face two major traumas, in addition to the expectations of her mother and extended family. Vuletić’s directorial debut, Summer in the Golden Valley, also featured a 16-year-old, a boy who must repay his late father’s debt. In his latest, Hana must cope with the death of her father, whose final wish was to be buried in a space suit. Matthew McConaughey has no role in the movie, but he gets referenced in Otter (more about that later).

    “A reserved teenager, Hana, has been invited by her crush, Balsa, to go to a lake with him to film a solar eclipse. On the morning of their planned trip, however, Hana’s father, a top-notch pilot, dies,” reads a synopsis for the film, which celebrated its world premiere at the 31st edition of the Sarajevo Film Festival. “In his will, Hana’s father requests that he be buried in a space suit. Frustrated by her mother’s inability to stand up to the rest of the family, who want to give her father a traditional funeral, Hana runs away from home and goes to the lake.” She wants to have a good time with Balsa and his friend and social media star Luka, only to be disappointed and experience violence. “Hana must suppress her considerate and obedient nature or her destiny will be as dark as the solar eclipse.”
     
    Vuletić has been busy after a 17-year “break” of sorts. “Many people think I took a break from filmmaking, but in essence, I was stuck with the production of one of my previous films,” he told THR during an interview at the Sarajevo festival. “It was that movie, Gym, that I premiered last year. Remember this saying, ‘Don’t put all your eggs in one basket’? And I made this mistake.”

    He reacted by starting to develop many things at the same time, “and it all came to fruition more or less over the span of five years,” Vuletić explained. “So in the last four years, I did two series as a creator and two feature films. But before that was not really a break. I did some theater performances as a director and some documentary things. So it was not that I was on holiday.”

    Srdan Vuletić

    Courtesy of Sarajevo Film Festival

    What is the story behind the space suit? “That was not in the early script version,” the director told THR. “It came along as a solution that I asked the script writer to make. We had a movie about a girl facing trauma. And I told him it’s somehow too linear for me to have only one trauma. I didn’t want Hana to have any respite. So then we brought this big trauma inside the house.”

    An otter captured in a box also plays a key role in the film. “One thing I changed right before shooting was that I thought maybe it would not be good to see the otter as an animal in a physical presence,” Vuletić shared with THR. “The otter symbolizes her trauma.”

    In a later scene, the otter can be seen but only in animated form. The director planned for this animated sequence early on. “I wanted to make a movie that’s different from the rest of regional cinematography,” explained Vuletić. In consultations with others, “this animation thing clicked,” he recalled. “It’s a moment where we enter her inner world. It’s the moment when she finally understands that she should not run from her problems. It’s a moment of change when she says, ‘OK, my first step in solving the problems is to recognize I have a problem and to face it’.”

    So what does McConaughey have to do with Otter? There’s a scene in which Luka’s looks are compared to those of the famous actor. But Vuletić says another Hollywood star was initially planned to get name-checked in that scene. “There was another actor we had in mind for this role of Luka, and this guy resembles Sean Penn,” the filmmaker told THR. “And then for a long time in the script, it was Sean Penn. Then, when we decided to have Pavle Marković, a great, great actor, play Luka, I said, ‘Listen, I think it doesn’t fit his character to say some name that he really resembles. Let’s say a name that he thinks he looks like.’ McConaughey. For some reason, that name came up.”

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    Georg Szalai

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  • The Return Of Christopher Nolan’s Interstellar Gets Delayed

    The Return Of Christopher Nolan’s Interstellar Gets Delayed

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    Image: Paramount Pictures

    Christopher Nolan didn’t release a movie this year, so theaters are bringing back one of his old ones to compensate. Interstellar was set to return to theaters next month but will instead be delayed until December, Variety reports.

    The 2014 space epic starring Matthew McConaughey, Anne Hathaway, and Jessica Chastain will hit theaters again on December 6 instead of September 27 as originally planned. The revival marks the 10th anniversary of Nolan’s ninth movie and will include 70mm IMAX showings.

    Interstellar tracks astronauts on a mission to find a new habitable planet for Earth’s remaining residents to flee to. It’s a movie about the destruction of the planet and the power of love, and one of Nolan’s more emotional and human projects. It’s the only time he’s worked with McConaughey, and the actor gave one of his best performances in it at the peak of the McConaissance (Dallas Buyer’s Club was a year earlier).

    So why the delay? “The theatrical release date was pushed to align with the home entertainment relaunch,” Variety reports. I have no idea what that really means since Interstellar is already available at home, but the publication says Paramount disputes recent rumors that the shift was due to lost or destroyed copies of the original 70mm reels.

    Instead, Paramount says it has plenty of archived copies of the movie, but that some film reels experience wear and tear from standard use. The company adds that it’s normal for them to become unusable after their original theatrical runs. I guess Paramount just didn’t want to get clobbered by Transformers One at the box office that month.

