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  • Paradise Season-Premiere Recap: Elvis Has Left the Bunker

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    Paradise

    Graceland

    Season 2

    Episode 1

    Editor’s Rating

    4 stars

    Season two kicks off with a beautiful detour into the life of Annie Clay (Shailene Woodley), an apocalypse survivor living in the ruins of Graceland.
    Photo: Ser Baffo/Disney

    Fire up your favorite emo cover of an ‘80s rock anthem because Paradise is back, baby. Let’s begin with a quick refresher as to where we left off with your favorite bunker show: A super volcano underneath the Antarctic ice shelf erupted and caused both worldwide tsunamis — Australia was gone first, I’m sorry to say — and a massive ash cloud that blocked out the sun. On top of Mother Nature’s chaos, as the world began to collapse, several governments got trigger-happy with their missiles, and it looked like everyone was about to go nuclear, because sure, why not? It’s the end of the world as we know it … until President Cal Bradford steps in.

    In a game-changing twist, we learn that at the last minute, Cal uses a super-secret failsafe that fries every electric circuit on earth and thus kills all the nuclear warheads before they can detonate, while also leaving any non-bunker survivors without any electricity. Because oh yes! There are survivors outside the not-so-secret Colorado bunker! And, as our evil billionaire Samantha “Sinatra” Redmond reveals to Secret Service Agent Xavier Collins, his wife, whom he had believed died after watching a nuke on track to blow up Atlanta, is one of the survivors, and she’s been using a radio to try and get in touch with him. Once Xavier and fellow agent (and Cal’s secret girlfriend) Robinson have solved the mystery of the president’s murder — it was the fake librarian with a vendetta after the love of his life got sick and died while they were helping construct the bunker! — Xavier gets on a plane, escapes the bunker, and goes to get his girl.

    Even just skimming the surface, there’s a whole lot to remember. But guess what? You actually don’t need to remember most of it because the season-two premiere has almost nothing to do with our main players from the bunker (until it totally does). In fact, we spend the entire hour with new characters and we trade in the Colorado bunker for a much cooler place to hunker down while the world ends: Graceland. I know what your first question must be: Does this mean that instead of ‘80s rock, we get emo covers of Elvis Presley songs? You betcha. So many emo Elvis covers.

    Instead of picking up where Paradise left off, “Graceland” takes us back in time and introduces us to Annie Clay (played by Shailene Woodley) and proceeds to show us what happened to her before, during, and after the apocalypse. I’m sure some people might be frustrated that we aren’t hopping directly back into the main action of the series, but if I’m being honest, it took me maybe five minutes to be completely invested in Annie’s story. This is partially because I’ve lived through Dan Fogelman and Sterling K. Brown’s other joint venture, This Is Us, so I’ve become accustomed to detours with random characters who eventually tie into the main story. But mostly, “Graceland” works because of Woodley’s magnetic performance.

    When we first meet Annie, she’s a poor teenager taking care of her ailing mother, at one time a successful doctor who was eventually felled by her mental health issues. The one thing that seems to help her mother is Elvis Presley. His portrait is on the mantle. Annie goes on the tour at Graceland over and over and over again to tell her mother about it. After her mother dies, Annie’s on her own. We see her in med school. She’s smarter than her colleagues. She’d be an excellent doctor. Unfortunately, she has debilitating panic attacks. The day she drops out of med school, she finds herself crying in her car outside the gates of Graceland. We’ve all been there. When security guard Gayle comes upon her and hears her story, she takes pity on her and eventually Annie becomes a tour guide at Graceland. Elvis’s safest place in the world has now become hers. And that’s before she turns it into her own personal fallout shelter and post-apocalypse living space.

    One day, Annie’s giving a tour when she notices everyone checking their phones and freaking the fuck out. This is it, the end of the world. We catch glimpses of news reports we saw in season one, and we hear Cal’s big speech. Annie is smart enough to know not to waste time panicking. Instead, she grabs Gayle and the two gather as many supplies as they can find. Food from the Visitor Center, blankets from the Presleys personal collection upstairs, and Annie even breaks into the case displaying one of Elvis’s guns. At the end of the world, she might need to be armed. They’re going to hunker down in the TV room, and it all seems like a good plan until Gayle takes a tumble down the stairs and breaks her leg.

    Paradise speeds through Annie and Gayle’s first 45 days in the TV room. Gayle’s injury is a doozy — Annie has reset her leg, but there is an infection, and Annie doesn’t have much to work with. The huge ash cloud has settled in, and it’s freezing, but Annie refuses to set a fire in the fireplace lest the smoke alert others that someone’s in Graceland. From the glimpses they get of what’s going on out in the streets — looting, fires, violence — that’s a smart move. Annie tries to keep Gayle’s spirits up with her Elvis impersonation, as one does. On Day 45, Gayle isn’t cold anymore, and Annie knows exactly what that means — she holds her only friend in the world until she dies and then she buries her in the Presley family plot before finally letting out every emotion she’s been feeling with one gut-wrenching scream. Annie is truly alone at the end of the world.

    Almost two years after the eruption — it’s Day 689 — the sun returns. Annie can breathe again. She can also start to grow things, which is so nice because how many cans of beans has this woman eaten and is her GI tract okay? Annie is alone, but things could be so much worse than spending your day reading in the Jungle Room and mainlining Bush’s Best; She’s tucked away safely and no one seems to bother her.

    And then someone bothers her. One day, Annie spots a group of six armed men at the gates. She grabs her gun and hides up by Elvis’s handy two-way mirror. But while these guys, led by a scruffy young guy named Link, pull Annie out of her hiding spot, they don’t seem to want to hurt her. They want to know where Elvis’s collection of vintage cars is. Link tries to talk to Annie and prove he isn’t a bad guy, and just as you think it might be working, Annie slams his head with something very heavy and makes a run for the TV room. Her safe space. She locks herself in there for three days. On that third day, the men are still in the house, but they are also cooking something that smells amazing and so she leaves the room. Finally, although still hesitant to let anyone in, Annie can see that these guys don’t want to hurt her. In fact, they’re just a big bunch of nerds. Link explains that he was in Louisville working at an REI store when the volcano erupted, and he wisely stocked up on sleeping bags and coats. He eventually ran into Geiger, an older guy who decided someone needed to travel around the country to each of the 94 nuclear power plants and attempt to shut them down before a disastrous meltdown could occur. Nerdiest of the nerds — they call him Urkel — explains that because of the ash cloud, the earth’s temperature has dropped twenty degrees. He also has a theory about a secret device that must have knocked all the power out. His buddies brush it off, but my fingers are crossed that one day he’ll learn he was dead right and he’ll drop a sarcastic “did I do that?” and we’ll all laugh about it. We need some laughs!

    While hearing about the catastrophic changes to the environment and the unfathomable death toll — Link estimates two-thirds of the U.S. population has been wiped out — these are all things we knew or, at least, could have guessed. One of the most important pieces of info dropped by this group, however, is that when they show up at Graceland, it’s been about three years since the volcano erupted. This, of course, means that Annie’s timeline has caught up with where we were in season one of Paradise.

    Link and his team assure Annie that they’ll be out of her hair soon enough, and slowly, she begins to warm up to them. She fixes Link’s broken wrist, and the team takes apart some of Elvis’s cars to use the parts elsewhere. She and Link talk about the stars and the falling satellites, about his terrible beard, and he shows her his pre-beard student ID card. (The fact that he went to Caltech tells us he’s probably more than just a sales clerk.) On the eve of the team’s departure, they all have a fancy dinner together in the dining room. Annie puts on one of the Presleys’ dresses. Link cuts back his beard. They totally want to fuck. At dinner, they play “one thing you miss/one thing you don’t,” and it takes Annie awhile, since so much of life before was hard for her, but what she misses most is giving tours here at Graceland. And so, they ask her for a tour. Eventually, Annie and Link pair off and things get hot and heavy in the Jungle Room. As someone who has been on the Graceland tour, I’m assuming this is a new addition.

    It’s a gorgeous scene that goes from the two of them talking, of Annie opening up, and then breaking down into sobs as he holds her close to him, to them in bed together. The chemistry between Shailene Woodley and Thomas Doherty is off the charts, and I buy everything they’re selling. I can’t shake the moment when Annie weeps into his shoulder. She’s been holding everything in for so long to survive, and finally being seen, being touched again after three years, is the push to just release it all. And he doesn’t back away from it. He understands it from the jump. Maybe this isn’t the speculative fiction thriller from season one, but I’m down with basking in a little story about human connection for an hour.

    The episode isn’t solely a reflective one. There are some important developments. In the morning, Link and his team are headed up to St. Louis — in order to avoid the apparently rough parts of Arkansas — and then out to Colorado … to find a secret bunker they know is out there that has enough power that could restart the world. He also mentions something dangerous in the bunker, but can’t explain further. He wants Annie to “come restart the world” with him. But in the morning, Annie has once again locked herself in the TV room. She is too scared to leave her safe place, even for Link. Link, who is suffering from a mysterious nose bleed and headaches by the way, begs her to open the door but she won’t, and he doesn’t have time to wait. Geiger comes and grabs him and reminds him how urgent it is to get to that bunker and to find and “kill Alex.” Are you also trying to list the names of everyone we know in the bunker? I cannot think of an Alex. Is “Alex” a person at all? When they leave, and Annie finally comes out of the room, she finds that Link has left her gear, a map, and a note that promises he’ll come back for her.

    This promise sustains Annie as she remains at Graceland alone once again and — surprise! — turns out to be pregnant. This promise is probably why, when a now VERY pregnant Annie hears a plane crash and sees that the wreckage and pilot are in the rough parts of Arkansas, she assumes it must be Link coming back for her, and she hops on her horse to rescue him. Out alone in the woods, Annie comes across that wrecked plane and its unconscious pilot, but it is not Link — it’s Xavier.

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    Maggie Fremont

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  • Vanderpump Rules Recap: Stand-Up Kinda Girl

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    Vanderpump Rules

    Back Alley Betrayals

    Season 12

    Episode 11

    Editor’s Rating

    1 stars

    Photo: Bravo

    With this episode, Vanderpump Rules officially turned into a dating show. Jason goes on a date with Natalie. Natalie hangs out with Shayne. Shayne wants to get back with Natalie. Angelica wants Shayne to want her. Shayne wants Angelica’s new boobs. Chris wants to be with Audrey, but Audrey wants to do stand-up comedy. All of the stories aren’t about work or friends or life as a partying 20-something living in Los Angeles who can only use their microwave or their A/C? but not both at the same time. All of the stories in this episode are about dating. I’m sorry, but yawn. This was the first episode where I thought that the reboot might not be worth the refashioned SUR menus its printed on.

    I think the producers have vastly misidentified what made Vanderpump Rules a hit in the first place. Yes, there was a romantic component to the show, but it wasn’t about dating, it was about couples. Katie and Tom Schwartz, Jax and Stassi, and Kristen and Tom Sandoval were already well-established duos when the show started. Even when those people became single again, we never really saw them date, and when they did, it was a flop. Sandoval went right into a relationship with Ariana and then, famously, right into a relationship with Racquel, nee Rachel, before that relationship was even over. Jax left Stassi and dated around, but was always pining for her until Brittany came along and stayed for good. We don’t want to see these loose connections; we don’t want to see people finding each other. We already have Love Is Blind, and this episode felt like a rip-off of that show, especially when Shayne, Natalie, Jason, and Audrey are in the SUR Alley, a future UNESCO World Heritage Site, talking about how they all may or may not have a connection with each other.

    Speaking of connection, that is what Vanderpump Rules was always about. Yes, there were couples, but they were female best friends dating a group of male best friends. We weren’t interested in the changes in the couples that much; what was more interesting was how those changes affected the friendships. That is why, strangely, Scheana is the lynchpin of the early years. She came in and was trying to butt into the friend group which the girls hated. That was the story engine, not who was hooking up with whom. By season two, we saw the story of whether or not Jax hooked up with Kristen (spoiler alert: they did), but what was perhaps even more compelling was what that did to Stassi’s friendship with Kristen (she punched her in the face) and Tom’s relationship with Jax (he punched him in the face).

    That’s the problem with this here reboot: the focus is too much on the couples and not enough on the friends. Know why? None of them are friends! They have all been slapped together to be on a reality show. They don’t even really work together. Jason and Chris were still in training, Angelica is a new hire, and Shayne hasn’t had a job that didn’t start with “hand” or “blow” in several years. There is nothing bringing these people together, and the connections they do have seem new and not that deep. If you look at Next Gen NYC, they may have also been smooshed together to create a reality show, and they’re also young people who haven’t known each other that long, but there are people in the cast who are close, who have been friends forever, who do actually spend time with each other outside of the production schedule. That’s why that show sings and gels and this one feels like a Bride of Frankenstein that Lisa Vanderpump is using to prop up a failing business.

    Yes, SUR itself is also a big problem. There is no way that place needs four hosts/hostesses. Not even the busiest Cheesecake Factory in America has that many. SUR doesn’t even feel like a real restaurant anymore. The show is doing a lot of work trying to cut around the fact that the place is always empty. We see everyone at work, but they don’t have much to do because we hardly ever see any customers. In the first few seasons of Pump Rules, the restaurant did seem full; it seemed like they really worked there. Now it just seems like a set for a reality show. While I do think that the cast is coming together and there are some stars here (notably Audrey, Shayne, Marcus, Natalie, and Demy as a lifelong friend of), and I can see the connections getting deeper and realer in season two. But if they can’t fix the restaurant, what use is there in having a show about the staff of said restaurant?

    So, what exactly happens in this episode? Natalie and Jason go to a studio where they spray paint all over each other. Jason thinks it’s a date, but Natalie says it’s not, it’s just friend vibes even though they’ve been sucking face for weeks. Natalie says she can’t have any guy friends who don’t catch feelings. The way she treats them, I can’t believe she has any guy friends who don’t catch her colds.

    Chris tells Jason that he doesn’t know if he wants to get serious with Audrey after all, even though in the last episode, he gave her the hard sell and she decided to give it another chance. Jason says this reminds him of that time Chris filmed with a porn star who became obsessed with him but he didn’t date her because she was a porn star. Dude! You’re a porn star!

    Shayne hangs out with Natalie and decides he wants to pursue her again and tells her that he even asked Jason if he could go after her. Natalie has lunch with Angelica at Something About Her, and production can’t afford Katie or Ariana, and they didn’t even get free sandwiches. Natalie tells Angelica, who is back from boob-job leave, about Shayne wanting to try things again. Angelica says, “Do I have to stab you?” Sister, this man told you he is through with you. Angelica also says she already has a new man and she’s picking him up from LAX. That is something I would only do for someone I’d been dating for over a year. This girl moves fast.

    Angelica tells Audrey about Shayne and Natalie, and Audrey tells Jason that Shayne asked about dating Natalie, but Shayne hadn’t asked him yet. I’m already confused and exhausted. (Conhausted? Exfused?) Natalie, Shayne, Jason, and Audrey all end up in the alley talking about it, and Natalie says she’s not even into Jason. Jason says, “Fine. Have at it, bro.” And then Natalie is like, “I don’t want him to have at me either. Gross.” Now this is all over.

    Venus plans for the big season-finale Pride party. Angelica is bringing swimsuits, Marcus is going to DJ, and Natalie is going to perform her hit song “Sure As Silver” with Chris and Jason as her backup dancers. Everyone has something to do except Kim. Oh, wait. She’s going to stand out front and serve scowls at all passersby. Venus also goes to hang out with Marcus and he laughs when Marcus tells him that Kim is off her birth control. It’s the best scene in the whole hour. See! Friends!

    The episode culminates with Audrey’s big stand-up debut. Shayne shows up with a new girl, and Angelica, who already has a new man staying at her place, is all bent out of shape and says that Shayne “can’t have any of this sandwich until it’s the only sandwich on the menu.” Girl, Shayne has given up on sandwiches. He is a gluten-free vegan. Just give it up.

    Audrey’s set fits into the long line of Vanderpump Rules ladies trying their hand at comedy, whether it is Kristen, Ariana, or the roast of Jax Taylor that made his future mother-in-law anxious because there were gay jokes. I thought Audrey was going to bomb harder than Iranian nuclear facilities (too soon?) but she told some solid jokes about herself and her friends. Marcus looks like he pays for gas with quarters! I couldn’t have said it better myself!

    Her worst jokes, however, are reserved for Angelica, whom she digs on for still living with her ex, coming after her for seeking male validation, and generally being absolutely lame. Angelica gets up in the middle of the set to leave because she has absolutely no sense of humor. On her way out, Audrey shouts, “Go say hi to your ex,” which was objectively hilarious. But Angelica totters away thought he weird alley where the comedy club is, and she reflects on what a failure this whole thing is. Her ex is gone, her LAX boyfriend has flown away again, Shayne is on another date, Jason broke her back, and moved on to Natalie. She has no romance and that’s what this show is all about. But there’s something worse for both Angelica and the show and it’s not her lack of a lover. It’s that she has no friends whatsoever.

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    Brian Moylan

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  • Southern Charm Recap: Itchy Grass Is Greener

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    Southern Charm

    Cabin Fever

    Season 11

    Episode 11

    Editor’s Rating

    2 stars

    Austen seems to be prioritizing literally anyone else over his friendship with Shep and Craig —and for good reason.
    Photo: Bravo

    Hello, and welcome to Miss Patricia’s Pet Cemetery. Here, you will see a collection of plaques for all of her departed pets, most of which have human names, a convention that has plagued the South at least since Reconstruction. There are Lily and Toby, Ashley and Rhett, Rocky and Nyla. And of course, my favorite, a cat named Kitty Kelley, presumably after the author of salacious unauthorized biographies about Jackie Kennedy, Nancy Regan, and Frank Sinatra. (Everyone who knows Miss Pat knows she still isn’t over that thing Nancy said about her at a cotillion back in 1977.) Now we are here to lay our beloved pug, Chauncey, to rest. If you can, please keep quiet and your photos to a minimum. We’ll now hear a eulogy from Austen Kroll, who was not a member of Chauncey’s immediate family, but they had a lot in common, like licking faces, soiling couches, and exceeding people’s expectations. Over to you, Austen: “He was a couch warmer, a confidant, a snack stealer, a friend. And those who knew him knew that what he lacked in brain power, he really made up for in spirit.” Thank you, Austen, that was both touching and funny. That concludes our tour of Miss Patricia’s Pet Cemetery. If you want to go inside the Stabin’ Cabin, we have a special exhibit on her son Whitney Sudler-Smith’s collection of rare guitars and matchbooks from bordellos around the world. Enjoy the rest of your stay.

    Wasn’t that a wonderful tour and a fitting good-bye for our dear Chauncey, which happened at the end of the episode. Curiously, it was also when the episode ran the end credits, not during the final scene where Madison calls Venita to say that she is giving birth to her baby the next day. Were they afraid of putting the second AD’s name next to Madison’s big announcement? Anyway, the timing makes you wonder, is Madison’s daughter the reincarnation of Chauncey the dog, much like Trisha Paytas’s child is the reincarnation of Queen Elizabeth? Even if it’s not, it really makes you think about the cycle of life and death, how there are always people coming in and out of our lives, kind of like one great big reality show.

    Honestly, those two things at the very end of the episode are the most interesting things to happen in the whole hour, as the only storylines we have to follow are Austen’s continued annoyance with both Shep and Craig; the love rhombus between Salley, Charley, Craig, and Austen; Venita and Salley being the best of frenemies; and why no one will date Whitner. Okay, the last one is more of a mystery than a storyline, but we shall see. Also, why can’t he and Molly just fall in love and get married and have a ton of Itchy Grass Babies? It’s what the fans want! Do it for us!

    As for the trouble with Austen, Shep, and Craig, we get our first glimmer of it at the big dinner party that Whitner’s delightful parents throw. They play a game at dinner where there is a question under everyone’s plates, and they have to answer, which is apparently a family tradition. The game is honestly a bit of a flop. Has the Slagsvol family never heard of the hit party game, “Who Do You Trust Least Around This Table?” Always a guaranteed banger. Anyway, when Austen leaves the table to go to the restroom, Charley tells Craig that he needs to fix their friendship and tells Craig that Austen’s going through a breakup. Craig’s eyes bulge out of his head like he’s an extra in Who Framed Roger Rabbit and asks, “What?!?!?!” He’s shocked that he doesn’t know that Austen is broken up, even though neither he nor Shep has made it easy for him to talk to them about it. Charley tells Craig that everyone knows, which seems to make it worse.

    After dinner, Shep sits Austen down to have a chat about his relationship because he wants to give him some advice. Madison tells him, instead of scolding Austen about his indecision, that he should ask questions and get Austen to open up. Shep, of course, ignores all of this and basically just tells him he needs to break up with his girlfriend. Austen tells Shep he doesn’t want to talk about it. Shep thinks that he’s being evasive, continuing to avoid a decision. He coaches Austen to be vulnerable. Then Austen tells him that he has been vulnerable, just not with him. He’s talked all about it to Rodrigo and Madison, a pair that I would trust to solve literally any problem: girlfriend issues, what to wear to a semi-formal event, the affordability crisis, how to get Gallery Girls back on television, and the collapse in the bee population.

    It’s not until the next day, when Shep, Austen, and Rodrigo go fishing in the umpteenth adorable little shack we’ve seen on Whit’s family farm, that Austen finally tells Shep that, yes, he did break up with Audrey. Of course, neither Shep nor Austen can bait the hook because they hate touching the worm, a problem that my man Rodrigo certainly doesn’t have. That man really can touch a worm. But it’s Austen who caught the only fish, prompting Shep to make a joke about “catch and release,” which then becomes about how Austen always talks about releasing his girlfriend but won’t do it. Austen should have known this was coming, that by not answering Shep’s questions about it, he would be hounded. But I also get his motivation. Shep and Craig wouldn’t have consoled him or applauded him on finally making a tough decision; it would be a chorus of, “I told you so,” and, “Why did you wait so long?” and who wants to hear that when fresh off a breakup. It seems like Austen is prioritizing other friendships over these two clowns, who are about as good at giving relationship advice as Diane Warren is at winning Oscars.

    On to the love-rhombus! Things are going well for Charley and Craig, who had a cute date out in a canoe while everyone else traveled around the farm and fought about their friendships. Salley and her extra E still aren’t quite over Craig, but she’s really trying hard to get under Austen. At dinner, Austen tells a story about stripping naked in a bar as a 20-something and she can’t help but interject that she wants to see him naked. When he gets up from the table at dinner to go pee, she asks him, “Do you need any help?” Finally, Austen has to say, “Down girl,” because, like loving cupcakes, it’s so obvious as to be annoying. And even still, Salley is like, “I want Austen’s dick.” Yes. We get it.

    Salley has a lot going on with Venita though, which, honestly, is a fight I don’t understand. They have a talk in Whitner’s pool house with Molly and Whitner as witnesses, and Salley is still pissed that Venita tried to start shit between Molly and Salley. I don’t know guys. It seems like Salley is just salty that Venita was right about Craig and is holding onto this slight for ammunition. Venita already apologized to Molly about talking about her vagina prettying surgery (that is the medical term) and Molly has accepted that apology. Venita apologizes again here, but it seems like Salley is willfully choosing not to get over this to be mad at Venita.

    That’s not to say that Venita behaved well in this discussion. When trying to explain herself, Venita tries to show the difference between herself and Salley and Whitner inserts himself into the conversation and says, “Why is that an important distinction?” Venita turns nasty at the drop of one of the dopey hats that either Austen or Shep was wearing at the party the night before. She tells Whitner to “shut the fuck up,” and he has nothing to do with this. Whitner points out that he was just trying to defend Molly, who he is clearly in love with and should marry. (I’m not giving up on this until it happens. Sorry.) It was an outsized reaction from Venita who should have either welcomed Whitner into the conversation, ignored his comment, or found a nicer way to tell him to butt out.

    However, Salley then says that Venita was trying to “pin” her and Molly against each other, which is not the term, and then Venita gets teary and storms off. Salley calls after her, saying that Venita is always walking away, and she’s right. Venita needs to stay and finish one of these conversations. She needs to get snotty and snarly and cry-y and let all of the emotions out on Salley if not only for her own catharsis but also so that they (and us) can move on from the fight. But she doesn’t. Venita, in her Daisy Dukes, walks off into the itchy grass, hoping that her problems won’t follow her. But that’s the thing, they always do. Even when you escape the confrontation, even when you put those tough discussions off until the next day, as Austen did, they’ll always be there waiting, with their snarled heads and their rotted teeth just getting worse and uglier by the day.

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    Brian Moylan

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  • All Creatures Great & Small Recap: Down at the Dog Track

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    It’s an amazing episode for Siegfried and Mrs. Hall shippers — complete with sexual cribbage innuendo.
    Photo: PBS

    Wow, so there’s horse racing, greyhound racing, and apparently whippet racing. Whippets: the smaller version of greyhounds*. (*Not an official definition.) This is the week I learn not only that people race whippets, but that it is popular specifically in the north of England, and that it is dying out. Probably for the best.

    We’re talking about dog racing because James discovers the practice is doing particularly poorly and needs more revenue. Siegfried is not being helpful because he is focused on making Jimmy identify what different animal poops smell like. At least I think that’s what’s happening. Jimmy’s having a great time, anyway. James brings up that they received a job offer from a local dog track that needs an attending vet. Siegfried hated how the horses were taken care of at the racing track he attended, so he immediately nixes the idea. James is pretty sure it’s a great idea and that the dogs at this unofficial racetrack in the middle of nowhere will be taken care of very well. So off he goes to Hensfield!

    I see that one of the extras from Guys and Dolls is here to head up the dog track. This is Mr. Coker, wearing a fedora and a dark pinstripe suit. Follow the fold, sir. Mr. Coker says he doesn’t do dog racing for money. Of course not. Who would? He doesn’t need to see James’s references or certifications. Well, this all seems very legit. They go look at the dogs. A veteran named Willie has a dog with a full stomach, which apparently is a big no-no when the dog has to run super fast. James lets it slide after they bond about The War. Jaaaaaames, no, James. The dog gets last place, and James realizes that Willie overfed him on purpose to make the odds better for him in the next race. Someone cheating? At a dog track? James tries to tell Mr. Coker about it, but Coker is like, “It’s definitely fine; why don’t you treat this guy who skinned his knee? I know you’re a veterinarian, but that’s okay.”

    So now James is out here knowing that Siegfried was right, which is annoying. Meanwhile, Tristan is having a time of it with George the Parrot. Can anyone explain why Tristan is still wearing his uniform all the time? I know the war is technically still on, but isn’t his part done? Does he have to wear it, or is this a personal preference? But okay, the parrot. George’s owner died and he was adopted by the Ainsley family, which includes one million children (okay, maybe four?). George is grouchy and mainly says “silly arse” all the time. He’s also pulling out his own feathers, which isn’t great. Tristan thinks it’s psittacosis, which can be transmitted to humans and is fatal to birds, so he gets George out of the house and quarantines him at the practice for monitoring.

    Tristan asks Siegfried to watch the parrot, because Tris has dinner with Charlotte. Siegfried is too busy taking Jimmy on a hunt for fox droppings. And he has a proposal for Mrs. Hall! Yes, it is cribbage, and she finally tells Siegfried she doesn’t really like cribbage, actually (character growth!), but then he suggests backward cribbage and Mrs. Hall says she’s never tried it that way. Maybe I’ve been watching too much Bridgerton but SEXUAL CRIBBAGE INNUENDO. This episode is really a 10/10 for Siegfried/Mrs. Hall shippers. And it all starts with cribbage.

    Because of being on ParrotWatch, Tristan runs over to Charlotte’s and explains he’ll have to miss dinner. They are still very cute, and we find out she hasn’t met his family other than Siegfried. Also, dying at her calling them his family. FOR THEY ARE. But then Tristan’s all weird and cagey about her meeting them, and is like, well, the parrot is very infectious, you see. Stop it, Tristan! She’s Emma Thompson’s daughter, for God’s sake. Think of the voicemails you could get from your mother-in-law. So now we have to worry about Tristan messing up his very good new relationship.

    Meanwhile, Maggie stops at Skeldale and chats with Mrs. Hall about darts. Mrs. Hall is in fact very good at darts! She lends Maggie her board and decides to ask Siegfried to change their plans for the evening and go to The Drovers to play. “It’s not just about what he wants,” Maggie tells her. Okay, see? Character growth. Things are happening. It might be season six and it’s been glacial, but I will take it. When Mrs. Hall brings it up to Siegfried, though, he says he already spends most of his day inserting needles with varying degrees of accuracy, so no, they’ll stick with cribbage. Siegfried! Wasn’t it just the other week you were crying in the kitchen about Mrs. Hall possibly leaving you? Go play darts! That was a very funny line, though, well done.

    Mrs. Hall isn’t the only one getting her suggestions shot down — James asks him to help him out at the racetrack and Siegfried says nope to that too. So it’s going to be James versus the Dog Track Powers That Be, which are Mr. Coker and The Tall Man in the Hat. Fortunately for James, back at home, Jimmy mentions to Siegfried that they can’t live at Skeldale because Helen said Siegfried is a shellfish. Siegfried takes this child-based feedback, drinks four double scotches, and asks Mrs. Hall if he’s selfish. She very tactfully says yes, and Siegfried decides to go to the dog track to help James. Fortunately, Mrs. Hall insists on driving. Has this happened before?? I do not think so.

    At the track, James is telling everyone that Willy’s dog has bloat and cannot run or he risks dying. Willy finally agrees, but Mr. Coker and Tall Man in the Hat are very opposed. What, is something shady happening? At the dog track … okay, right, I’ve already done that joke. Siegfried stumbles up just in time and tells Tall Man to walk away. “I warn you,” Siegfried informs him, “I am fully versed in whippet racing code.” Then he and James grab the dog and run away in what proves to be a madcap dognapping, with Mrs. Hall as getaway driver. Everyone does a great job, except for the man who didn’t close the gate on them in time. He’ll probably be in trouble.

    They save the dog’s life; Tristan finds out that George the Parrot is not sick, but sad, and Tristan tells George that he is also sad; Siegfried tells James that he wants to apologize to Helen about his behavior, and he wants them to stay at Skeldale. Hurray! Also, we get our next excellent Siegfried and Mrs. Hall moment as she dabs at the cut below his eye. Her hand is on his face! Her hand! Is on! His face! Siegfried asks if she wants to go to The Drovers for darts. Good lord, just get married; what is wrong with you two? Are you “complex human beings” with “emotionally loaded backstories” and things aren’t “as easy as that?” Booooooooooooooo.

    After his heart-to-heart with George, Tristan invites Charlotte to meet his family. She comes into the family room, and all quickly becomes chaos in a charming Skeldale way. We end on everyone throwing paper planes at each other. Bless you all.

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    Alice Burton

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  • Southern Charm Recap: Birthday Bashes

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    Southern Charm

    Best Frenemies Forever

    Season 11

    Episode 9

    Editor’s Rating

    3 stars

    Photo: Bravo

    One of the great mysteries of the Bravoverse has been solved! You might not have noticed it because it came during a sleepy scene where Salley and her extra e return home to hang out with her family and her new niece. She complains about the chickens she bought to impress Craig, even though everyone in the group told her it was a bad idea. She says the chickens stink, leave a mess, and won’t die nearly soon enough for her liking. Who is she telling all this to? Her sister, Clair. Do you see it? Clair. That is where Salley got her extra e from! She stole it from Clair! I’ve heard of intense sibling rivalries before, but even with Olivia de Havilland and Joan Fontaine (look it up), this is the first case of sibling vowel theft we have on record.

    There are a few family visits, and with them, the interminable questions about when everyone is going to settle down and have kids. Even as Shep is giving Craig and Rodrigo a tour of his new house, Craig is talking about how Shep can get married and have two kids in that house and still have plenty of room. Craig, you have known Shep for more than a decade. When has he ever given any indication that he was interested in getting married, starting a family, or having home décor that wasn’t centered around surfboards, which would allow him to have either of those things in his life?

    It is a bit different when Austen goes home to have a chat with his mom, Wendy. They start talking about his relationship with Audrey and whether or not he’s going to forge ahead or cut her loose. We all know the answer, but it is still interesting to see Wendy basically tell Austen he needs to get serious about something in his life. But Wendy’s request isn’t selfish. It’s not that she wants “grandbabies” to play around with. “Having kids was the best thing I ever did,” she tells Austen, with tears in her eyes and loss in her heart. “The best thing I ever did … don’t lose sight of that.” This isn’t the regular nosiness of this conversation; this is a mother wanting the same thing for her son that brought her so much joy in life. This is someone trying to share a gift, and for the only time this season, I will allow it.

    After we watch Molly sniff her America’s Next Top Model weave, Craig explains how bee baths work, and Charley swoons a bit on her oyster date with Craig, the main action of the episode is the ill-fated birthday dinner that Whitney plans for Austen. It’s at a somewhat fancy place, and Austen, the birthday boy, shows up to meet the other OG dudes in the group wearing shorts. Shorts! Shep looked more put-together in the opening faux-sitcom scene of the episode when he wakes up in Craig’s guest room in a short-sleeve button-down and compression shorts. I know we can all take liberties on our birthdays, but if he had shown up in his birthday suit, he would have been better dressed.

    The evening starts nicely enough, where Craig and Austen swallow their simmering resentment like they swallow the Nitrotinis that come steaming off the bar. It’s even sweeter when they all go around toasting one another and their long-standing friendships. Things start to take a turn when Craig makes a “preposition” that they will all be nice to each other at this dinner. That’s interesting coming from Craig, who is usually the first person to bring anger to the table. As Austen walks to the bathroom with Whitney, he’s already bitching about how annoying the “preposition” is.

    Austen isn’t blameless, either. The two have been expressing all sorts of displeasure with each other for seasons now, to the point that everything one says totally pisses the other off. Austen won’t let Craig off the hook for anything, and Craig finds fault with everything about Austen. Whitney, of all people, described the situation perfectly. He says that Craig is a bully who will shout “Fuck you!” at you one day and the next day act like your best friend as if nothing happened. Austen is someone who holds grudges, so each time that happens, his anger ratchets up. What we’re left with, Whitney says in a way only he could, is “this circle jerk of stupidity and acrimony that keeps festering.”

    It all starts to go awry when, countless drinks in, Austen toasts his friends, even though they are also sometimes his enemies. Craig says they were enemies in the past, but not anymore. Austen reminds him that just days ago he told Salley that Austen was his enemy. Craig says he felt betrayed, like Austen is always rooting against him, and tells us, in a confessional, that he thinks that Austen doesn’t share his value system.