    Whatever the case, it’ll be worth it to wait a few extra months so fans can once again witness one of the coolest space sequences in film on the big screen. It’ll also be interesting to reappraise one of Nolan’s headiest movies (he co-wrote it with his brother, Jonathan Nolan). A recent viral TikTok popularized an entirely inverted interpretation of the movie that’s full of holes but fun to contemplate on a re-watch.

          

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    Ethan Gach

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  • Hollywood Actor Matthew McConaughey Still Open To Running for Elected Office

    Hollywood Actor Matthew McConaughey Still Open To Running for Elected Office

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    All-Pro Reels from District of Columbia, USA, CC BY-SA 2.0 , via Wikimedia CommonsCredit: All-Pro Reels from District of Columbia, USA

    Last week, Oscar-winning actor Matthew McConaughey attended the National Governors Association meeting in Salt Lake City, sparking curiosity about his potential political aspirations. During the event, New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy inquired about McConaughey’s thoughts on entering the political arena.

    “I’m on a learning tour and have been for probably the last six years,” McConaughey responded. “Do I have the instincts and intellect that it would be a good fit for me and I would be a good [fit] for it. You know, would I be useful?”

    Watch his full comments:

    Nothing New for McConaughey

    McConaughey’s musings about a political career are not new. He has been contemplating this shift for several years, most notably in 2021 when he considered challenging incumbent Governor Greg Abbott in the 2022 Texas gubernatorial race. This contemplation has become as familiar as his iconic phrase, “alright alright alright.”

    The actor’s approach to politics is seen by some as a refreshing contrast to the often impulsive nature of political figures. And for some a reminder of how past figures weighed the challenges of political work.

    Governor Green’s Advice to McConaughey

    Hawaii Governor Josh Green offered McConaughey some sage advice during the meeting. “Don’t fall into the trap to think you should be just one thing,” Green advised. “A lot of Republicans will want you to be Republican and a lot of Democrats will want you to be a Democrat, just be you because that might be something special for all of us.”

    Green’s advice underscores the importance of authenticity in politics, a quality McConaughey has consistently displayed in his acting career and public persona. However, the actor’s prolonged hesitation raises an important question: If McConaughey has spent years pondering his usefulness in a political role, might he already have his answer?

     Matthew McConaughey and Hawaii Governor Josh Green speaks at the National Governors Association Summer Meeting via YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kLiW7Rz3W4o
    Screenshot: The Salt Lake Tribune Youtube

    McConaughey’s potential entry into politics could bring a unique perspective to the often polarized political landscape. His centrist views and dedication to thoughtful consideration might resonate with voters tired of extreme partisanship. Yet, the question remains whether he will ultimately decide to take the plunge.

    As McConaughey continues his “learning tour,” the public and political observers alike remain intrigued by the possibility of his candidacy. His approach, which is quite reminiscent of other political figures will keep people’s attention.

    For now, the question of his political future remains unanswered, leaving room for continued debate and anticipation.

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    Jorge Arenas

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  • Glen Powell Is the King of the Rom-Com

    Glen Powell Is the King of the Rom-Com

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    For the girls who get it, just the name Glen Powell should cause a physical reaction. Not just for the Top Gun beach scene — or the Anyone But You shower scene — but because he’s the face of a new era: the great return of the mid-budget rom-com.


    We thought the genre was dead and buried. For a while, it was. We had to subsist on the crumbs of endless rewatches and Netflix Wattpad adaptions. And each teen romance franchise was worse than the last. We went from watching the tolerable
    To All The Boys I’ve Loved Before adaptation of Jenny Han’s famous series to barely watchable renditions of literal Wattpad books like The Kissing Booth and My Life With the Walter Boys.

    To make it worse, the change was so abrupt. Many people point to the summer of 2011 when both
    No Strings Attached (starring Ashton Kutcher and Natalie Portman) and Friends with Benefits (starring Mila Kunis and Justin Timberlake) came out within months of each other. If you’re struggling to remember the difference between them, it’s because there isn’t one. Two identical movies going head-to-head with each other? The rom-com bubble burst — curse you, Ashton Kutcher and Mila Kunis.

    Prior to that, there had been a reliable summer romance movie in theaters each year. It was the date night flick. Old faithful. Studios knew their female demographic and their partners would drive the box office. But then, suddenly, it vanished. Marvel summer blockbusters took over until no one was going to the movies at all. Streamers won. And they certainly were not giving in to the romance department.

    But it’s 2024 and we’re so back.

    2023 was the year of the girl, with
    Barbie making studios remember that unabashedly femme features can make a chunk of change — globally. Then, the frenzy of Shondaland’s Bridgerton series hit and breathed life into the romance genre. The final piece of the puzzle? The sleeper hit Anyone But You, a romance that became a solid cinematic hit, starring Sydney Sweeney and . . . you guessed it, Glen Powell.

    As the male lead in the most profitable Shakespeare adaptation of all time — yes,
    Anyone But You was an adaptation of Much Ado About Nothing that knocked10 Things I Hate About You out of the top spot — Powell sure has some heat on him. And he’s using his undeniable charm, leading-man looks, and charisma to good use by bringing back the rom-com.

    What’s Glen Powell in?

    Glen Powell’s filmography is surprisingly long and filled with hits. Although he’s been gaining a steady amount of attention over the past few years, he’s been putting in the work consistently for about a decade.

    Personally, I started seeing him everywhere in 2016. His blonde hair and good looks cast him as a generic frat boy in film after film after film. In 2016, he pretty much played this role in
    Everybody Wants Some!! This underrated Richard Linklater college feature where he starred alongside future co-star Zoey Deutch, but not as her love interest. But his turn as a 1980s crafty baseball player pales in comparison to the hyper-inflated, campy frat boy, Chad, that he played alongside Nick Jonas in the misunderstood Scream Queens. Fans of the cult classic will remember.

    His real 2016 breakout was in
    Hidden Figures. More importantly for his career, the Hidden Figures premiere was also where he was photographed grinning so gleefully it became a meme. And when you’re a meme, you know you’ve made it.

    2018 was also a terrific year for Powell. Fans of the romance genre and the period drama might have caught the quiet Netflix film,
    The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society. But many more will remember his true Netflix breakout — Set It Up.

    Without a doubt,
    Set It Up was one of the greatest rom coms attempting to revive the dying genre in the late 2010s. Here, he met Zoey Deutch again and they starred as overworked assistants for Lucy Liu and Taye Diggs. In an attempt to get more free time to pursue their own dating lives, they engineer a Cyrano plot. They manipulate their bosses calendars, get them to date, and reap the benefits. It’s the perfect combination of wacky schemes, chemistry, and real heart. And it’s what solidified Powell as a romantic interest. But could he carry a big budget movie?

    2023 was his year to confirm that he could. After finally proving himself as a mainstream heartthrob in
    Top Gun: Maverick, he starred as the leading man in two films in 2023: Anyone But You and Hit Man. Due to delays, Hit Man is finally coming out this summer. But, in the meantime, Anyone But You has become Gen Z canon.

    In the Sydney Sweeney enemies-to-lovers hit, Powell carries the film’s acting with his blend of physical comedy and emotional vulnerability. I hate feeling sorry for blond men — but somehow he makes me root for him.

    That’s why he made Hollywood Reporter’s list of rising stars. The Young Hollywood A-List Top 10 as this generation’s “The Megawatt Smile.” It’s a nod to his charm, but also his earnestness and likability. He can do it all. And the fact that he chooses to keep doing rom-coms is a testament to the fact that he plays on his strengths.

    What makes Glen Powell truly great?

    Like the male heroes of the rom-com genre before him, Glen Powell isn’t ashamed of being a romantic lead.

    Kate Hudson — star of the iconic
    How To Lose a Guy In 10 Days — said on The View in early 2024, “it’s hard to get male movie stars to make rom-coms … that’s a big part of the equation … is to have that event. If we can get more Marvel guys like … hey, come to do a rom-com!

    The good actors think they’re too good for ‘silly’ roles like complex male characters. Meanwhile, they’re waiting for the phone to ring from Marvel so they can run around in tights for two hours … make it make sense.”

    Even actors who started on romantic television shows refuse to even acknowledge their start. Jacob Elordi wants to be known for
    Euphoria and Priscilla but talks down his breakout role in The Kissing Booth. Rege-Jean Page couldn’t wait to get out of Bridgerton — but where is he now while Kingsley Ben-Adir has the career Page thought he would have? On the other hand, Charles Melton says nothing but good things about the hellscape that was Riverdale and is closer to an Oscar than either of the other two.

    Back in the day, incredible actors like Chris Pine, Matthew McConaughey, and Heath Ledger played romantic leads with no shame. I mean, DiCaprio is famous for
    Romeo + Juliet, Gatsby, and Titanic. If he can do those roles and still be taken seriously, so can anyone else. These giants elevated the genre, paving the path for the few daring souls who venture to do romantic films these days. Like Glen Powell.

    Glen Powell was
    made to be a romantic comedy heartthrob not just because of his looks, but because he takes the genre seriously. His roles are funny, but imbued with a non-pretentious depth — a hard balance to strike.

    He’s also a good sport about the type of press required to promote a romantic film. The Cilian Murphy method of press tour promotion is to visibly hate being there — which works when you’re playing Oppenheimer. But when you want your audiences to fall in love with you, not so much.

    “So often actors look at marketing or publicity as, like, ‘Oh God, now I have to go market the movie? I just wanted to make it,’” Powell said to
    Hollywood Reporter. “And then you look at a Margot Robbie or Ryan Reynolds, these actors who embrace marketing in unexpected ways, and what ends up happening is the audience has a blast while they’re publicizing a movie and then they’re desperate to see it.”