    The fight devolves until we realize what it’s really about. Like so many of these arguments, it is a fight about the show. Austen feels he was manipulated by Craig, specifically last season, when they had their discussion on the beach, where Craig talked about his addiction issues and how they were affecting their friendship. Austen thinks that Craig knew he had a lot of things to answer for in their friendship, so he brought up addiction to shut Austen up. Now, a year later, he’s back to his same old drinking habits, including at this dinner, where he has more glasses in front of him than the manager at LensCrafters. I felt like Austen was making a very valid point.

    In retaliation, Craig says, “He just made my drinking problem about him.” That’s also true, but I don’t think it’s about the drinking problem; I think it’s about the lying. Which is true? Is it that Craig has a drinking problem? Okay, if that’s true, then the group needs to address why he’s drinking so much this season, and no one is saying anything about it. Or is the truth that Craig doesn’t have a drinking problem, or any other addiction issues. If so, then he certainly was manipulating Austen to not talk about their deeper issues. Shep says Austen’s comments are wrongheaded, but I think Shep is missing the bigger point. Austen doesn’t want to continue looking like a jerk for how he treats Craig if Craig is somehow misrepresenting himself or the situation. As usual with Craig, it all comes down to when (or even if) he is telling the truth.

    Craig also says that Austen is a different person when filming, but doesn’t elaborate how. He then takes on a different, more personal attack, saying Austen blames him for his life being the same as it was five years ago. That seems a little below the belt. Also, how is Craig’s life that much different? Other than his pillow empire taking off, he’s still single, in the same town, on the same show, doing the same thing. What’s so different? That he has bees and an assistant who will murder someone to make Craig fall in love with him? Other than the business piece, Austen is in the same exact space as Craig. I also don’t think Austen is blaming Craig for his problems. It seems like Austen is just raising the issues he has with Craig, but isn’t pointing them out as the cause of problems in his own life. His annoyance with Craig and his annoyance with his business seem to be two totally separate issues.

    Whitney and Shep are almost entirely silent because they’re just bickering back and forth until Craig eventually says that Austen hates him. Austen answers, “I do fucking hate you,” which Whitney tells him immediately to apologize for. But Austen can’t do that because he’s dissociating. In his mind, he’s somewhere else. In his mind, he’s somewhere safe, on the screened-in porch with his mother sipping an Aperol spritz and picking at a plate of nuts, olives, and other assorted snacks. The sun is slanting through the trees, creating pockets of light and warmth on the floral-print sectional. It’s homey, it’s comfy, it’s supportive in its way, and Austen thinks about his mother asking him when he is going to raise a child, and then Austen thinks that he’s been raising one for years — he just didn’t know that child was Craig.

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    Brian Moylan

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  • RuPaul’s Drag Race Recap: Feeling Faint

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    Now that’s more like it. This episode of RuPaul’s Drag Race has everything: beautiful gowns, hideous jumpsuits, fighting, crying, fainting, accusations of faking that fainting, and Tony winner Annaleigh Ashford singing about boobs. Just four episodes into the season, we’ve already had some remarkable ups and downs, but here’s hoping things stay on this track.

    I don’t think it’s a coincidence that the two best episodes this season (this one and the premiere) have been the sewing challenges, where the producers get out of the girls’ way and just let them be drag queens. To be clear: This is not a great episode because of the challenge, which is convoluted and off-putting and seemingly designed because the producers were worried about the karmic retribution they were facing by depriving Vita of her first-episode win. It’s a great episode because the cast is really good, and watching them interact is an utter delight. The girl-group songs were terrible; the RDR Live! scripts stank; this challenge is weird. The success of this season will rest on the girls, not the twists, and if the producers can just not fuck it up, I think we’re in for an entertaining rest of the season.

    The episode opens on the first legitimately dramatic mirror-message session I can remember. Normally, the show tries to stir up scandal with a healthy helping of sound effects, but this week Briar, Mia, and Athena really are fighting. You see, Briar has run afoul of South Florida by not respecting Athena’s boundaries while expecting Mia to understand her implicit ones concerning her previous relationship. Additionally, Mia thinks Mandy should have stayed in the competition over Briar. Plus, it turns out that Briar’s been shady off-camera toward Athena, stirring up a little drama between her and her drag daughter Juicy.

    A lot of the drama that comes up this week, particularly here, is centered on stuff that we didn’t initially see. Mia joking Briar was the reason her relationship failed wasn’t shown last week; Briar telling Mia she crossed a line was off-camera; Briar joking about Juicy and Athena’s relationship was behind the scenes. Drag Race is notorious for its draconian rules about contestants’ whereabouts, and, from what I’ve heard, typically keeps them on ice (a reality TV term for “shut the fuck up”) backstage. Clearly, that is no longer the case because this the second time that BTS drama has played out between these very queens, after glove-gate during the premiere.

    Honestly, I’m fine with this. The queens don’t start real drama on-camera anymore because of their reputations, but they are drag queens, so there will be drama. It just doesn’t happen when the camera is on them. If letting scandal fester offscreen is what it takes to get good story lines onscreen, then that’s fine. Just make sure the situations are clearly explained.

    The challenge this week starts by having the girls pair up with their friends. Then, they are turned against each other in a “Who Wore It Best” competition. The idea is cribbed from Drag Race U.K. season two, if I’m remembering correctly, where it resulted in Tia Kofi’s eternal “I’m serving you an adequate dress with materials that are stuck on my body.” Good challenge! Messy, but not in a way that would result in someone with a top-tier outfit going home, even if she can’t beat her partner. Plus, it results in a shorter challenge (just a runway walk) and they use the excess airtime to critique every single girl, which I think is a stroke of genius. Heading into next week, every single contestant will have a story line with the judges in place.

    The sewing challenge asks each girl to mash up two randomly selected red-carpet looks. Too bad this was filmed last summer when it was still reasonable to include Nicki Minaj content on this show. The pairings and looks are as follows:

    ➼ Briar & Juicy: Lil Nas X’s pink cowboy suit and Rihanna’s Guo Pei Met Gala coat

    ➼ Discord & Jane: Cher’s Oscars black two-piece and Sarah Paulson’s green Prada spikes

    ➼ Myki & Nini: J.Lo’s green Versace dress and Nicki Minaj’s leopard-print Grammys look (the only outfit I was not familiar with)

    ➼ Ciara & Kenya: Lady Gaga’s meat dress and Britney Spears’s all-denim dress

    ➼ Mia & Vita: Katy Perry’s Met Gala chandelier and Lil’ Kim’s purple VMAs outfit with a boob hanging out

    ➼ Darlene & Athena: Kim K.’s floral extravaganza and Zendaya’s Mugler robot

    In the Werk Room, Briar cries to partner Juicy about the fighting and feeling attacked, which makes sense. It’s notable that these are the queens under 29 in the cast, especially since Juicy has allies in the Florida girls. The word undergirding all of Briar’s actions is “immaturity.” Otherwise, the Werk Room stuff is all fun but inconsequential. I’m really starting to fall in love with Mia, who knows she is not beating Vita but still tries really hard and keeps her spirits up. Jane and Discord eye each other up, since they both consider themselves look queens. Juicy is still asking for help. Vita reveals that she literally makes replicas of celebrity outfits back home. Seriously, they probably just designed this challenge with her in mind. (Which is fine; she should have a win.)

    On the runway, it’s time to see some face-offs. Juicy and Briar are first. I love Juicy’s outfit. Who knew she could make this after the disastrous first-week look? It’s got a fun hood and some faux-fur lining. The judges get on her a bit about the fur being meager, but it’s a sewing challenge, so I’m not bothered. Briar really does look bad. “Neon-yellow bodysuit” is just not a word combination that makes sense. Also, if you’re doing true female-illusion drag, with a glamorous face and big hips, it does not make sense to me to forgo breasts. The outfit just doesn’t make sense proportionally. I don’t think her head was in the game this week.

    Next is Discord and Jane. I don’t like Discord’s look at all. She’s doing “high fashion” drag, showing a lot of body, but the bodice sits too low, so it just gives, in Law’s words, “man in a dress.” The pieces trailing off the bodice as her skirt, lined with green fur, are not cute. And her face is too harsh. Walk still bad. Jane’s look is definitely better, but I’m not falling all over it in the way the judges are. The length is odd, and the dress has nothing to do with the original looks other than the colors. What about Cher and Sarah’s looks gave Auntie Mame? And the length is weird. She’s still a front-runner, but it’s not my favorite week for her.

    Myki and Nini have the hardest time combining their two fabrics (leopard and green jungle) and give probably my least favorite looks of the week in the aggregate. Myki’s Hollywood-glamour ensemble really is overaccessorized. It’s not hideous or anything, it’s just totally forgettable. This queen needs to step on the gas. Nini’s look is a disappointment from her. A leopard bodysuit with green sashes, it’s definitely well made, but it’s just … ugly.

    Ciara Myst does by far the best work I’ve ever seen her do in this competition. She builds a meaty-looking bodysuit with a denim cocktail dress over the top, then ties herself up like a Christmas ham. This is what I’ve been waiting for with her: It feels genuinely odd and creepy, but also leans away from the plasticky Halloween aesthetic that’s defined her drag so far. Really into it. Kenya definitely improves on her first challenge design look, creating a red and denim mermaid dress, but it’s not interesting and doesn’t engage enough with the meat dress.

    The judges love Mia’s gown with a breast hanging out, but I think it’s just okay. She does what was asked of her, for sure, but the random piece of purple fabric that snakes up her dress is ugly. I don’t get the passion for this one. Vita’s look, though, is drop-dead stunning. It’s one of the best gowns I’ve ever seen made on the show. This is better than a lot of queens’ ultimate finale gowns. Amazing work. Well-deserved win.

    Finally, it’s Darlene and Athena. This is the only decision that I fully disagree with. I really like Darlene’s outfit! It helps that she’s eight feet tall with a model’s disposition, but she looks amazing in her space-age cowboy fit. It’s totally Darlene and very fashionable. The judges ding her for the shoes, but I think she makes up for it in innovation. I don’t like Athena’s look at all. It’s a dress with a cape. Look, the name of the game with her is “well-rendered but basic drag,” and that’s just never going to set me on fire. I’ve seen this a billion times both on the show and off.

    During critiques, Briar gets the harshest reviews by far, and, just as Ru is about to declare Juicy victorious over her, she faints. It’s a shocking moment, one that I’ll remember for a long time. The especially iconic grace note is the reveal of the hole in her crotch as she tumbles to the ground. The doors that ANTM cycle four’s Rebecca has opened. Then, the girls quickly start to speculate about whether it was real or faked. That’s crazy! Vita fully comes down on the side of it being fake. Other girls are less willing to do that on-camera, but they seem suspicious. I don’t have anything to say about that, as I was not there. The speculation, though, is definitely mean-spirited (and also fun to watch).

    Jane, Vita, and Ciara are declared the overall top three. I’d have replaced Jane with Juicy or even Darlene. Vita wins, as she should have three weeks ago. Glad to see her on top where she belongs. The bottom three are Kenya, Discord, and Briar, with the bottom two being Kenya and Briar. Sorry, but I think Discord should be down there with Briar. Did not get that look at all, even if it was well made. The song is a late-stage Kylie Minogue track called “Lights Camera Action,” which … this show is as it ever was. Neither girl has an amazing grasp on the words, but Kenya is about 300 times more entertaining. She gets to stay, and Briar gets sent home mere hours after fainting on the main stage. (Or, if you ask Vita, falling for fun.)

    • The girls spend most of their time on Untucked freaking out about whether Briar will get cleared to come back and, if not, who will wrongly take her place in the bottom two. Loved seeing all of them do the Discord walk. It’s a total joy. I reiterate: I’m having fun with this cast, and if the show can just play to their strengths, we could have a really good season on our hands.

    • “I don’t want to squabble this opportunity” is very funny.

    • Trauma Makeup Corner: Briar and Mia use this time to patch up their relationship by both sharing parts of their trauma. I was glad to see the tearful talks motivated by story line, but this did feel a little forced. Both their stories were very emotional, but the whole segment just feels produced, whether by production, editing, or the queens themselves.

    • Predicted Top Four: Holding strong on Jane, Juicy, Vita, and Nini. But Nini needs a pop and a real story line soon, because the other three front-runners are gaining on her by the week. “Underestimated” can only take you so far when the person underestimating you was Discord.

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    Jason P. Frank

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  • Southern Charm Recap: Otherwise Engaged

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    Southern Charm

    Engaged in Battle

    Season 11

    Episode 8

    Editor’s Rating

    3 stars

    Craig’s refusal to take accountability for leading Salley on might just push her into a “The enemy of my enemy is my friend” alliance with Austen.
    Photo: Paul Cheney/Bravo

    There are three things that have little to do with the main storylines of this episode that I really want to talk about, so I’m just going to ramble for a bit, and if you don’t like it, well, there’s the door. (There is no door. The door is an illusion. So is the world and this text. Nothing is real. Surrender to the robots.) The first is the big reveal we’ve been waiting for: the names for Salley’s chickens. I thought there were only two, but turns out there are actually three, and they are named Cantaloupe, Coconut, and Popcorn. Yes, this is better than giving them people names, but isn’t it kind of disrespectful to name your chickens after food? Also, if that’s what you’re going to do, I can think of a few more names that are more appropriate. How about Cacciatore, Milanese, and Finger?

    The second thing is that Shep returns from a trip and is going to live with Craig because his new house isn’t ready yet, which seems like malfeasance, and his old house is rented out for a tidy sum on Airbnb. (What housing shortage?) But the trip was to Cuba. How did Shep go to Cuba? Can Americans get visas to go there just to go fishing and jump off dilapidated bridges? Can he then get back into the country? Is ICE going to show up at his house? Or, wait. Do we own Cuba now? Was that like a BOGO with Venezuela? I live in England, and they gave most of the Caribbean back, so I don’t even know who owns what or can exploit their natural resources anymore.

    Finally, the thing I really want to talk about is a possible Austen Kroll toupee reveal. I’m not entirely sure how to interpret this weird scene where Austen and his girlfriend Audrey are out on the little pier at Rodrigo and Tyler’s engagement party, but the fact that they included it in the episode makes me think it’s significant. Austen is trying to take a sunset selfie of them and says, “Oh my god, look at my toupee.” Then immediately says, “WTF [indecipherable word but maybe “Bookie”?]. It looks like I’m wearing a toupee. What the hell was that?” Then as Audrey is laughing, he says, “Do you still like me?”

    The way I read this is he said, “Look at my toupee,” and then immediately realized that both Audrey and the cameras were there and didn’t know he had a toupee, so he changed what he said to mean it looked like he was wearing one. Upon realizing that Audrey now knows that he has a toupee, he asks if she still likes him. But is it really a toupee? It seems like he’s always had that hair, and if it is a rug, then it is unspookable. I mean, no shame in it. Good for Austen. There isn’t a single woman on any of these shows who is sporting her real hair 100 percent of the time, so if Austen wants to wear a wig, wear a wig. But the scene was odd, hard to interpret, and a little out of the blue.

    All of the action in the episode, including the first-ever non–Drag Race wig reveal, happened at Rodrigo and Tyler’s Greek-themed engagement party, and most of it was somehow related to the Salley, Charley, and Craig love triangle, with some extra Venita thrown in for spice. Earlier in the episode, Venita goes to lunch with her mother, who says that Venita wasn’t being a good friend when she told Salley and her extra E not to call her when Craig finally dumped her. When Salley arrives at the party (looking stunning in a low-cut dress that shows Craig just what he’s missing), Venita tells her she misses her and tries to get things back on track. However, Salley isn’t that interested and thinks that Venita is trying to control her, so she just walks away.

    Things are also in tatters between Salley and Charley over Craig. Charley meets with our girl Molly to do a little craft project, and Charley confesses that she’s anxious about her date with Craig. Charley is worried that things between her and Craig are “weird” now because of how Salley feels. Molly, very astutely, points out that things were “weird” with Salley and Craig because of how Venita feels and Salley didn’t care, charging ahead and doing whatever she wanted. Because of that, Molly counsels that Charley should do what she wants as well, which is to go out with Craig. I have no notes. Thanks for doing my job, Molly. At this point, should I be more worried about losing recapping duties to ChatGPT or Molly?

    For most of the episode, Craig is trying to exonerate himself. When he recaps the situation with Madison, he says he did nothing to lead Salley on and Madison explains that the hot tub, the flirting, and the texts didn’t help. Craig admits he knew Salley was trying to stay that night, and he was like, “Okay, get home safe,” swerving her back then. He says if he wanted something to happen he knew that was his invitation. According to Craig, he never wanted anything more than friendship and said she could have stayed over just to be nice. Okay, that’s messed up. Shep, naturally, defends Craig, saying that’s just how he is; he was being his usual chatty, flirty self, and girls just take it the wrong way.

    I don’t know, boys. Like three-day-old gas-station sushi, I’m not buying it. Yes, Craig was excited to have a new friend after his breakup with Paige, and his relationships with Austen and Shep were on the rocks, but if he had known she was trying to stay, he probably should have clarified the boundaries a bit more. He didn’t even need to tell her, “Look, I think we’re just friends,” but fewer invitations to the hot tub, a bit more talking about other girls he wants to date in front of her, a couple more tell-tale signs, and she would have gotten the hint. Craig should have made his intentions clearer before it got to the point where Salley had to tell him she was catching feelings in a livestock and feed store.