    This is precisely the quality that convinces me that he has what it takes to “make it in this town” —
    as it were. And the greats agree. JJ Abrams told Hollywood Reporter: “I think Glen has just begun to scratch the surface of what he is capable of onscreen. Simply put, he’s a terrific actor — but it’s his humility, humanity and sense of humor and willingness to show vulnerability and laugh at himself that makes me certain he is going to do some pretty incredible work in the years ahead.”

    What Is Hit Man about?

    Powell’s latest turn in
    Hit Man shows his versatility and the potency of the genre. First of all, he co-wrote and co-produced it with Richard Linklater. So, he’s not only a pretty face, he’s just as dynamic and surprising behind the camera.

    Hit Man has all the elements of what makes Glen Powell great: It’s fast, it’s never what you expect, and it has a surprising well of heart and depth.

    Based on a true story, the movie follows a professor who puts his surprising acting skills to use by pretending to be a hitman to stop murders before they happen. The real Gary Johnson moonlighted as a fake hit man for the Houston PD. Johnson told his
    unbelievable story about his work in a 2001 piece in Texas Monthly. And while his work is the foundation of this story, a small anecdote he tells at the end is where Linklater and Powell set their sights.

    In Johnson’s story, he describes an instance where a woman came to him looking for a hit man to kill her abusive husband. Rather than turning her in, Johnson helped her find resources at a women’s shelter so she could leave the man.

    But of course, this wouldn’t be an action-packed romance without taking some liberties. In the film version, Johnson falls in love with this woman and what ensues is a thrilling saga of identity with a whole lotta heart.

    Hit Man is just the start of Powell’s writing and production career. He also has Twisters alongside Daisy Edgar Jones in the pipeline and an A24 film Huntington in production. You’ll be seeing that meme-worthy face everywhere — and you’re going to love it.

    Watch the Hit Man Trailer now.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DXwa8DKIK7g


    Hit Man is available to stream on Netflix starting June 7.

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    LKC

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  • Matthew McConaughey ‘Still Answering’ If He’s Considering A Run For Office

    Matthew McConaughey ‘Still Answering’ If He’s Considering A Run For Office

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    Matthew McConaughey might still be entertaining a run for office.

    The Texas-born movie star said he was carefully considering if he wanted to step into politics while talking about new measures to address school safety during an appearance on ABC’s “This Week” on Sunday.

    Asked if he could see himself running for elected office, he told host Jonathan Karl, “There’s a great question that I’m still answering.”

    McConaughey explained why he was more comfortable working outside the system, offering Karl more details about his Greenlights Grant Initiative.

    The program, which he and his wife Camila Alves launched earlier this month, aims to connect communities to government grant money to prevent school violence and support students’ mental health.

    “As of right now, to be a private citizen with my wife and to come up with an idea like the Greenlights Grant Initiative,” he said.

    “To work with the government publicly to help them, not doing the job for them, helping them pull off what they set out to do in the first place,” the conservative-leaning star went on. “There is an argument that that’s more useful, what I’m doing right now, in a small way.”

    Matthew McConaughey, a native of Uvalde, Texas, talks about the mass shooting in Uvalde as he joins White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre for the daily briefing at the White House in Washington D.C. on June 7, 2022.

    A native of Uvalde, Texas, McConaughey was compelled to act on gun violence after the community was devastated by a school shooting in May 2022. The shooting at Robb Elementary School left 19 students and two teachers dead.

    In June 2022, the actor visited the White House to discuss gun violence prevention with President Joe Biden.

    Not long after, congress passed the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act, which approved school funding for mental health support, enhanced background checks and stricter implementation of “red flag” laws.

    In his interview with ABC, McConaughey addressed people who are worried gun control will infringe on their second amendment rights, telling Karl, “I’d change the word from ‘control’ to ‘responsibility.’”

    “No one wants to be controlled,” he continued. “But responsibility is still something that we can all go, ‘Yeah, I’ll take responsibility…’ The Second Amendment defenders could talk responsibility. They could look you in the eye and talk responsibility with someone from the other side of the aisle.”

    McConaughey first flirted with the idea of running back in 2021 after polls showed him leading in a hypothetical governor’s race against Republican incumbent Greg Abbott.

    “It’s a humbling and inspiring path to ponder,” McConaughey said in a Twitter video in November 2021. “It is also a path that I’m choosing not to take at this moment.”

    Abbott would go on to defeat his Democratic opponent Beto O’Rourke by double digits in November 2022.

    Watch McConaughey’s full ABC interview here:

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  • Kevin Costner’s ‘Yellowstone’ Exit Left Creator Taylor Sheridan “Disappointed”

    Kevin Costner’s ‘Yellowstone’ Exit Left Creator Taylor Sheridan “Disappointed”

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    The rebirth of Yellowstone amidst star Kevin Costner’s exit has been largely shrouded in mystery. Last month, Paramount announced that at the conclusion of season five this November, TV’s top-rated drama series will be revamped to revolve around a new lead, played by Matthew McConaughey. But creator Taylor Sheridan has been tight-lipped about his plans for his TV empire’s crowned jewel—until now.

    In a new Hollywood Reporter cover story, Sheridan breaks his silence on Costner’s sudden departure, which followed reported behind-the-scenes drama involving the number of days Costner was willing to shoot on the show. “My last conversation with Kevin was that he had this passion project he wanted to direct,” Sheridan told the outlet—a reference to Horizon, the multipart Western Costner is cowriting, directing, and starring in. “He and the network were arguing about when he could be done with Yellowstone. I said, ‘We can certainly work a schedule toward [his preferred exit date],’ which we did.”

    According to THR, “there are ongoing discussions to try to convince” Costner to film remaining scenes to conclude his character John Dutton’s storyline. (Sheridan said he’s not currently writing, in solidarity with the ongoing writers strike.) “I’m disappointed,” Sheridan added of Costner’s decision to leave. “It truncates the closure of his character. It doesn’t alter it, but it truncates it.”

    Elsewhere in the piece, Sheridan denied rumors that he had told Costner to “stick to acting,” words that were allegedly a contributing factor in his exit. “I never had that conversation with Kevin,” Sheridan said. “There was a time in season two when he was very upset and said the character wasn’t going in the direction he wanted … Kevin felt season two was deviating from that, and I don’t know that he was wrong. In season three, we steered back into it. And I recall him winning a Golden Globe last year for his performance, so I think it’s working.”

    The creator—whose original series has spawned spin-offs including prequel series 1923, starring Helen Mirren and Harrison Ford, and 1883, led by Tim McGraw and Faith Hill—says he harbors no ill will toward Costner as a performer. “My opinion of Kevin as an actor hasn’t altered,” Sheridan explained. “His creation of John Dutton is symbolic and powerful … and I’ve never had an issue with Kevin that he and I couldn’t work out on the phone. But once lawyers get involved, then people don’t get to talk to each other and start saying things that aren’t true and attempt to shift blame based on how the press or public seem to be reacting. He took a lot of this on the chin and I don’t know that anyone deserves it.”

    Sheridan also told THR that he wishes Costner well on his future endeavors. “His movie seems to be a great priority to him and he wants to shift focus,” he said. “I sure hope (the movie is) worth it—and that it’s a good one.” He also ruled out at least one means of onscreen death for John Dutton. “I don’t do fuck-you car crashes,” he said. “Whether [Dutton’s fate] inflates [Costner’s] ego or insults is collateral damage, that I don’t factor in with regard to storytelling.”

    And the show will go on with McConaughey, Sheridan confirmed. “He seems like a natural fit,” he said of the Oscar winner. “We had a few conversations over the years, and spitballed a few ideas. Then he started watching Yellowstone and responded to it.” The cowboy lives to ride another day.

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    Savannah Walsh

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  • ‘Yellowstone’ Will End After Next Season

    ‘Yellowstone’ Will End After Next Season

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    Fans of Yellowstone have known the end is coming for a while now. Luckily, they also suspected that the end of Yellowstone wouldn’t be the end of the Duttons.

    The main issue with keeping the hit Paramount show rolling is that star Kevin Costner has other obligations. It’s already been hard for him to juggle other projects with his run on the series, and it’s been expected that he’d bow out sooner or later for a long while. As recently as April though, Paramount reported that they expected to have Costner on the show for a long time into the future. That is after Costner had already asked to work just one week filming the second half of Season 5.

    Instead, Paramount has announced that the primary Yellowstone series will end following second half of its fifth season, which is set to air this fall. Unfortunately, no one can say for sure how much of part 2 of season 5 Costner will appear in. He’s been taking time off to work on a passion project of his called HorizonIt’s a western of epic proportions, taking place before and after the Civil War. It makes sense that Costner would need to devote most of his time to it, considering he’ll be directing, writing, producing, and starring in the project.

    READ MORE: The Best TV Shows of the Year

    While the original Yellowstone is ending, Paramount also revealed that the ongoing story of the Duttons will continue in a new as-yet untitled sequel series that will follow shortly after the conclusion of Yellowstone 1.0.

    Chris McCarthy, president and CEO Showtime/MTV Entertainment Studios had the following to share:

    Yellowstone has been the cornerstone on which we have launched an entire universe of global hits – from 1883 to Tulsa King, and I am confident our ‘Yellowstone’ sequel will be another big hit, thanks to the brilliant creative mind of Taylor Sheridan and our incredible casts who bring these shows to life.

    As noted, Yellowstone, created by Taylor Sheridan, has spun off an entire TV universe of shows. In addition to the aforementioned 1883, there’s also 1923 and the upcoming Bass Reeves1944, and 6666, all set at various points in the story’s timeline.

    TV Spinoffs That Are Better Than Their Original Shows

    These 10 TV spinoffs from successful shows actually found a way to be better than the series that were based on.

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    Cody Mcintosh

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  • Woody Harrelson confirms he wants to get a DNA test with Matthew McConaughey to see if they’re actually brothers

    Woody Harrelson confirms he wants to get a DNA test with Matthew McConaughey to see if they’re actually brothers

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    Woody Harrelson has confirmed that he wants to get a DNA test along with Matthew McConaughey to see if the two are half-brothers. The “True Detective” costars have been friends for quite some time, but a few years ago, they learned they may have the same father.