    When Craig goes to talk to Salley, however, he somehow blames everything that happened on her. Salley seemingly isn’t upset that Craig cut her loose, she’s mad that he told Austen that he’s done with their friendship. Craig totally denies that he said that, even though it was, in essence, what he was saying. Craig’s response is wild. “You believe the guy whose main goal in life is to tear me down,” Craig says, referring to Austen as his “enemy” and getting upset at Salley for talking to Austen about him. When Salley says she didn’t know Austen was his enemy, Craig says that she knows how Austen treats him. Okay, but if Craig thinks that about Austen, if he really views him as an enemy, why is he even friends with him? Why is he even talking to him? And how is he turning this whole thing around on Salley when he said it and it’s clearly his fault? Some people love drugs, some people love sex, some people love money, some people love playing blues guitar with only a moment’s notice at an outdoor bar, but no one loves any of those things more than Craig loves being wrong.

    After Rodrigo’s party, the whole gang gets in Shep’s party bus and keeps the party going on a night that will surely end in tragedy. Never go with Shepherd Rose to a second location. This is when the drama between Craig and Salley, and whatever is happening with Austen and Audrey, overlaps. All episode, everyone is telling Austen that he needs to tell Audrey that things between them are probably not going to the next stage of their relationship and fizzling out. Austen’s sister, Katie, tells him, “What are you doing if you’re not all in?” Even Austen describes their breakup as a meteor approaching Earth, one he’s trying to ignore for a little while longer.

    When Austen is at the bar, Salley comes up to him to say that Craig told her that he didn’t say he wrote off their friendship. Neither Austen nor Salley believe Craig, which is what happens when you have a reputation for being as fictional as Anna Delvey’s credit report. Salley also tells Austen that Craig referred to him as his “enemy” and that he’s not Austen’s friend. Austen looks into Salley’s eyes and even deeper into her cleavage, and hugs her close to his side. He smiles at her and she smiles back and he runs his hands through his (possibly fake) hair and smiles even bigger and she giggles and looks back at the bar and back at Austen. Meanwhile, Audrey, his girlfriend, is sitting all by herself in a busy bar, the blues music landing on her shoulder like a shawl of gnats. She can’t even see it, but just past the moon, there’s a little streak, a little dot, that is a meteor getting closer and closer, accelerating at every moment, and getting ready for a crash.

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    Brian Moylan

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  • Fallout Recap: The Other Player

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    Fallout

    Uranium Fever

    Season 2

    Episode 6

    Editor’s Rating

    4 stars

    Photo: Lorenzo Sisti/Prime

    Was anyone else reminded of Pluribus this week? “The Other Player,” another eminently enjoyable 50 minutes of television — maybe it seems like I’m sitting on the fence with such consistent star ratings, but I just think Fallout is a solidly four-star show, with little deviation so far either way — circles around similar, and franchise-familiar, moral questions. Is the wasteland really worth saving when it is so rife with bloodshed, barbarism, and brutality? What is it about our species’ propensity for war, anyway? Why the hell doesn’t war ever change? At this point, should humanity just be relegated to the irradiated scrapheap? Take Hank’s monologue about All’s Quiet on the Western Front, one of the more egregious examples of the series’ writers deploying a somewhat hammy, but appropriate, metaphor for our never-ending cycle of conflict (this episode was written by Dave Hill, whose credits include Game of Thrones and The Wheel of Time).

    “I saw the same thing on the surface,” says Hank, confronted by Lucy in the executive vault. “People fighting over petty things, like bottlecaps.” (He’ll be familiar enough with the world of Fallout not to bat an eyelid by now, but there’s something deeply amusing in imagining Kyle MacLachlan reading that line in the script for the first time. “Why the hell are they fighting over … bottlecaps?” It is, of course, the preeminent currency deployed throughout the wasteland, curiously standardized from coast to coast.)

    Anyway, forgive the slight tangent. Back to Pluribus: Hank has himself assembled a large staff of worker bees, docile automotons controlled by his newly refined mind-control chip. (It seems like the heads have stopped exploding, though let’s not write off some level of gore off-screen. After all, human sacrifice should never stand in the way of scientific progress, nor corporate growth!) Like “The Others” of the Apple TV+ series, these surface dwellers, among them ex-cannibals, Legionaries, and other such denizens of the post-apocalypse, have been stripped of their individualism; while they do not share a collective hive mind, they are effectively one big pacifistic, ever-smiling mass. Lucy is horrified to witness the result of her father’s latest experiment, having stolen these people’s lives, memories, and personalities. But how many of them — like our old friend the Snake Oil Salesman — willingly gave all of that up for the chance to expunge their lifetimes of trauma? A fair few, you’d wager. As Max and Thaddeus discuss elsewhere during the episode, Lucy’s relentless idealism has only been possible because she grew up in the rarefied bliss afforded by a vault. Sure, subterranean life has its downsides, but at least you’re not going to sleep worrying that you’ll wake up with a knife to your throat or that you’ll be dragged to a distant cave by a super mutant. (More on this later with Ron Perlman!) Even brainwashed, no wonder they all want to stay when Lucy gives them the opportunity to escape. The overarching question here is essentially the same as that in Pluribus: is peace worth the erasure of the human spirit?

    Honestly, when you survey the conditions of the wasteland, that question doesn’t feel as cleanly open-and-shut as you might otherwise expect it to be, nor does Hank’s Vault-Tec (and RobCo) approved remedy seem all that outlandish. But then, perhaps that’s the conflict that is most present in all of Fallout: the fight to sustain one’s humanity, and the human spirit at large. (Between its gonzo tone and extremely silly sense of humour, it’s perhaps a little easy to overlook how the world of Fallout is rife with tragedy. Child slavery is normalized. Eating people? Bon appetit!) This conflict also manifests as the internal duel between The Ghoul and Cooper Howard, the two personalities within one prune-wrinkled, noseless man that have raged at each other for two centuries. It’s telling that while he’s impaled outside the Atomic Wrangler, struggling to reach his vials before he is rendered a feral, zombie-like corpse, he reminds himself of his own basic humanity: “My name is Cooper,” he says. “I have a daughter. Her name is Janey. She’s alive.” Don’t quote me on this, but it feels like the first time that The Ghoul has explicitly acknowledged his former self.

    This reminder of his sole purpose — to see his family again — is almost enough for him to unskewer himself, but he slips at the last moment, sliding back down the Ghoul-bab. At which point, like a hulking angel descended from the heavens, a gigantic person-man-thing appears, snaps the pole in half like a twig, and carries The Ghoul back to the safety of his grisly, viscera-strewn lair. Fallout heads would obviously know this to be a super mutant as soon as they see that Hulk-like build and hear the guttural voice. But for the uninitiated: super mutants are usually what you get when you dip a human being into a vat of FEV — the Forced Evolutionary Virus, which Norm was reading about on Barb’s terminal last episode — and different variants have appeared throughout the series. (In Fallout 3, they’re standard enemy fodder, save for an intelligent mutant called Fawkes, who you can recruit as a companion. Fallout 4 takes largely the same approach. In other games, like New Vegas, they are more complex; there’s an entire settlement full of friendly muties called Jacobstown. They’re also the main villains of Fallout 1, led by a maniacal monstrosity called The Master.)

    And yeah, huge cameo alert: this particular mutant is played by none other than … Ron Perlman! Remember Barb’s “war never changes” line? That’s the tagline of the Fallout games, and has been spoken by Perlman — the series’ narrator — in every major game installment since the series was born in the late ‘90s. And of course he’s a mutie in the show: that deep, gravelly voice and brawny build — here in the U.K., we call it being a “brick shithouse” — make for the perfect combination for playing a super mutant. He shoves a chunk of uranium into The Ghoul’s open stomach hole. “There’s a war coming, and we need you healthy,” he says. And then he drops a huge bit of lore on us, describing their common enemy as “the people who set all of this in motion,” that presumably being the entire nuclear apocalypse: The Enclave.

    Look, I’m not about to say “I told you so!” after last week, because in retrospect, it was kind of obvious. (I do feel a little smug about my seemingly accurate prediction that the Enclave will be revealed as the show’s overarching antagonists by the end of the season, but as Fallout likes to beat us over the head: one must always beware hubris.) There’s a part of me that feels like it’s a bit unadventurous to default back to the mainline series’ go-to bad guys; maybe the show could’ve invented its own existential threat. At the same time, their absence would’ve likely felt a little weird if we went for another season without more explicit reference. Further confirmation that the Enclave was behind all of this comes in a flashback, when Barb encounters none other than Wilzig (Michael Emerson, now with a body) in an elevator at Vault-Tec HQ. Turns out he was also present in the pre-war timeline, and so was presumably frozen like the rest of the 2077 ensemble who have made it through to the post-atomic present. It’s also revealed that he’s the one who told Barb to sell the spectre of nuclear war as a business opportunity in that meeting we saw at the end of season one.

    Barb tells Cooper all of this at the Lucky 38 after he finally confronts her. The latter is furious that his wife would so nonchalantly welcome Doomsday; she says that she’d do anything to ensure Janey’s survival. (Including the extinction of countless species, the deaths of billions, and a perma-scorched landscape that will remain basically uninhabitable for centuries? Yeah, maybe not.) But there are “worse people out there” than her, she says, before telling Cooper about her encounter with Wilzig. Unless it’s a red herring, the Enclave is at the wheel. And you’d suspect that, in the present timeline, The Ghoul knows a lot more about them than he’d have let on. (He has been around for over 200 years, after all. And the Enclave has done a lot of evil shit in that time.)

    Soon thereafter, Cooper accompanies a trashed Hank to his suite in the Lucky 38. While he’s unconscious, Cooper opens the case that Hank has handcuffed to his wrist; it contains an extraction device. Barb appears, and sticks the device in Hank’s neck, pulling out the fusion chip. Meanwhile, in the present timeline, Max and Thaddeus are led to The Ghoul, bruised and battered from his ordeal in Freeside — but alive, crucially. He does not look especially pleased to see them. At least he hasn’t lost his charm.

    • Apologies for the lack of mention for all the stuff going on in Vault 33, but that’s the least interesting element of the show for me right now. As much as that “Uranium Fever” song-and-dance number makes for a bit of formal fun; great direction from Lisa Joy there. It’s clearly setting up a civil war that broadly parallels the ideological split of our times: boring but sensible pragmatism (Betty and the need to ration water) versus exciting but unsustainable populism (the increasingly power-hungry Reg and his incest club). With a dose of on-the-nose xenophobia for the age of Trump: “You’re from Vault 31. I know things are different there. You 31ers are plum different.” To which another vault dweller chimes in: “It feels good to finally hear someone say that out loud!”

    • Thaddeus mentions that he was born in The Boneyard, which was the first Fallout game’s title for the city of Los Angeles, named so for the ruined skyscrapers that rose above the horizon like… you know, bones. Fans have wondered how the Boneyard might fit into the new lore established by the show. He doesn’t go any further than to say he lived on “the shithole side,” but it stands to reason that it’s somewhere in the ruins of L.A. proper. Even so, Shady Sands was itself moved from its original Fallout location for the show. Maybe there’ll be a minor retcon.

    • Hopefully that isn’t the only NCR vs. Legion action we see this season, but that sequence in the executive vault is a fun bit of fan service regardless.

    • No, I haven’t forgotten about the episode’s first scene, in which House (well, fake House) and Barb discuss an exchange of cold fusion for the mind-control device. I’m still waiting to see how that plays out in the last couple of episodes.

    • Lastly, on the subject of chips: no mention of the Platinum Chip from Fallout: New Vegas yet, a storage device that contained the necessary data to upgrade House’s Vegas defense system. It was set to arrive the day after the bombs fell. Had it gotten there in time, not a single nuke would’ve hit Vegas — though only a handful made it through anyway, and mostly away from the city itself.

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    Jack King

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  • The Real Housewives of Potomac Recap: Hostile Takeover

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    Gizelle’s coup of the Aspen trip leaves Angel backed into a corner and creates more misery than entertainment.
    Photo: Bravo

    At the moment, my favorite non-reality television series is HBO’s Industry. I love it for all the reasons that everyone else does, but beyond that, I am enthralled by the premise of a show heralded by a woman who we know from day one is committed to making her life better at the world’s expense, and is willing to claw her way to the top by hook or by crook alongside the caravan of Machiavellian schemers she calls colleagues and mentors. Without a doubt, Harper Stern is my favorite evil Black woman on television right now. When she peers down in slight aggravation as a client strokes out in front of her, I can only gasp in awe at her and her boho braids of doom.

    While Harper is the example of Machiavellian plotting wielded for maximum enjoyment, Potomac’s Gizelle Bryant shows how that same kind of scheming, executed poorly, just amounts to misery for all parties involved. It is a wonder of wonders how she can take an incident that rightfully infuriates her — subpar accommodations from the host — and somehow be so insufferable about it that I still find her in the wrong. Still, her ultimate problem is that her lack of tact or consideration propels her to escalate something way beyond any reasonable measure. Is it appropriate to be frustrated with Angel about the subpar accommodations and hosting failures? Absolutely. Is it worthwhile, entertaining, or productive to sit in a private jet and berate Angel for over 30 minutes about the issue, without giving a word in edgewise? Not as far as I am concerned.

    Therein lies the conundrum of the show — Gizelle is the most propulsive member of the cast and its anchoring force, and without Karen in play to really keep her in check, the vibe and tenor of the cast accommodates her whims. Multiple women later sheepishly admit that the pile-on of Angel while she was trying to show them the Aspen experience was overkill, but it was almost entirely in the confessionals, not in person. Angel was left to endure the barrage that she was clearly attempting to apologize for on her own, while Wendy leapt to get in unnecessary jabs in edgewise. Not only was this remarkably unpleasant to watch, but it further cements Gizelle as the cast’s gravitational nucleus for the foreseeable future.

    Angel undoubtedly made numerous unforced errors that created this issue, but at this point, she is fully backed into a corner and fighting for her life. She’s being penalized for not being open about her marriage, when they refuse to accept any remarks she gives about her family life as fact; she’s held to the fire over having alliances and friendships, which they all do; caviar bumps (which are a known trend) are unhygienic and classless. She’s berated for assuming that the workers were telling her the truth when they reported the water was back, and for not hearing anything to the contrary from the women, which is a hosting failure but not the most egregious transgression in the world.

    All of this ire would be way more understandable to me if Potomac had a reputation for glamorous cast trips, but we all know that is far from the truth, which is why they continue to recycle the same footage from Cannes and Nevis when Gizelle insists that her standard is the Four Seasons, a hotel chain that we haven’t seen her in once in the last 10 years. Now we have to humor her delusions about hosting top-tier trips, all because the women are afraid to tell her that she has beaten the dead horse already and is now just spouting delusions. It’s in moments like this where it becomes more obvious than ever why Karen is a necessary oppositional force to cut things like this at the quick.

    It’s a shame, because the day that Angel put together was quite lovely: a private jet to Aspen and private whiskey tasting, a shopping trip to Kemo Sabe and private catered lounge, and an extended linkup with Mo where all the women contemplated how much they valued a friendship with Kyle Richards over a night with Aspen’s most eligible mid-life crisis. In concept, the effort should have helped put the women in better spirits, but the women have committed to critiquing every part of this experience, from Monique demanding that Angel answer for her marriage in their second meeting ever to Gizelle blatantly looking past Angel in disgust when she finally breaks down in tears. Nothing about this is entertaining, and by the time they finally go on the shopping trip, I am ready for them to wrap this all up and head back to Potomac. Angel is audibly contemplating whether she should end her journey with these women in Colorado and save herself the headache.

    By the time things wind down and Angel starts to lay out the itinerary for the next day, Gizelle makes her final coup and announces that not only will the girls be going to the Four Seasons, but they will be heading back to Maryland after brunch, and puts the plan up to a vote. It’s a shameless power play, and an unmerited one by any definition. If Gizelle didn’t leave Miami when Mia got drunk and assaulted Wendy, and stayed in Austin while Ashley had them literally dancing with chicken shit while staying in a souped-up Hampton Inn, there is no way she can reasonably convince me that she cannot endure one more day of activities. But left unchecked, the power that Gizelle has over the cast and the show has the potential to corrupt her absolutely. While most of the season has been an entertaining success, this episode showcased the downside of Gizelle’s dominance, creating fertile ground for Karen’s inevitable return. The trip comes to a miserable end next week. See you all then!

    • Even on an episode that doesn’t center on Stacey, she manages to steal the show. Accidentally eating her contacts? I have been wearing glasses and contacts since the ‘90s, and that is absolutely a singular experience, although I will be saying “20/20 bootyhole” to myself for quite some time.

    • Did we always know that Ashley met her ex-husband, Jack Skellington, at a “membership lounge”? For a second there I thought she was trying to bring Mia back into the group.

    • I get that Jassi really wants a moment to shine on the show, but every time she tries to bring up her marriage as a reference point for anything on the show, I cringe in secondhand embarrassment. There’s no way in this universe or the next that she genuinely believes that her wrangling babysitters for her husband’s harem of co-parents is in any way akin to a breastfeeding mother needing to figure out how to adjust childcare plans for the night.

    • I’ve tried to ignore commenting on this because, for the most part, she has been pulling off the looks, but after the stiletto boots, enough is enough. Why is Wendy trying to put on a fashion show to go to Colorado? Go to Designer Shoe Warehouse, get a sensible heel, and keep it pushing.

    • A short chartered flight is a lot less expensive than I thought. I’m not saying I’m about to fly to the Hamptons every weekend, but it’s definitely more attainable than expected.

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    Shamira Ibrahim

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  • Agatha Christie’s Seven Dials Series-Premiere Recap: Not So Lucky Number 7

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    After a surprising loss is classified as death by misadventure, Lady Eileen “Bundle” Brent is the only person who refuses to accept the idea.
    Photo: Simon Ridgway/Netflix/B) 2024 Netflix, Inc.

    Fans of twisty murder mysteries set in stately British homes and admirers of the shrewd, plucky heroines who solve them, rejoice! A zippy new adaptation of Agatha Christie’s The Seven Dials Mystery is here to light up the problem-solving pleasure centers of your brain. Is Netflix capitalizing on the success of its multi-film Knives Out partnership with Rian Johnson? Is it looking to compete with PBS a little bit by branching out into the Golden Age of Detective Fiction–adaptations game? Does the series’ tagline, “The queen of crime returns,” portend more cozy murder-solving on our screens in the coming years? Whatever the reason, we all benefit.

    “Bundle of Love” is almost entirely exposition-focused, introducing the characters along with their emotional, social, and historical contexts, while setting the scene and stakes of the murders to be solved. Lady Eileen Brent — but please, call her Bundle — is among the bright young things of the social set, perfectly at ease in an exquisitely draped golden gown as she moves through the massive party being held at her family home. So far, so normal for the daughter of a marquess (the late Lord Caterham).

    Is this going to be markedly different from Gosford Park — even a sort of murder-y Downton Abbey? Well, yes. Series creator and writer Chris Chibnall (Broadchurch, Doctor Who) has wisely chosen to emphasize the emotional hangover so many families were slogging their way through in 1925. According to the memorial where Lady Caterham still places flowers regularly, Bundle’s brother, Tommy, died in action in 1915, and the war ended just seven years ago. Bundle and her mother are still deeply haunted by the losses of Tommy and Lord Caterham, who passed away in 1920. They put brave faces on it, but Lady Caterham scarcely leaves the grounds of their estate, Chimneys.

    Sadly, Lady Caterham is now land rich and cash poor, so to pay her staff and maintain the physical plant of Chimneys, she’s been forced to rent out the house for the summer to a wealthy steel magnate and his wife. Sir Oswald and Lady Coote and their new-money ways are a horror to Lady Caterham — can you believe they thanked the butler Tredwell for bringing them fresh glasses of Champagne? What next? — but money is money, and she needs it.

    As a viewer, it’s a treat to be so deftly and efficiently whisked into a fictional world like this; unavoidable clunkiness is fleeting and pops up only a few times. For example, Undersecretary for the Foreign Office George Lomax hisses at his underling Gerry Wade, right in front of Bundle, that he simply must tear himself away from their sweet, flirtatious conversation to attend to Lady Coote so Lomax can continue to work on making himself Sir Oswald’s bestie. It’s not elegant, as exposition goes, but Alex Macqueen’s overprecise, officious delivery more than makes up for it, telegraphing in just a couple of lines the precise type of nitwit Lomax is.

    Gerry beetles dutifully off and we get a little party-within-the-party scene of him playing bridge with Lady Coote, Jimmy Thesiger, and the Cootes’ personal secretary, Rupert Bateman. I didn’t feel any particular way about Lady Coote until the moment she almost threatened violence against him for his very gentle suggestion that she ought to keep her eyes on her own cards. She is now my fictional enemy for life. Fortunately, Jimmy is there to ease the tension with some self-deprecating humor about his failure to pass the civil-service tests. It turns out he’s always in demand as a party guest, however, thanks to his flawless dance moves.

    After an ecstatic dance with Gerry, dreams of a likely proposal spinning in her head, Bundle heads to bed for the night. What a swell party it was; what grief will dash her hopes in the morning. Watching Bundle and Gerry whirl around the dance floor as a jazz band plays at fever pitch, I couldn’t help being reminded of the gulf between the perspectives of the characters experiencing the party and the contemporary viewers watching it unfold. Bundle and Gerry think they’re having a splendid evening, and with the Great War behind them and their blissful ignorance of the Great Depression and World War II yet to come, they don’t realize how close they are to the end of an era.

    When Tredwell and then Bundle find Gerry dead in bed with an empty bottle of a powerful sleeping draft on the bedside table, Bundle is the only person who refuses to accept the idea that Gerry died via an overdose of any kind. He was a legendarily hard sleeper — Tommy’s letters from the front described Gerry as being able to sleep through exploding bombs, and his Foreign Office colleagues Ronnie Devereux and Bill Eversleigh planted eight alarm clocks in his room as a prank to wake him before noon — and had made special arrangements for a dinner date with Bundle to ask an unspecified question that would have been, y’know, life-changing.

    Owing to a lack of any evidence that Gerry’s death involved anyone else, the inquest results in his end being classified as death by misadventure, but Bundle is not satisfied. On top of Gerry’s death destroying her romantic hopes and reviving the worst of her grief over Tommy, her moxie and sense of obligation to the man who dragged her dead brother off the battlefield won’t allow her to let it lie. Bundle is also galled by Lady Coote’s refusal to mention at the inquest that the fatal sleeping draft was from a bottle she’d given to her sleepless maid, Emily. How did it get from Emily’s room to Gerry’s? Lady Coote sniffily tells Bundle that “it does none of us any good to revisit this tragic event” and that, friends, is what we call a toxic “Keep Calm and Carry On.”

    Ronnie, feeling a little guilty for remaining silent about the weird discrepancy between the eight clocks he and Bill had tucked away all over Gerry’s room and the seven clocks artfully arranged on the mantlepiece, reluctantly agrees to make some inquiries about Seven Dials. Gerry referred to it in a letter he was drafting to his sister Loraine, but why would he regret divulging anything about a famously seedy London neighborhood? Could it be related to the seven clocks in his room? Or to the super-secret project Sir Oswald and George Lomax were speaking publicly about? Is it code for something else entirely?

    While we’re asking questions, Bundle wants to know what’s up with a man she spots in the inquest and then again in the town square as she and Ronnie are talking. Who is he? The man clearly notices her, then notices her noticing him, and starts briskly walking away. Bundle, who I now suspect is part bloodhound, dashes off after him. He gets away, but thanks to a bit of quick thinking in a public phone booth, Bundle learns that the mysterious man had just called Scotland Yard. We’ll learn soon enough from the credits that this is Police Superintendent Battle, but for Bundle, he’ll have to remain a tantalizing mystery for a bit longer.

    Later feeling her oats, Bundle announces her intention to drive up to London to meet with Ronnie and do a bit more investigating. Lady Caterham can only sigh that her sole surviving child is too much like her late intrepid husband, who we now learn is actually the same man we saw getting gored to death by a bull in Ronda, Spain, in 1920. (Does his family know the grisly details of Lord Caterham’s death?) The plot thickens further when Bundle, driving hell-for-leather down a country lane, comes across someone lying in the middle of the road. It’s poor Ronnie, bleeding out from a gunshot wound, and with his last breath, he urges Bundle to “tell Jimmy Thesiger … Seven Dials.”

    Now we have two murders on our hands, and it’s time for some informed speculation. I’m eliminating Sir Oswald and Lady Coote from consideration on the grounds that they’re written as far too gauche to be mixed up in Gerry’s death. In addition to Sir Oswald thanking the staff, Lady Coote is straight-up mean to the maid she was assigned, and they talk openly about money. Perhaps worst of all, they can’t resist informing Lady Caterham that they paid for the scholarship that covered tuition for their excellent secretary, Mr. Bateman, at the same posh boarding school Tommy had attended. None of these behaviors are crimes, but for those to the manor born, they may as well be. The Cootes are basically walking around with a giant neon sign above their heads flashing “RED HERRING.” I know who I think killed Gerry, but Ronnie’s death complicates my hypothesis, and I won’t say more about my suspicions until the final episode. Gentle readers, do you have any particular suspects in mind yet?

    • As Bundle and Lady Caterham, Mia McKenna-Bruce and Helena Bonham Carter are very well cast — they resemble each other just enough to be believable as mother and daughter, and McKenna-Bruce’s performance seems like a cousin to Bonham Carter’s breakout performance as Lucy Honeychurch in A Room With a View.

    • Tredwell is played by Guy Siner, a legendary British “Hey, it’s that guy.” He’s been in a bit of everything over the decades, but I remember him best as Lieutenant Gruber from ’Allo, ’Allo!, a long-running series about French resistance fighters of varying degrees of enthusiasm outwitting the Nazis in Vichy France. A comedy, obviously.

    • Speaking of Tredwell, in a robust field, he delivers my favorite line of the episode. Regarding the clocks on Gerry’s mantlepiece, he primly tells Bundle that “what a gentleman does in the privacy of his room, with as many clocks as he chooses, is his own affair!” And you know what? He’s right. Our casual disrespect for horological privacy has gone too far!

    • The morning after the big party, Tredwell has wisely anticipated the needs of the very hungover young folks by putting out a serving tray of dry toast and liver salts, a new-to-me old-timey product that sounds a lot like a precursor to Alka Seltzer.

    • To defend this section against baseless accusations of being little more than a Tredwell fanzine, I’ll note that this episode marks the third time I’ve seen Nabhaan Rizwan, who plays Ronnie, play a character who meets an untimely deaths.

    • And finally, if you were wondering what exactly a marquess is, Debrett’s has you covered. Outside of the royal family and all their HRHs, the nobility ranking goes duke, marquess, earl, viscount, baron. Pretty spiffy, in other words: Lord Caterham would have outranked fellow fictional aristocrats Anthony, Viscount Bridgerton and Robert, Earl of Grantham.

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    Sophie Brookover

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  • Vanderpump Rules Recap: Pump It Up

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    Jason has a penis pump, and Angelica cannot stop talking about it.
    Photo: Bravo

    Remember back in the day when the cast of Vanderpump Rules had undiagnosed drug problems they would rather do nothing about? Remember how much fun that was? Remember fighting about the “pasta” and Jax Taylor’s very obvious cocaine sweats as he whipped off a chunky knit to fight in a Vegas parking lot? Oh, those were the days. Now we have Shayne talking about being off fentanyl and meth for more than a decade and we can’t even make fun of him. He wants to get help. He wants to stay sober. What do we even do with this? Is this what we signed up for?

    I’m kidding, of course, and I support Shayne on his sober journey. He’s not even Cali sober like DJ James Kennedy; he gave up weed, mushrooms, ketamine, and DMT years ago. He tells Marcus that he picked up a bottle of kratom and was thinking about using it. DMT? Kratom? What even are these drugs? Am I so old and uncool that the kids invented all new drugs when I wasn’t looking? Should I, I don’t know, maybe try them? No, no, no, no, no, no. That seems like a bad idea. It’s also a good idea that Shayne isn’t doing them either since the last time he picked something up, he ended up in a two-year relapse.

    Shayne tells us that he learned about drugs from his family members, who introduced him to all of these substances. It’s come up again because his family — his father, Shayne; his mother, Shane; and his sister, Shaine — is visiting to see the premiere of his short film, and they’re on drugs, and that is a giant trigger for him. Learning more about his family made everything about his personality click into place. It’s the same as when Natalie tells us that she had a “toxic” childhood with a difficult mother who used to say, “I love you, but I don’t like you,” and that she has no relationship with her mom. It’s like, “OOOooooooh. This all makes so much more sense now.”

    It was sweet to see the Shaynes at Shayne’s movie premiere. Knowing everything I know, it’s going to be so hard not to make fun of the poky little venue — that the footage looked cheaper than buy-one-get-one-free ramen packets, that it was part of a triple bill. The best thing that can be said about Shayne’s performance is that he really fills the hell out of a tank top. Now that we know everything he’s been through, I really don’t want to say those things. I should just be nice about all of it: all of his Hollywood dreams, all of his happy endings.

    Instead, maybe we should make fun of Shayne’s friend Marcus and what happened between him and Kim at the after-party. When they arrive, Marcus tells Kim that she’s giving “too many special hugs” to people. Um, we saw the footage. There was nothing special about any of those hugs. Those hugs were less special than an episode of Diff’rent Strokes in which a photographer tries to touch Arnold in his bathing-suit area. In his confessional, Marcus says Kim yelled at him about him hugging Natalie, so he’s bringing it up only because she started it.

    I’m sorry, but this is a radioactive whirlpool worse than flushing weaponized uranium. She says something to him; he gets retribution by being jealous of her; she texts him “I love only you”; he ignores her; she cries in the bathroom, ruining her mascara; her friend buys her a drink; he continues to ignore her; she says if he keeps this up, he’s going to lose her; the next morning, she takes him back and doesn’t bring it up; he knows he’s never going to lose her; and they do it over and over again until they ruin both their and their children’s lives. This whole dynamic is absolutely terrible, and someone needs to tell Kim to run. Ruuuuuuunnnnnn. Run like the wind. Run like cheap stockings. Run like the world’s last refrigerator. Run like Forrest Gump with the braces falling off his legs as he goes right into every war and onto every shrimp-fishing boat in the world. RUUUUUUUUUNNNNNNNNN.

    To her credit, Demy tells her something like this. First, she tries to intervene and get Marcus to treat his girlfriend like a human being by ordering her a cocktail called a Boo Bear, which is the most inappropriately-named cocktail to get in the middle of a domestic mishap. Then she goes to the ladies’ room to check on Kim and finally says, “He’s never going to change. This is who he is.” Exactly. This is who he is. This is how it is always going to go, and while Kim might think she deserves it or that this is what love looks like, she doesn’t, and it’s not, and I hope she realizes it soon and keeps this corrosive sludge off our television forever.

    Oh my God, can we talk about something fun? How about penis pumps and merch shoots? Those seem fun, and that’s what most of the episode was about. Angelica arrives at TomTom for a photo shoot for “Shag the Chef” aprons and the ugliest bejeweled hoodies that fell out of Ed Hardy’s backside, and she’s having lots of nerve pain from her time at the jujitsu studio with Jason. Poor guy — he thought he was going to a pussy palace, pussy palace, pussy palace, but it was just a dojo, dojo, dojo. When she’s crying about her back pain, Lisa Vanderpump asks her what’s wrong, and she tells her about her back pain but also that Jason gave her the ick because he has an OnlyFans and a penis pump. She then asks Lisa if she knows what that is and Lisa feigns ignorance, but come on — she was once a young lady in swinging London. She knows.

    Thankfully, Chris, Jason’s identical cousin, explains in his confessional that it’s not for erectile dysfunction. He says he uses one because he is on OnlyFans and trying to overdeliver. “If you go to a steakhouse, you don’t want a normal steak,” he says. “You want something, thick, juicy, and a little intimidating.” Whooo. Yes, boy. Amen. I’m going to need to fan myself. Also, I don’t think I’ll need that pump for the next 15 minutes or so.

    Angelica keeps bringing up this penis pump, and Chris finally tells her that it’s disrespectful. In this moment, I agree with Angelica. It’s hard to have a pornographic account and then get a little precious when people find out you’re also pumping the penis. I’m glad that, between the filming of this scene and his confessionals, Chris is ready to own both his account and his pumping. It’s just that Angelica was being really annoying in the moment, and he’s right: She was bringing it up to embarrass them.

    But this is the last time that I’m going to agree with Angelica for the rest of the episode. When everyone at the photo shoot goes from TomTom over to SUR, she tries to talk to Jason about everything that’s going on, and he tells her that he has to go check on his tables because he is currently working two of his jobs (and three, if he takes a dick pic in the bathroom while Demy isn’t forcing him to check his section). She says he’s not paying her enough attention or even apologizing, and it is neither the time nor the place for this conversation. There is a table of very unhappy bears who need refills on their mimosas and another order of French toast for the table, and they need Jason to come over and take that order so they can watch him walk away in the tight pants that Lisa forces the SURvers to wear because she knows how to keep a table of hungry bears happy and it is ass.

    The penis pump comes up again when Angelica pulls Audrey aside at Shayne’s premiere party for a little chat. Audrey tells her that her trust was broken when Angelica kept bringing up the penis pump at the Ed Hardy Wannabe shoot. Angelica went back to her old arguments, blaming it all on Jason. She says if Jason didn’t want people to know about it, then he should have put it in a drawer rather than in the shower. She thinks she could go online and sign up right now to watch him using the penis pump. Angelica is totally missing the point here. It’s not about the pump; it’s about sharing something that Audrey told her in confidence. As Audrey points out, they were drinking matcha in their PJs, having a little kiki (in front of at least two cameras, a sound guy, and a producer). Audrey says that the way she brought it up was fun and as a joke, but Angelica was bringing it up as a way to shame Jason for both his porn career and the, ahem, tools of the trade. I think Audrey might be the only person on this whole damn show whom I actually like.

    As Audrey tells Angelica that she doesn’t want to be her little sister, that she’s just going to be cordial to her from now on, two new people join the party. The gay guy says he just needs to say “hi” to the kids who work for him; he needs to make a little appearance at this work party. He brings Katie Maloney Schwartz Maloney for one drink before they stop off at Junior Cookies for half a dozen of the Heather Dubrow special. She sees two girls fighting over who is a better friend; she sees a woman trapped in a toxic relationship with a man who is too mean to leave and too nice to let her go; she sees them all drunk, all making mistakes, all thinking about calling in sick the next day when their co-workers know exactly what they were up to. She’s been here. She’s been them. She’s had all the Boo Bears and turned down all the pasta. “I just …” Katie says as she turns straight around and waits for her friend in his car, dreaming about gluten.