    McConaughey revealed last week on Kelly Ripa’s radio show, “Let’s Talk Off Camera,” that his mother had mentioned years ago while they were all vacationing in Greece that she “knew” Harrelson’s father, and noted that “it was a loaded K-N-E-W.”

    During an appearance on “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert” on Tuesday, Harrelson said “there is some veracity,” to McConaughey’s belief they could be brothers.

    Harrelson agreed that when McConaughey’s mom said she “knew” his father, Charles Harrelson, it seemed like she was insinuating she slept with him and he could be McConaughey’s biological father. Harrelson even mirrored McConaughey’s words in saying that there were “ellipses” in the sentence, which he said he found “troubling.”

    Harrelson added that the pause around “knew” was “filled with innuendo.”

    “She was on a sabbatical from her relationship with [McConaughey’s] supposed father, Jim,” Harrelson said. “We want to go [DNA] test, but for him it’s a bigger deal because he feels like he’s losing a father. But I’m like, ‘No, you’re gaining a different father and a brother.’”

    McConaughey had said in his interview with Ripa, “It’s a little harder for me, because he’s asking me to take the chance to go, ‘Wait a minute, you’re telling me my dad may not be my dad of 53 years’ and believe in it? I got a little more skin in the game.”

    Colbert then showed a photo of the two actors together, saying some people might feel they look like half-brothers. 


    Woody Harrelson: Matthew McConaughey Might Be My Brother by
    The Late Show with Stephen Colbert on
    YouTube

    Justin Theroux, who was present during Tuesday’s interview, chimed in to say, “I kind of want to be your brother, too.” 

    McConaughey said last week that he and Harrelson discussed the connection and realized Harrelson’s dad was in West Texas around the same time McConaughey’s parents were getting their second divorce. McConaughey’s parents married each other three times and divorced twice, according to Entertainment Tonight.

    Harrelson was raised by a single mother after his dad, Charles Harrelson, was sentenced to life in prison for murdering a federal judge. Charles Harrelson died of a heart attack in a federal prison in 2007. 

    While McConaughey, 53, grew up in Uvalde, Texas, Harrelson, 61, was born just north in Midland, Texas, and later moved to Ohio. 

    The pair starred on HBO’s “True Detective” together in 2014 and their strong friendship inspired their new show “Brother From Another Mother,” loosely based on their connection. 

    “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert” airs on CBS. Both CBS News and CBS are owned by Paramount Global.

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  • Woody Harrelson Wants To Get A Test To See If Matthew McConaughey Really Is His Half-Brother

    Woody Harrelson Wants To Get A Test To See If Matthew McConaughey Really Is His Half-Brother

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    By Corey Atad.

    The stars of “True Detective” might really be related.

    On Tuesday night, Woody Harrelson appeared alongside Justin Theroux on Global’s “The Late Show”, and was asked about the theory that Matthew McConaughey is his half-brother.


    READ MORE:
    Matthew McConaughey Reveals Woody Harrelson Might Actually Be His Brother

    The speculation first came to light last week, when McConaughey shared on Kelly Ripa’s podcast “Let’s Talk Off Camera” that his mother revealed she knew Harrelson’s dad around the time he was conceived.

    “There is some veracity to that thought, because we talked to Ma Mac, Matthew’s legitimate mother,” Harrelson told Stephen Colbert.

    “It’s crazy. We were in Greece. We were watching the U.S. team win the World Cup, and I mentioned something about regrets. And I said, ‘It’s odd that my father has no regrets,’” he said. “Now, I’ve known Ma Mac a long time. She goes, ‘I knew… your father.’ And it was the ellipses I found a little troubling, or interesting!”


    READ MORE:
    Matthew McConaughey And Woody Harrelson To Reunite For New Apple TV+ Series

    Asked how he would describe that pause, Harrelson said, “Filled with innuendo.”

    “A pregnant pause,” Colbert joked.

    Harrelson continued, explaining of the timing, “She was on a sabbatical from her relationship with [McConaughey’s] supposed father.”

    The actor added, “We wanna go and test, but for [McConaughey] it’s a much more big deal. I mean, he feels like he’s losing a father. But I’m like, ‘No, you’re gaining a different father, and a brother.’”

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    Corey Atad

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  • Are Matthew McConaughey, Woody Harrelson brothers? They think it’s possible – National | Globalnews.ca

    Are Matthew McConaughey, Woody Harrelson brothers? They think it’s possible – National | Globalnews.ca

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    Are Matthew McConaughey and Woody Harrelson long-lost brothers?

    The Hollywood stars and acting veterans believe they might be genetically linked, with McConaughey telling Kelly Ripa that the pair are considering a DNA test.

    Speaking on Ripa’s Let’s Talk Off Camera podcast, McConaughey said the two actors learned from his mom that she knew Harrelson’s father, perhaps romantically.