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    Brian Moylan

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  • RuPaul’s Drag Race Recap: When Athena Takes the Stand

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    Welcome back, girl groups! Oh, how I missed you. Except maybe not this version of girl groups, filled with dated references that most of the girls don’t fully understand. Okay, let me back up a little.

    Last season on RuPaul’s Drag Race, the show eschewed girl groups entirely, and it was a mistake. I thought it was weird. Suzie Toot told me it was weird when I interviewed her. And fans thought it was weird. We all like girl groups! Watching the girls struggle to put together a number reflects what they actually do at home, and the ones who are good at performing can use that to their advantage on tour and online. It’s the single challenge that most accurately reflects these girls’ ability to work as a drag queen in 2026. In the U.K., it’s become an incredibly standard challenge, spurred on by that country’s love of girl groups like Spice Girls, Little Mix, Girls Aloud, and others.

    But for some reason, American Drag Race refuses to let the girls just do modern girl-group drag. In season 14, they had to do doo-wop songs based on girl groups that the girls clearly did not know the differences between. In season 15, they literally had to become old ladies for some reason. The high-water mark for girl-group challenges in recent years is season 16, which got out of the girls’ way and just let them slay. (Remember how Nymphia ate that? Oh, those were the days.) Maybe this difference is because we have a messier history with girl groups in America, especially during the show’s heyday in the 2010s, when the only American girl group of note was Fifth Harmony, who were a mess.

    But in 2026, girl groups are huge again — specifically K-pop groups like Le Sserafim, Blackpink, and the globally based Katseye, which even includes some American members. So I was excited when I heard they were going to do “Q-pop” groups. Until, that is, RuPaul revealed the songs’ genres were all just ’60s–’80s pastiche. Look, I believe drag queens need a Rolodex of pop culture that extends beyond their years. The problem is that the show refuses to update its Rolodex. You’re telling me that Leland couldn’t work up a serviceable “Gnarly” parody that the girls could do something with? Instead, we have to sit through critiques about how Mandy Mango could not accurately evoke Sylvester. These girl groups need to get with the times.

    Still, it’s a pretty solid episode. There’s drama and hurt feelings, with some queens managing to stand out as performers and other queens managing to stand out as characters. Chief among that latter camp is Athena Dion, who, it turns out, is not a “Sasha Colby.” No, no … She’s a “Shannel.” Specifically, she’s a season-one Shannel: a classic drag queen who is utterly sour when things don’t go her way. In other words, she’s a perfect shit-stirrer for reality TV.

    The episode starts with Ru announcing the challenge: Form a “Q-pop” group and perform a song in one of three genres — doo-wop pop (à la Wham), disco (à la Sylvester), or punk (à la the Runaways). Then, Ru lets Nini Coco and Vita VonTesse Starr, as the top two from last week, pick the teams, with the four unchosen queens forming the final group of “leftovers.” They end up as such:

    Team Nini: Nini, Mia Starr, Ciara Myst, Myki Meeks, and Kenya Pleaser

    Team Vita: Vita, Briar Blush, Juicy Love Dion, Discord Addams, and Jane Don’t

    Team Leftovers: Athena Dion, Darlene Mitchell, Mandy Mango, and DD Fuego

    Athena is obviously pissed not to be chosen and promptly becomes a sourpuss for the entire episode because of it (immediately proving Nini and Vita right for not choosing her).

    When it comes time to pick the song, every single team wants disco and nobody wants punk, which is obviously a mistake. Punk requires the least dancing, so it’s helpful if you have any only-okay or even bad dancers, which every group has. Plus, it’s easily parody-able and visually interesting. And why on earth do these queens want disco? It’s Ru’s favorite genre, and she’s obviously going to be pedantic about their interpretations of it. Anyone who doesn’t have a backlog of references about disco should avoid it at all costs. The pop song is totally fine, but ultimately, it’s hard to break through on a restrained, chipper track. Athena and Vita go at it until the ungainly Discord, who literally performs in a rock band, manages to convince her team that punk is the way to go (she’s right). And Athena, who keeps referring to disco as “her era,” gets the genre she wants.

    During choreography, Nini’s pop team is filled with at-least-competent movers along with Mia Starr, who is a professional dancer, so it goes swimmingly. The punk team has to deal with Discord, who cannot move, as proven on last week’s runway, but otherwise seems fine with Juicy taking the lead. And the disco team has no clear leadership except a pissed-off Athena, and they are also saddled with Darlene, who is awful at choreo.

    The vocal recordings with Michelle go well enough for everyone except Nini, who has lost her voice. It’s definitely sad to see her struggle, but for all her freak-outs, I was confident that the judges wouldn’t hold it against her. That’s one level of unfair too far for even RuPaul.

    When the performances begin, Team Disco goes first. They are … not good. Athena starts the number off and performs exactly the kind of Drag Race verse that people like to make fun of. She has the most basic of rhythms, and sings lines like, “Pay no mind to what they say / This is your journey, lead the way.” It’s tough to watch. And the choreo, which she spearheaded, is the most basic drag choreo imaginable. Athena is a classic drag queen, but her lack of innovation is immediately hurting her. Darlene can’t dance, but she creates a fully realized ditzy character and includes a Sylvester-y high-note bit that Ru loves. She knows how to play the game. Mandy is overenergetic and performs by-the-book drag choreo, with an uncharismatic vocal performance on her verse. DD isn’t bad so much as she is boring.

    The doo-wop team is definitely better than the disco team, but I wouldn’t say they kill it. Mostly, that’s because the song sucks. Mia Starr fares the best, largely because she turns it into a Meghan Trainor track. She performs it very well, has a good voice, and has innate musicality. I hate her costume, though. Kenya does pretty well, with a cute verse. She does lose her face a little bit when she kicks her leg in the air. On TV and on Drag Race, you need to be “on” all the time. Ciara Myst really leans into the “inspirational” idea in her lyrics, which I’ll cop to finding a bit grating. Her verse isn’t bad, but it plays like Ms. Rachel for tenderqueers. Also, her costume is too busy. Nini is in the unfortunate situation of not being able to perform to her vocal recording. There’s definitely a mismatch between her big performance and her meek voice on the track, but it’s unavoidable. She definitely deserves her safe placement. Myki sounds good and looks a lot like guest judge Dove Cameron. I was impressed that this comedy queen could hold a tune and dance pretty well. Excited to see what she does next week in RDR Live! when she’s finally in her element.

    Finally, it’s the punk group. One huge advantage they have is that their song’s chorus is the only one without faux-inspirational lyrics for them to write to. Instead, they all get to be hot, badass sluts. It makes for much better drag. Discord is first. She is very lucky to be on the punk team, because I think she’d go home on either of the other teams. She mostly just stands still and performs her verse with fear in her eyes. I don’t think she’s long for this world. Vita has a little bit of the Athena problem, where her musicality is very basic, but she makes up for it with a balls-to-the-wall performance. Briar surprises me! I think she is one of the clear standouts in her group, and her look is sexy and fun. Jane goes next, and she’s great. She has a clear idea, playing a woman possessed by the devil who is vacillating between a demonic voice and her normal, more meek one. It’s very funny, very well executed, and totally inventive. Clear winner. Juicy is great throughout the number, but I wouldn’t say punk is her natural habitat. The judges end up choosing just two tops. I think if there were a third, it would be her, but I get why her pirouettes didn’t inspire much love in the rocker-chick song.

    The runway is “favorite body part” — always a great one and vague enough that it gives the queens a lot of space to have fun interpreting it. Athena goes first, showcasing her back with a … backless dress! She looks good in her ever-classic drag. Next is Darlene, doing “skin” with a trashy sunburnt look. It’s great. Her boobs are hamburgers! There are roaches in her hair! Darlene is one to watch. Mandy showcases her face by going as her grandmother’s side table with a photo of her on it. The wood-table base does not read. DD immediately made me laugh when she came out as a cloud with legs to show off her legs, but then she stood up and was wearing an ill-fitting pink leotard. Not great!

    Mia Starr wore a full-body dress that just showed off her neck, her back, her pussy, and her crack, with the reveals of each built in. It’s clever, but not pretty, and the zipper on the back isn’t pretty. Kenya shows off her “everything” in a stoned bodysuit. I get it, but also … do the damn challenge. Ciara turns my favorite look of hers so far, featuring her eyes, with eyes on her head and her boobs. It looks cute! She looks like Carol Burnett. Nini stuns on the runway, wearing a 3-D-printed brain hat and a gorgeous pink look. This is the first Nini look that has blown me away, but it’s looking like she really is the runway queen of the season. This rocks. Myki wears a leotard with a billboard advertising her legs over the top of it. Totally fine for a week where you’re guaranteed safe.

    Discord also wears a backless dress. It’s an ugly mishmash of black and gold. She continues to walk like Tina Belcher, and her lace is a completely different color from her face. She is very, very lucky that the disco team was bad this week. Vita shows off her butt. It’s a black leather leotard with belts that looks great and does, in fact, show off her butt. But I would prefer to see a little more wit. Briar wears an all-covering black-widow outfit, with just one finger poking out. It’s funny! Very Testament of Ann Lee (go see that movie). Jane shows off her mouth with a “Wendy Williams on Masked Singer”–esque outfit featuring a giant red mouth. It’s very visually striking. She knows how to deliver impact. Finally, Juicy shows off her “left leg” with a dress that features just one leg poking out. It’s cute but not jaw-dropping.

    The disco team is put in the bottom as a group, while Ru declares Jane and Mia tops. That makes sense to me, and it gives the judges a chance to express how much they like Darlene and Athena’s general drag, even as they tsk-tsk them for their challenge performances. Ultimately, Jane wins the challenge, and Mandy and DD are made the bottom two. I think that’s mostly right if you’re taking future performance into account, but I do think Athena did the most “wrong” this week. The lip-sync song is Dove Cameron’s “Too Much,” which is exactly the kind of anonymous pop track that you’d find playing at drag shows across America on any Tuesday night. In other words: It’s a clean slate and a completely fair fight. Mandy throws the table off of her and then performs an unremarkable but totally energetic version of the track, with lots of stunts but not a ton of musicality. DD just kind of walks. And so DD Fuego becomes our first out! I’m definitely disappointed to see New York out of the competition so early this year, but I can’t really argue with the results.

    • Nobody gets into a huge fight, and the girls seem mostly happy with the tops and the bottoms this week. Juicy worries about Athena. All in all, a totally fine 22 minutes of time.

    • An edit I loved this week: Pre–lip sync, the two comedy queens of the season, Myki and Jane, double-teaming a description of the queens facing off. Very funny!

    • A joke I loved this week: When the girls ask how much Athena paid DD to claim she’s a team player, DD says, “A trip to Mykonos!”

    • Last week, I claimed that Malaysia was the first queen from Florida. That was obviously wrong, and she instead was the first queen from Miami, and I got confused. Either way, the show’s recent overindexing on FL stands.

    • Trauma Makeup Corner: DD gets to talk about growing up in Monterrey, Mexico, but she doesn’t cry about it. Discord talks about being in a punk band and standing up for queer rights. Later on the runway, Darlene cries about missing performing as a queer person while being a bedroom queen after getting sober. Jane and Darlene have both cried on the runway recently. I think both were completely natural, and, at the same time, I do think enterprising queens would be smart to save their tears for when they’re in front of RuPaul, who loves vulnerability.

    • Gay thoughts from gay people: This week, Michelle Visage sent me her new perfume, Wednesday. It smells a little minty and a little like leather. It’s honestly very nice. Thank you, Michelle!

    • Predicted top four: Jane, Vita, Nini, and a wild card. Darlene?

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    Jason P. Frank

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  • Heated Rivalry Recap: Dancing On My Own

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    Last week’s cutesy, comedy-less rom-com was all good and well — a little something for the moms watching — but thank god we’re finally back to the story between Ilya and Shane that got us invested in this show in the first place. Their long-distance, slow-burn situationship is well portrayed through a montage at the beginning of the episode that spans 2014 to 2016. We see them continue to text, Ilya partying and Shane shooting brand deals, and both checking their calendars for the next game they have against each other. Those games are intercut with glimpses of the sex they’re having afterwards, and after Shane wins two cups, Ilya texts him, “The only cup you’ll have next year is the one I’ll take off with my mouth.”

    But naturally, over this long stretch of time, people are asking about their respective romantic lives. During a trip to the aquarium with Hayden and his four kids, who only appear off-screen (saving production money that they can then spend on body oil), he asks about an ex of Shane’s, and tries to set him up with one of his wife’s friends. Even Shane’s parents try to set him up with a Swedish princess — a brief break from their usual focus on his brand deals. Even Ilya gets pressed by Svetlana about whether he’s dating, and she asks about the mysterious “Jane” he’s texting. But neither of them seems open to any romantic prospects outside of one another.

    Finally, the pair meet again at Ilya’s place, and waste no time kissing right there in the entryway, where Ilya lifts Shane up onto the counter. We then cut to Shane riding him in bed like a Zamboni, before getting spun around in a smooth position switch. Afterwards, when Shane suggests that he should go, Ilya asks him to spend the night, adding, “I’m not done with you.” Even hotter than the bare asses.

    It’s also a marked shift from what we’re used to seeing between them, especially from Ilya. In the first two episodes, their relationship was predominantly physical, but naturally, over such a long stretch of time, a personal connection has grown. Amongst other things, a-yo! What happens when Shane stays is far more intimate and vulnerable than anything we’ve seen thus far — they cuddle, Ilya asks if Shane’s ginger ale is cold enough, and even offers to make him a tuna melt. A tuna melt! Get a room, you two, Jesus. But with this evolution comes confusion. Purely sexual or fully romantic are much easier connections for someone to wrap their head around than this grey, in-between area on that spectrum.

    For example, when they’re sitting on the couch, Ilya mentions sleeping with Svetlana and dating women, which Shane seems to bristle at. In turn, Shane says he likes girls too, even though Ilya hasn’t seen any proof of this. “I like girls, but I also like you,” Ilya tells him. “Not as a person, of course. But you have a good mouth.” The barb points out the elephant slowly wandering into the room — are they just mouths (and butts), or are they people in each other’s lives? While the first half of this conversation points to the former, the next part, in which Shane asks if Ilya’s father is okay after overhearing a tense phone call, suggests the latter. “Oh, you speak Russian now?” he asks, to which Shane replies, “I know the word for father.” Yeah, I bet he knows the Russian word for daddy, too.

    Cuddling on the couch quickly turns to Shane getting on top of Ilya yet again, this time jerking them both off. But post-completion, Shane suddenly has a change of heart and quickly decides to leave, saying, “I’m sorry. I can’t do this.” It’s like he’s reading off that Post-It note Berger left for Carrie Bradshaw. That grey area might just be too much for him to wrap his head around.

    Later in the episode, Shane gets invited to a party where the show essentially presents him with his two potential paths. First, when he orders a drink, a seemingly flirtatious male bartender gives it to him for free — so that’s what’s available behind Door Number One. But behind Door Number Two is the actress Rose Landry (played by Yellowjackets’s Sophie Nélisse). Impossible to say which is the gayer choice: gay sex or hanging out with Young Melanie Lynskey. Ultimately, he chooses the latter. She’s in town shooting a new “X-Squad” movie, and being that she grew up in a family of hockey fans, the pair naturally hit it off.

    But what’s really driving this connection? A high profile relationship would make sense if Shane was facing questions about his sexuality from the public, but any pressure to date has really just come from his close friends and family. There’s also the possibility that he’s actually into Rose. But the timing of this is interesting, with it happening right after Ilya mentioned sleeping with women himself. Is this some kind of competitive bi-off? Or maybe he’s scared that his connection with Ilya is beginning to shift more toward the romantic than the physical, and this is an attempt to run or course-correct.

    In any case, the relationship soon goes public. Paparazzi photos of the pair are taken, Rose wears his jersey to a game, and they quickly become the hot celebrity/sports couple — like Travis and Taylor. Ilya, being the Karlie Kloss in this situation, is, of course, disgruntled by the coverage.

    Two weeks later, they’re playing against each other again, and per usual, Shane is on his phone before the game. But this time it’s Rose he’s texting, who wants him to go out to the club with her afterwards. Old habits die hard, though, and we see him check his messages with Ilya…but nothing. Maybe that’s why they both end up underperforming in what turns out to be a dud of a game, though we do at least get one quick glimpse of Ilya throwing Shane up against the glass out on the ice. Oh, I didn’t realize this was an exhibition match.

    After the game, Shane meets up with Rose as planned, and despite being exhausted, agrees to dance with her at the club. But guess who also decided to go to what seems to be Montreal’s only club after the game? Ilya, who watches on after spotting hockey’s new it-couple together across the dance floor. But two can play at that game, so Ilya finds a girl of his own and ups the ante by making out with her in front of Shane. I can already picture the fan edits of this scene set to “Dancing On My Own” by Robyn. But since this is a Crave Original, that of course isn’t the song actually playing, it’s “All The Things She Said” by (fittingly) Russian duo t.A.T.u.

    But quick sidebar: what’s the deal with Rose’s friend Miles? He’s actively flirting with Shane at their table, makes eyes at Ilya at the bar, and then, in the strangest move of all, joins Shane and Rose on the dance floor and not only grinds up behind Shane, but kisses his neck like they’re in Challengers? And it goes completely unacknowledged by everyone. What the fuck is that about?

    Perhaps because the club refused to play Robyn’s music, both of our hockey players soon leave. Shane has sex with Rose, which feels a little like watching a dog walk on its hind legs, whereas Ilya is left to jerk off alone in the shower. But as we cut back and forth between their respective completions, it feels like the moment they’re both actually still in is the brief eye contact they made on the dance floor.

    • 12:34: Shane’s butt in motion, grinding as he rides Ilya. Classless.

    • 12:50: A rear shot of him walking toward Ilya in bed, fully nude. Tasteful.

    • 41:28: Ilya’s hockey butt narrowly avoids shattering the glass as he jerks off in the shower. Christmas came early and so did he.

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    Tom Smyth

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  • Southern Charm Recap: The Wrong Stuff

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    Southern Charm

    A Moveable Beast

    Season 11

    Episode 4

    Editor’s Rating

    3 stars

    The way Craig brings up a baseless rumor in the middle of a fight with Austen is a perfect example of his erratic behavior since the big breakup.
    Photo: Bravo

    It must be tough being Craig Conover, being that handsome and yet that consistently wrong. Just look at this non-fight with Austen that Craig turns into a big deal by handling the situation as deftly as a blindfolded juggler with vertigo. Craig initially got mad that Austen was making cracks about him hanging out in the hot tub, drinking with girls. He starts with telling Austen that it’s silly to be against fun. He is entirely correct. Then he says that Austen is just jealous that Craig is single and he’s not because he might be unhappy in his relationship, which is also correct. Then he says, “Austen, keep running your mouth and Shep is going to say something that’s going to ruin your life.” Okay, now you’re wrong, now you’re entirely wrong!

    His first incorrect assumption is that if Austen keeps talking, Shep is going to step in and defend Craig, but Craig doesn’t need defending, and he is the one who turned Austen being a bit of a dick into this whole fight that is going to ruin Whitner’s birthday party. His second incorrect assumption is that Shep knows something that will ruin Austen’s life, which I don’t think he really does. This is why the cast keeps talking about how they’re afraid of Craig and how unpredictable he is. It’s the escalation from nothing to scorched earth. Madison points out that over the past several years, when he was with Paige and drinking less, he was focused on his business, being successful, and getting along with his friends. Since the breakup, he’s back to drinking and, well, cue the old footage of Craig being an asshole for no reason!

    Craig and Austen go inside to continue their fight, and Shep tells the table what Craig is talking about. Apparently, when Shep was in New York a few weeks ago, some women in a bar approached him and told him that their friend was talking to Austen. Shep brought this up to Craig to ask if he should even concern Austen about it, and Craig said “no,” to preserve Austen’s peace. I think that is the right play. Can these random strangers in a bar, whose friend very well could be lying to them, be trusted? No. Craig knows this. However, as soon as he was a little peeved at Austen, he brought it up. Sure, he doesn’t exactly spill or reveal what was said, but he does mention it at a group event in front of cameras and then forces Shep to bring it up when they both decided that it wasn’t worth it.

    Dude, that’s wrong! Not only is it then giving credence to something that is no more than a rumor, something that Craig already dismissed as a made-up attack on his reputation, but it’s also putting Shep and Austen’s relationship in jeopardy because now Austen is mad at Shep for talking to Craig about his relationship. Now, I know there would be no show without these guys talking shit behind one another’s backs all the time, but fair is fair, and when they both decided not to bring it up, they should have left it there.

    Inside, Craig and Austen’s fight gets deeper with Craig saying he’s upset with Austen for saying he’s afraid of him. Then he calls it a lie, saying that Austen isn’t afraid of him. Then he asks him, “Are you afraid of me?” while yelling and displaying the exact behavior that, yes, Austen is afraid of. This is what drives me crazy about Craig. He says that Austen is lying and not scared of him, but then later he tells Salley, “I’m not going to be gaslit into thinking I did something wrong.” Craig is the epitome of believing feelings over facts. If he feels Austen isn’t afraid of him, then that is a fact. If he feels he did nothing wrong, then he did nothing wrong, and any attempt to convince him otherwise is “gaslighting,” the incurable gonorrhea of words.

    The problem is that Craig is wrong. He brought up something he and Shep decided wasn’t worth mentioning in front of both a group of people and the cameras. That makes sure it’s going to be discussed even though he’s still hiding behind not being the one who said it, like an idiot standing in a hurricane with a bodega umbrella. He even says, “I tried my best not to get involved.” Dude! You brought it up! There would be nothing if not for you! If people tell him that raising the issue is wrong and he should apologize to Austen, as multiple people suggest, that is not “gaslighting,” that is having a different opinion (and the correct one). That is being a good friend and telling Craig he was out of bounds. That is defending truth, decency, humanity, democracy, net neutrality, and the $5 foot-long.

    When Craig talks about gaslighting to Salley, she and her extra e tell him how great he is and how he’s really just misunderstood. But is he? Is he great? This is so Salley, to drop everything and agree with a man just so that she’ll pick her, choose her. There is one person who has Salley’s number and that is our beloved Molly. As the fight was raging inside, Salley said she was telling Craig to apologize; she wasn’t just over there flirting. Molly says it looks like she was flirting, and Salley then tells Molly to hush up because she knows Molly has been talking about her. Salley said she was talking facts about Molly behaving inappropriately at Madison’s shower, but Molly was making things up about Salley calling dibs on every man in Charleston.

    This is where the fight gets exciting. Salley asks who she has been calling dibs on. Then Venita, who is her best friend, mind you, grabs the muggle sitting next to her and starts pawing at him, doing a Salley impersonation and saying, “Craig! Craig! Craig! Craig!” Molly then calls Salley out on telling Charley not to talk to Craig, which she says she didn’t say. Then both Venita and Rodrigo, my favorite cat dad, tell her that, yes, she did say that and the footage proves it. I love that Salley is trying to change the story, trying to convince us she didn’t do something, and even her friends are like, “No, you are that bitch. Own it.” Salley, like any Englishman on any beach anywhere in the world, is burnt.

    The day after the fight, we find out that Salley and Charley kept Craig company in his hot tub until 4 a.m., but that nothing happened. Salley thinks it’s weird that Craig didn’t make a move. He says in a confessional that when he’s after a girl, he likes to play a long game. Then he has Charley come over with a bunch of art that looks like it was lifted from the conference rooms of airport Best Westerns. Oh, Charley is totally winning. It seems like Craig is way more into her than into Salley. However, if I were to predict what is going to happen, I would say that Salley is going to make a move on Craig, they’re going to bone, and that is how Salley is going to “win.” Then Craig will end up pursuing Charley, and Salley will get all bent out of shape. I’m telling you, I have read the tea leaves (i.e., the remnants of Jell-O shots at the bottom of Craig’s hot tub).

    Also, after the party, we get a nice scene with Madison and her son Hudson, where she talks about waiting for the new baby and her changing relationship with her son. Then we get a glimpse into Whitner’s life and, well, it’s giving viral morning routine with Saratoga Springs water vibes. He gets up at precisely 4:35 a.m., takes the dog out, runs and exercises for a few hours (and, damn, son, it’s working!), and then he is at work at 8 a.m., working as a lawyer and calling his adorable mother. If I wasn’t fully in lust with our man before, well, I am now, Patrick Bateman cosplay or no.

    The episode ends with the boys talking to their confidantes about what they should do about the fight. Charley tells Craig that he should apologize, and he agrees, but he doesn’t. Shep tells Molly that he told Craig about the rumor he heard without ill intent, but that Craig brought it up at the party with ill intent. Austen is still more likely to forgive Craig first because that’s the weird relationship they have.

    Finally, Austen has Rodrigo come over with his two new kittens, who were part of a litter from Rodrigo’s cat. One is named Martini and the other is named Piper, just so that in a full-circle Southern Charm moment, Austen can shout, “Piper, noooooo!” at the cat like Parker Posey in The White Lotus. As he’s talking about Shep and Craig both talking about him behind his back, he realizes that maybe they’re not his friends after all. As he says this, Martini and Piper are tottering their way along the couch cushions, still not entirely confident in their bodies, still not afraid of the world and all their horrors. ’Tini walks right into Austen’s lap, mewing up at him like she has a message, something deep to tell him. When he reaches out to touch her, she rolls herself up and folds herself over, tucking her whole body so that it fits in Austen’s meaty hand. That’s all she had to tell him, that was the entire message, and it’s one that Austen hasn’t received in a long time.

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    Brian Moylan

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  • Stranger Things Recap: To Catch a Demogorgon

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    Stranger Things

    The Turnbow Trap

    Season 5

    Episode 3

    Editor’s Rating

    3 stars

    The group pulls a classic Home Alone on a Demogorgon, with mixed results.
    Photo: COURTESY OF NETFLIX

    We’re three episodes in, and already, I am concerned about people’s sleep (or lack thereof). Admittedly, I’m always worried about whether people are getting enough sleep across all aspects of life because sleep is so important, especially for these teens! The initial crawl that went to shit was the night before, and there are no signs anyone is sneaking a nap anytime soon. The sleep deprivation, however, might explain why our group’s plans are getting more ludicrous by the hour. “The Turnbow Trap” and the plan it refers to really stretch the suspension of disbelief, but it is exciting to watch, so stretch it we will.

    The other reason the crew’s plans are getting wilder and riskier is, as Will points out, because they don’t have time to play it safe. Now that Will knows he is tapping into the hive mind and getting glimpses of what Vecna can see, he and Robin have figured out that Vecna plans on kidnapping more children and his next victim is Dipshit Derek Turnbow. Don’t come at me for being mean about a little kid — everyone calls him that. And he is, in fact, a real dipshit. Not even Holly can stand Derek, and Holly seems pretty chill, aside from being so easily tricked by an evil wizard monster and blindly trusting a man no one else can see. Except for Hopper and Eleven, the whole team meets back at the Squawk to figure out what’s next.

    It’s very sweet to see Will leading the discussions. He and Joyce do eventually have a heart-to-heart about their current dynamic, and Joyce apologizes for being overbearing but admits she is still carrying a lot of guilt and fear from the time he was taken. “What kind of mother doesn’t check on her 11-year-old?” she says. Winona forever, you know? She can let Will spread his wings to a point, but she is always going to be watching and looking out for him. I swear to God if Joyce sacrifices herself for Will at the end of this thing, I will be crying for days.

    But now that Will knows about his connection to Vecna, and they know about Dipshit Derek, they need to figure out a way to protect him. Of course, it would be nice if they could figure out a way to protect Derek that would somehow help them in their search for Holly. And Mike might just have a way. Sure, it involves kidnapping an entire family, but it’s kidnapping to save lives, so Joyce, the only real adult in the room, is fine with it.

    So, yes, Robin (with her new buddy Will) knows exactly where to find a whole bunch of benzos from the hospital, thanks to all the time she’s been spending there with Vickie. Then, they’re going to bake those benzos into a pie. Lucas and Mike have enlisted Erica — you knew she’d pop up at some point — who is best friends with Derek’s sister Tina, to be their inside woman. There is one small hiccup: Twelve days ago, they turned from best friends to archenemies because of some incident in gym and also because it’s middle school and that’s their prerogative. Still, Erica is on board once Mike explains that this isn’t really about Derek, it’s about saving Holly, and also, what they’re asking her to do will surely make it so Tina never wants anything to do with her again. A real win-win-win. That third win is for us because Lucas informs us that every member of the Turnbows is a menace, and he is not wrong. Knock ’em all out, I say. (Safely, of course.)

    Erica’s the perfect person to send in to the Turnbows. She fakes a very sincere-sounding apology and offers Tina’s favorite pie as an olive branch. She’s also able to problem-solve quickly when Tina refuses to eat the pie, and though Tina’s parents and Derek have all passed out as planned, she needs a quick shot to put her to sleep. Erica has no problem administering this. (Is Erica a psychopath?)

    Aside from the Tina debacle, surprisingly, almost everything else goes according to plan. Joyce, Robin, and Will take the now-fast-asleep Turnbows to a farm across town. The team shoves pillowcases on all of the Turnbows’ heads to make sure that even if they wake, Vecna can’t figure out where they’re hiding. Meanwhile, the rest of the team sets up a trap for the Demogorgon they’re sure Vecna will send for Derek once he’s believed to be fast-asleep. The goal is to get the Demogorgon in their trap long enough for Nancy to shoot a tracker into it, and then they’ll be able to follow the tracker on Dustin’s device, which will hopefully lead to Vecna and thus to Holly. The plan includes a mannequin in Derek’s bed, water balloons full of acetone to make the Demo highly flammable, some wood beams to injure the thing, and, yes, a giant square cut out of the living room floor so the monster falls down into the barbed-wire pit below, where Nancy can shoot it with the telemetry-tag tracker before Jonathan lights that baby on fire.

    It all goes according to plan, more or less. It’s once the Demo takes off that there’s a problem. Our tracking team consists of Steve, Dustin, Nancy, and Jonathan in Steve’s now-souped-up BMW (do not even get me started on that), and the Demo is moving fast in the Upside Down. Steve has to blow through some fences and people’s backyards to keep up with it. Suddenly, Dustin sees on his equipment that the Demo has changed course — it has doubled back the way they came and is heading southeast quickly.

    It’s Will who figures out what went wrong. Derek is awake and has managed to get the pillowcase off his head. It’s too late, he tells the group: Vecna knows where they are, and the Demogorgon is on its way. Dipshit Derek is really living up to his name.

    Obviously, time is of the essence here, but it would be swell if the team up top could figure out a way to reestablish communication with Hopper and Eleven in the Upside Down. Those two are acting on theories they’ve hatched without updated intel, and it could prove dangerous.

    We find the two of them still at the wall, but whatever that thing is made out of or whatever it’s hiding, they can’t figure out a way through; El’s powers aren’t strong enough to crack it open. They run out of time exploring it anyway. The military shows up, and they have a fancy new toy they refer to as “the hedgehog” — it emits some type of sonic blast that turns out to be El’s kryptonite (Hop’s word, not mine). As soon as it reaches her, she doubles over in pain. She can barely move, she can’t think, and she certainly can’t use her powers against it. This is a game changer.

    Hopper hides them behind a collapsed billboard and tries to keep El as quiet as possible, but she is hurting. The incident almost ends without them getting noticed, but one of the military guys, Sullivan’s right-hand man, Akers, stops to take a piss on the wall and discovers a knife Hopper accidentally left behind. They turn up the power on the hedgehog, and El screams out in pain. The soldiers realize who’s there, and a shoot-out commences. I guess Hopper has been training with Eleven because he’s basically Rambo now. His grenades kill most of the soldiers, and he’s able to shoot at the hedgehog and disable it — a powered-up Eleven knocks out Akers, the last soldier standing.

    Instead of just running for it, Hopper and Eleven take Akers prisoner. Hopper wants to interrogate him for info on when the next supply run is coming through so that he and Eleven can get unflipped, as it were. Eleven hates this idea — she wants to interrogate him about the wall. If he peed on it, he probably has some idea of what it is, and she is desperate to get through it. The father and daughter decide to compromise. Halfway happy, remember?

    Hopper gets the face-to-face with Akers, but while he’s asking the guy for info that he really does not want to give up, Eleven is rummaging around in his brain. The soldier is terrified, begging her to get out of his head, but El’s very good at this now. She winds up in a memory of his in which he and Sullivan talk to Dr. Kay in her lab. She’s able to follow Dr. Kay down a secured hallway with a big, metal door at the end. It’s locked tight, like a vault, and Hopper presses, but Akers is adamant he doesn’t know what’s behind the door. It doesn’t matter. Once El bounces out of his head, she tells Hopper she could feel the kryptonite coming from behind the door, stronger than the machine the soldiers were driving around with. She thinks it has to be coming from someone with powers like hers — it has to be Vecna. She is convinced the military has him and is using him as a weapon. It certainly seems impossible, since we know Vecna has been freely moving around in his victims’ minds. So who or what is behind that door?

    So far, we’ve done a lot of chatting about Vecna and his plans, but do we see him in action at all in this episode? Sure do. Well, at least, we see him in his Henry Creel skin, being the most thoughtful host to Holly. He’s brought her to some vision or memory or other dimension-type place where the Creel house is shiny and new and contains everything Holly could want (aside from her parents, who Henry swears he’ll bring over once they’re healed). There’s a gorgeous breakfast with her favorite foods and all the dresses she could want, and he even gives her a tape player and a Tiffany cassette. He has to leave for the day — other children to kidnap, one assumes! — and gives Holly free rein, only warning her to never go out into the woods. (Let’s forget, I guess, that if this is Vecna’s world, couldn’t he, like, fix it so she can’t go into the woods? I’m just asking questions here!!)

    Holly seems content to have some me time. But it doesn’t take too long for someone to start ringing that doorbell. When Holly opens the door, no one is there, but there’s a letter inside the mailbox. The note seems to be Henry asking for her help, but he needs her to meet him out by the rocks, which are, of course, through the woods. He even drew a handy map. Holly honestly seems like a smart kid, but she’s being real dumb at the moment. None of this adds up if you think about it for more than ten seconds, but still, Holly goes on her journey through the woods. (She is dressed like a hybrid Dorothy/Little Red, after all.)