    Read more:

    Arnold Schwarzenegger terminates huge pothole that wasn’t actually a pothole

    “You know, where I start and where he ends, and where he starts and I end, has always been like a murky line,” the 53-year-old McConaughey said earlier this week.

    “And that’s part of our bromance, right? My kids call him Uncle Woody. His kids call me Uncle Matthew. And you see pictures of us and my family thinks a lot of pictures of him are me. His family thinks a lot of pictures of me are him.”

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    Woody Harrelson (L) and Matthew McConaughey appear in still from 'True Detective.'


    Woody Harrelson (L) and Matthew McConaughey appear in a still from ‘True Detective.’.


    Handout / Time Warner

    He said the possible link was established a few years ago on a trip to Greece.

    “In Greece a few years ago, we’re sitting around talking about how close we are and our families,” McConaughey said. “And my mom is there, and she says, ‘Woody, I knew your dad’ … Everyone was aware of the ellipses that my mom left after ‘knew.’ It was a loaded K-N-E-W.”

    “We went on to unpack what this ‘knew’ meant and did some math and found out that (Harrelson’s) dad was on furlough at the same time that my mom and dad were in their second divorce. Then there’s possible receipts and places out in West Texas where there might have been a gathering, or a meeting, or a ‘knew’ moment.”

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    However, despite being “on the precipice” of doing a DNA test to verify the connection, the Oscar winner says he’s been more reluctant to have one done as he’s concerned about learning that his dad might not be his biological father “after 53 years of believing that.”

    “It’s a little easier for Woods (Harrelson) to say, ‘Come on let’s do it!’ What’s the skin in it for him?


    Woody Harrelson and Matthew McConaughey attend the launch party of new bar The Parrot at The Waldorf Hilton hosted by Idris Elba on Nov. 8, 2018 in London, England.


    Dave Benett / Getty Images

    “It’s a little harder for me because he’s asking me to take the chance to go, ‘Wait a minute, you’re trying to tell me my dad may not be my dad after 53 years of believing that?’ I got more skin in the game.”

    McConaughey and Harrelson, 61, have shared a number of sets over the years, acting together in the films Welcome to Hollywood, EDtv and Surfer, Dude, as well as the television series True Detective. They are set to reunite for an AppleTV+ comedy, Brother From Another Mother, where they will play fictionalized versions of themselves living together on a ranch in Texas.

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    Michelle Butterfield

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  • ‘How To Lose A Guy In 10 Days’ Turns 20! Kate Hudson And Matthew McConaughey Chat ‘Mischievous’ Chemistry And Andie And Benjamin’s Future

    ‘How To Lose A Guy In 10 Days’ Turns 20! Kate Hudson And Matthew McConaughey Chat ‘Mischievous’ Chemistry And Andie And Benjamin’s Future

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    By Melissa Romualdi.

    Kate Hudson and Matthew McConaughey are celebrating 20 years of “How To Lose A Guy In 10 Days”.

    The actors whose iconic roles as Andie Anderson and Benjamin Barry, respectively, continue to live on, sat down for an Instagram live video on Monday to look back on their favourite scenes, the classic movie poster featuring that “bomb” yellow dress, how they created their chemistry on set and more.

    “I feel like this movie will keep going,” Hudson, 43, said of the 2003 rom-com that’s attracted a whole new generation of younger kids thanks to a few of the film’s moments that’ve recently gone viral on TikTok.


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    “We got lucky to be in such a classic one,” she said.

    But what keeps the spark between Andie and Ben alive is the “mischievous fun” they have, McConaughey, 53, noted.

    “We are probably like two very well casted people for anything mischievous,” Hudson added, to which McConaughey joked, “We picked each other’s pocket before.”

    Over the last two decades, two of the most common questions that Hudson gets asked are what her “favourite moment” is from the film and “what’s it like to kiss McConaughey?”

    Speaking of the latter, the actress noted how their smooching scenes were “always in weird environments,” adding that “there was only one time” when they had a “nice and gentle” kiss in the bathroom.

    ‘How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days’
    — 2003, (c) Paramount/courtesy Everett Collection/CPImages

    “Yeah. Everything else has not been climate controlled,” McConaughey chimed in. “Everything else is like swim up to the top. The sharks almost ate you. You just fell from a plane from 300 feet,” he said referring to their second film together, 2008’s “Fools Gold”.

    “Or you’re on the Brooklyn Bridge and you’re yelling across and the wind is like blowing right in your face,” Hudson said of the iconic ending scene in “How To Lose A Guy”.


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    While it was hard to make their kissing scenes look “passionate,” Hudson had to admit, “we do kiss nicely,” in respects to their now-partners.

    “I would have to agree with you,” her former co-star said. “Absolutely.”

    As for their favourite scenes, McConaughey has “a bunch of favourites,” but the one that he remembers most is the couples counseling scene with co-star Kathryn Hahn.

    “The setup was so right,” he said, explaining how his character’s emotions and reactions got to “be bigger than they would be in real life,” which ultimately made it a “deeply funny” moment, Hudson added.

    “It was also so funny to shoot,” she said. “The best part for me was that I could hide [laughter]. Whereas you had to be as straight and as insane as could be.”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gswtR4EpZ_4

    The actors went on to explain how a lot of their chemistry was rooted in them “riffing” on set.

    “As soon as you and I got in on our first day, and it was obvious…it was like, ‘Oh, okay, these two can play with each other,’” McConaughey recalled.

    “A lot of the stuff we came up with is in the movie,” Hudson revealed of the film’s classic lines and nicknames like “Benny boo boo” — the one she gave to McConaughey’s character.

    “It sounds like something I [would come up with],” she said of how the nickname came to be. “I think that might have been me.”

    Moving on to the film’s “perfect rom-com poster,” McConaughey gave “props to the yellow dress” that Hudson is photographed wearing.

    “The yellow dress was the bomb,” he continued. “And no other dress…any other dress is a far second.”

    Kate Hudson and Matthew McConaughey, ‘How To Lose A Guy In 10 Days’, 2003.
    Kate Hudson and Matthew McConaughey, ‘How To Lose A Guy In 10 Days’, 2003.
    — Photo: Paramount/courtesy Everett Collection

    Another big moment that’s lived on from the film is the “You’re So Vain” song that the two sung on stage during the ball.

    McConaughey shared that he and Hudson had actually “gotten under each other’s skin a little bit”- not only on-screen but off-screen as well.

    “We were legitimately kind of pissed off at each other,” he said, but “in a really cool way,” because it ended up “coming together.”

    “We made it work,” Hudson agreed.

    “Look, we were kind of two heavyweights going at it and we got a little rock n’ roll. What I mean by that is…. we played it …what tickles me doesn’t bruise you [and vice versa],” McConaughey elaborated on their chemistry. “You just go with it and hopefully the camera’s rolling while that’s happening and I think that happened a lot.”


    READ MORE:
    Kate Hudson And Kathryn Hahn Have A ‘How To Lose A Guy In 10 Days’ Reunion On ‘Knives Out 2’ Set

    Hudson added that there’s “something spontaneous” about how the pair work together.

    Looking ahead at where she thinks Andie and Ben are now, Hudson has two versions — the real one and the movie one.

    In the real version, the actress hopes “they’re still happy and adventurous…and have kids and made it work,” but in the movie “they’re not” and it’s like “what’s the conflict?”

    “I don’t know what that is,” she said, “but there’s definitely conflict in the movie version.”

    As for McConaughey, he hasn’t given Andie and Ben’s future much thought but agreed with Hudson that “there’s gotta be some major conflict.”

    “And she’s still in the yellow dress,” he joked.

    Elsewhere during the live chat, Hudson noted that, in the last two years, she’s felt “the most creative” in her life and that she wants to “continue to create things that make people feel good.” Hopefully that one day translates to giving “How To Lose A Guy In 10 Days” a sequel. One can only hope, right?

    Happy anniversary!

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    Melissa Romualdi

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  • The top 10 audiobooks on Audible.com

    The top 10 audiobooks on Audible.com

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    Audible best-sellers for week ending December 23rd

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  • McConaughey, Kunis among People mag’s ‘People of the Year’

    McConaughey, Kunis among People mag’s ‘People of the Year’

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    Matthew McConaughey, Mila Kunis, Jennifer Hudson and “Abbott Elementary” creator and star Quinta Brunson have been named People magazine’s 2022 “People of the Year.”

    LOS ANGELES — Matthew McConaughey, Mila Kunis, Jennifer Hudson and “Abbott Elementary” creator and star Quinta Brunson have been named People magazine’s 2022 “People of the Year.”

    The magazine unveiled its annual list Wednesday, with Editor in Chief Wendy Naugle explaining this year’s honorees were selected because of their efforts to help others.

    McConaughey was chosen for his advocacy efforts after the Uvalde school shooting rocked his hometown. Kunis was lauded for her fundraising — which People said has topped $37 million — for Ukraine, where she was born.

    Hudson and Brunson were honored for their onscreen work. Hudson, who launched a daytime talk show this year, was cited for her efforts to create an inclusive show where everyone felt welcome. Brunson’s “Abbott Elementary,” a critical hit that turned her into an Emmy winner, was praised as a show that brought many joy and showed that different generations can work well together.

    Each of the honorees are featured on a special cover that highlights their contributions. Kunis’ includes the quote, “I’m proud to be from Ukraine,” while Brunson includes her statement: “I’m a sign that times are changing.”

    McConaughey’s proclaims, “We have to do better for our kids,” while Hudson’s says, “I’m living my dream — and learning as I go.”

    Previous People honorees have included George Clooney, Regina King, Dr. Anthony Fauci, Sandra Oh, Selena Gomez and Simone Biles. This year’s special editions will be released Friday.

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