    She reaches the rocks, but instead of finding Henry, she thinks she sees a monster in the cave, and so makes a run for it. It is not a monster who runs after her, though; it’s someone in boots and jeans. And when Holly looks up, she finds Max Mayfield staring back down at her. Max lives — I mean, in this vision-memory-mind trap Vecna has built. But still: Max lives.

    • Listen, I know Dustin is acting out because of his grief, but he’s so mean! There’s only so many times you can accept “he’s misplacing his anger over the loss of one brother figure and putting it on to his other brother figure,” okay? When he just drills into Steve’s car to install the telemetry system? What an asshole. These two better make up — it’s already become insufferable.

    • Steve does clock Dustin lying to his friends about how he got so bloodied and bruised, so maybe he’ll be instigating an emotional chat sooner rather than later.

    • Speaking of insufferable, Jonathan is really brooding over this Nancy thing. As suspected, Murray snuck an engagement ring in that Coltrane cassette and is confused when he discovers Jonathan hasn’t popped the question yet. That proposal is going to be a disaster, isn’t it?

    • During the interrogation, Hopper screams at Akers that he would kill a thousand soldiers “to protect the one person that [he] loves.” It might make you tear up for a second until you realize that’s a potent piece of information to just hand over to the enemy, Hop.

    • Ah! Another mention of wormholes! Mr. Clarke is teaching his class — which includes star student Erica Sinclair — about wormholes and the Einstein–Rosen bridge. In short: They’re very unstable!

    • Robin and Will have another moment together at the hospital when Will asks how she knew Vickie was interested in her. She talks to him about little signs snowballing into an avalanche. They also make some jokes about Will’s bowl cut, which is nice for us.

    • Bring back calling people “barf bags”!!

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    Maggie Fremont

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  • Survivor Recap: Idol Chatter

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    Survivor

    Huge Dose of Bamboozle

    Season 49

    Episode 10

    Editor’s Rating

    4 stars

    Photo: Robert Voets/CBS

    This is quickly turning into a season not about alliances but about voting blocs, and each of those blocs is always targeting each other, with at least one skilled player in the middle, taking turns eliminating each bloc’s power bit by bit. Strangely enough, that player is Sophie the Silent, who we didn’t even peep until about episode seven. But they’re all in danger of being subsumed by the man, the myth, the legend, R-I-Z-G-O-D, whose lame grandstanding and credit-taking is likely to derail all of their games just because he’s the flashiest and thirstiest among the group. He didn’t do much this episode, yet at tribal council, he’s the one looking like the hero in front of the jury.

    The episode starts with Sage telling Jawan about Kristina’s idol and then, later, telling Sophie about it as well. Steven made the cardinal sin of telling Sage to gain trust with her. This reminds me of something Sandra Diaz-Twine, the great goddess of strategy, once said: an idol people know about is completely worthless. (I believe she said this on Australian Survivor, which Jeff Probst doesn’t want Americans to see.) The more the information gets out, the more people play around it. Even if a player “wastes” it, then it can save them for a vote while a large coalition mitigates for it, but then it’s effectiveness is done. It can’t really be used to advance a player or a group in the game, like when Parvati Shallow turned the numbers on their head by playing two of them.

    After her ally, Alex, was voted out last episode, Kristina is having a tough time trusting anyone on the island and truly being comfortable in the game. This comes to a head at the reward challenge, where Jeff asks her how she’s doing, and she goes through the five stages of grief in about 60 seconds. “I want my mom. I want my mom so bad right now,” she yells, adding that her mother died a few years ago. “And I don’t have her anymore. And it’s not fair. It’s not fair!” Jeff asks Kristina to tell him about her mother, and she shares some stories, and, honestly, it was a touching moment. Kristina then crawled through a balance beam, almost her whole body in the water, as she slithered onto the platform to try to help her team win a reward. Though she got the swell of inspirational moments and kind words from Jeff (rare for a woman who is not doing well in a challenge), it was all for naught.

    The winning team is Soph, Sophie, Sage, and Steven, who get to go to The Sanctuary (say it all together, “Where schmood schmings schmappen!!”) and eat hamburgers and hot dogs, and Sage gets to launch her plan with Sophie about getting Savannah out of the game. Going into the immunity challenge there are two factions. The trio of Rizo, Soph, and Savannah wants to team up with Jawan and Sage to get out Steven, who they think is a challenge threat and far too likable because he is an endless source of space facts. Sage has other plans. She wants to draw in her ally Jawan, along with Steven, Kristina, and Sophie, to get rid of Savannah, whom she can’t stand, and who everyone is afraid of winning immunity once again.

    Before the immunity challenge, there is a brief intermission when we are entertained by the “musical” stylings of a boy band called 3 Boyz on a Bench. It’s just the remaining three men pretending to rap but mostly just saying “3 Boyz on a Bench,” to a beat repeatedly. I do like the name of their songs — “Don’t Blindside Me Baby,” “You Drive Me Coconuts,” and “I Got Sand in All the Wrong Places” — though I’m not entirely sure if I would like the tunes of any of them.

    The immunity challenge is a classic obstacle course where players have to run through the “teeter tunnel,” which was Jeff’s nickname in college, get a bunch of discs off a pole, free the handle underneath, and then use the handle to run puzzle pieces across a balance beam, and then make the classic Survivor logo puzzle. Steven does the best at the puzzle piece balancing, but he is quickly outpaced by Sophie, who wins the challenge. This might be to her detriment because now she’s back in the spotlight as a challenge beast who they might have to send home.

    I’ve realized that Survivor is a little bit like an episode of Law & Order. Just as the first main suspect is never the person who did it, the first plan you hear about after the immunity challenge is not the person getting sent home. In this case, we’re hearing a lot about Steven and Savannah, but then Steven and Kristina talk about using her idol on Steven to prevent him from going home. They want to split their votes between Savannah and Rizo so that if Rizo gets spooked and plays his idol for Savannah or himself, one or the other is going home. Sage has this great master plan that after this tribe, Savannah will go home, Rizo will use his idol, and Kristina will use hers. She is only going to get one of those three things accomplished.

    That is because Sophie can’t be trusted, at least by Sage and her group. She tells Savannah that Jawan and Sage are going to flip and that Kristina has an idol. The problem is that if Sophie votes with Rizo, Soph, and Savannah, that is only four, which forces a tie. As word of that idol spreads, Soph considers using her Knowledge Is Power to get it for herself. Savannah also reveals that she has an extra vote, so with Sophie, they can turn themselves into the majority rather than just having a tie.

    Then Savannah gets an idea. What if, instead of going for Steven or Kristina, who could block their votes with a deft play of an idol, why not go after the flip-floppers and target Sage and Jawan? Savannah is keen to get out Sage because she knows Sage is coming for her and is smart enough to realize Sage is the real mastermind behind all these plans. They pose the question to Sophie, who, as the swing vote, they want to give the power to make the decision. She says she thinks Jawan has a better shot because he’s more likable but still wants to target Steven because she’s afraid that he might have a better shot of beating her at challenges.

    Going into tribal, the viewers are in a great position because we’re unclear of just who will use their advantages and how, what effect that might have on the vote, who might catch a stray, and who, exactly, will go home. But, again, we know all of the allegiances, who is voting with whom, who betrayed whom, and why. We also know that Jeff Probst is going to get the kind of Advantage-apalooza that he loves, with everyone emptying their pockets of their trinkets to stay in the game. What I most fear is another of Jeff’s favorite things, a live tribal. God, how I hate getting out of their seats and whispering.

    Luckily, we’re spared that, and the trouble is mostly a bunch of people making vague statements about how they can’t trust anyone. It’s after the votes are tallied that we start to get the fireworks. First, Kristina pulls an idol out of her hair and gives it to Jeff to block Steven. Rizo has been fingering a set of beads the whole time and gets up, heading towards Jeff to ask if he can say a few words. “I feel like a lot has happened and I feel like this vote is truly going to show who is with me and who is not,” he says. “I have to do my best to protect myself in this game and for that very reason, I’m playing it for Savannah.”

    Then Jeff shocks us by saying that it isn’t a real immunity idol. Seriously, dude, WT-effing-F. He did all of that to psyche everyone out, to rub their noses in it, to make some kind of grandstanding about how he wants to play an idol; he knows their plan is for Savannah, but actually, he doesn’t need it because he feels safe. He’s rubbing their noses in the fact that he knows something they don’t. In the immortal words of Jawan, who is about to walk out the door, “Playa, play the real thing.”

    The votes are read, and for a minute, I’m thinking that my girl Sage is definitely about to take the long walk to Ponderosa. Then the votes pour in for Savannah and Jawan, sending Jawan packing and showing Kristina that she “wasted” her idol. Jawan asks who did this and Sophie, Soph, Rizo, and Savannah all raise their hands. But it’s what happens next that they should all be afraid of. Rizo jumps to his feet and tells Jawan to bring it in and give him a hug. “You flipped on me once. I wasn’t going to let it happen again,” he says. This is a major problem that all of his allies should be wary of. He had nothing to do with this move. Sophie brought them the information, and Savannah and Sophie decided to flip it on Sage and Jawan. Rizo played a fake idol, made a big scene, and then said, “I wasn’t going to let it happen again.” Not “we,” “I” singular. He’s hogging the spotlight and taking credit and I hope that, as Sophie manipulates the blocs for them to decimate each other, they come for him next.

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    Brian Moylan

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  • Down Cemetery Road Recap: Strangers on a Train

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    Last week was all about the emotional toll killing people, rescuing people, and discovering people-killers has taken on our motley crew. This week is all about action. As we near the finale, tensions are mounting to a fever pitch. We’re entering the part of the story which should compel a reader to read while walking, and the show delivers in creating a viewing experience that replicates that hold on the viewer’s attention. The highlight of the episode — if not of the series as a whole — is the chase sequence on the train to Scotland, when Zoë escapes from Amos’s grip within an inch of her life.

    We left off last week with Amos’s realization that he was being followed; now, he finds out who is following him. As it turns out, Axel’s main passion in life, besides killing people, was journaling. He made sure to include a photo of Zoë in his little red book, with a caption explaining she was Joe’s wife. In brute force, Zoë is no match for Amos — he could probably take her down with a stare. But unfortunately for him, Amos is not as witty or charismatic. Zoë’s ability to connect with people saves her life.

    After making sure his gun is loaded with bullets and a silencer, Amos finds Zoë. He sits across from her just as a PSA advises passengers to alert the authorities if they see something suspicious. Zoë has a better idea: she strikes up a conversation with the chatty American couple sitting next to them. She introduces herself as Julia — Amos picks the alias “Andy” — to Bob and Shelley, and, noticing that Bob is carrying Bananagrams like any self-respecting American looking to have a good time, she asks them to play a game. She takes Bob up on his promise that he can “play all night,” hoping to ward off Amos. But Amos waits patiently until Bob and Shelley decide to go to bed. When Shelley wants to take a picture with them, Amos pushes “Julia” in and offers to be the photographer.

    Zoë follows the couple to their cabin, then begins the hard work of losing Amos. A train is an excellent stage for a chase sequence; from Skyfall to this year’s Highest 2 Lowest, some of the most memorable chasing in cinematic history happens on trains. It’s a great setting because there is only one way to go, and leaving a person’s sight is hard when you’re essentially walking down a long hallway. But Zoë manages to hide behind people, suitcases, and, eventually, inside a staff room. I was worried when she locked herself in, because even though Amos’s shoulder is injured, he looks strong enough to break down a door. If Zoë found herself locked in a room alone with Amos, it’d be game over; the genius of being in Bob and Shelley’s company was that it precluded Amos from acting. But all’s well that ends well. A conductor catches up to Amos and asks if he’s having trouble finding his room. He seems to consider shooting the conductor, too, but gives up. He knows that Zoë is headed to his same destination, after all, and it’d be much more convenient to kill her somewhere private.

    Zoë finds an available empty cabin. She gets a FaceTime call from Morgue-Boy Wayne, who sends along the decrypted video evidence that the British government used chemical weapons on its own troops. Zoë asks him to find out where exactly in Scotland Dr. Wright tested on his guinea pigs. Wayne delivers just in time, telling her to go to Firinn Village. Amos, who knows they are close by, sets off the fire alarm, so the train has to evacuate. He takes off in a stolen taxi, unluckily for Shelley and Bob, who have the misfortune of being his passengers. They try to get him to stop the car, even threaten to call the police, but their questions are too grating for Amos, who shoots them both.

    Genius twisted mind that he has, Amos uses the killings as an opportunity. Though he sees Zoë’s taxi drive by, there is no chance he could’ve seen her inside, given how far he was standing from it and how fast the car was going — yet, when it comes to being a psycho, Amos always knows what to do. In an Oscar-worthy performance, he calls the police, crying to report two dead bodies on the side of the road. He describes a woman he saw running off: spiky short hair, a leather jacket, and big boots. He wipes his fingerprints from the surfaces of the car and heads off — the teddy bear is only a little more than 14 miles away.

    Zoë’s cab driver, who was already annoyed, only becomes more irritated when she tells him to go past the village and towards a disused army base Wayne texts her about. The car takes a right on a fork where Sarah took a left, toward the village. She is walking around because Downey took off in Ella’s car and left her sleeping in the woods. It’s little wonder Downey wanted to shed the deadweight after last week’s performance, but there is a deeper motivation, too: Downey doesn’t want another death on his conscience, particularly not when he and Sarah have developed something resembling friendship. When she asks him, the night before he leaves, if he thinks they are close (to finding Dinah), his first instinct is to interpret that emotionally — like, emotionally close. That’s a long way from the guy who could barely look Sarah in the eye in their hotel room, all that time ago.

    So that’s four of our crew in Scotland and headed to Firinn — we’re only missing Malik, who is put on a chopper by a very disappointed-looking C. He surprises Malik while he is walking his dog, telling him that Amos is very much alive and leading Downey to Dinah. C prepares him for the trip by telling him that if he isn’t able to deal with “whoever or whatever is left,” he won’t be able to keep him around much longer, though it’s unclear whether that means getting fired or killed. Either way, at least C gives Malik a gun, with instructions to take out Amos, Downey, or both, and some parting words of encouragement. He sort of tenderly grabs Malik’s chin and says, “Strike like a cobra.” Right, because Malik is renowned for his stealth.

    C is only human, so he has to deal with his own boss, Talia, who wants his input on a “big important speech” about the budgeting plans we’ve been hearing about. Talia is practicing it, clad in athleisure, when C arrives. She wants C to tell her how she should respond when and if a journalist asks about the British government’s stance on and development of chemical weapons. “The weapons industry is the most regulated in the world,” is his recommendation. “I would suggest we don’t give space to speculation.” A perfect example of how to say absolutely nothing while sounding like you’re saying something — hopefully some attentive journalist will catch it and push back.

    Firinn Village is picturesque and the people are friendly. A shopkeeper tells Sarah that local teenagers are stealing her booze and cigarettes and going to an old army base nearby, the very same one where Zoë is headed. This is the first of a few too-happy coincidences that zip some of this episode’s strength, but at least Sarah is on her way. She sees Ella’s car empty and locked on the side of a road, but there’s no sign of Michael. We don’t see much of him this week, but we do see that he is down to one Histropine pill. It’s all going to hit the fan at the same time.

    Realizing this, Sarah literally runs to the base. The scariest thing that happens there is that she runs into a group of taunting teenage boys, the worst possible thing that could happen to anyone. Sarah follows some clanging sounds, and we cut to Dinah’s holding room, where the two guys, Nev and Ty, play soccer. The ball knocks over a folder of photos of the chemical burns, which they, along with Steph, are just seeing for the first time. This is another detail that doesn’t seem totally earned. After days spent locked away, not being told what they’re waiting for or what’s going on, wouldn’t they have at least snooped around? Anyway, they see a shadow coming through the CCTV. We think it’s going to be Sarah, but it turns out to be the provisioner, who is greeted with two guns pointed at him.

    Sarah herself was preparing to use the foldable knife she took from Paula’s if necessary when she turned a corner to find Zoë. It’s not what she wanted, but it was what she needed. When Sarah slumps on the floor and says she wants to give up and go home, Zoë reminds her that she can’t. One, she’s in way too deep; two, there’s nothing guaranteeing she can make it back to Oxford alive — in fact, all evidence is pointing to the contrary. Zoë shows her the video to galvanize her: They are this close. 

    Zoë and Sarah decide to discreetly find out from the villagers where the experiments were conducted. In a pub, Sarah finds the shopkeeper from earlier doing crosswords with the bartender. They talk about the “army types” that come through the town under Sarah’s guise as a “military nerd.” Meanwhile, on the dock, Zoë overhears the provisioners say something about being paid to keep quiet. Out of all the convenient coincidences in the back half of this episode, I found this one most grating. Zoë’s biggest weapon is her ability to make people tell her things they probably shouldn’t. Why not have her outwit these guys?

    At the pub, Sarah notices that the map on the Puffin tour pamphlet she took from the bartender is missing an island when compared to the map that hangs on the wall — bingo. Putting her dormant restorationist skills to use, she traces where the island is supposed to be on the pamphlet, and is almost out the door before she hears the bartender pick up a call from Callum, the police officer at the scene of Bob and Shelley’s murder. We saw him a little bit earlier with his colleague, who found the picture of the couple with Zoë in Shelley’s purse. He gives the bartender Zoë’s description and asks her to keep an eye out. Overhearing this conversation — annoyingly written to give Sarah every piece of information she needs — Sarah runs to tell Zoë the police are looking for her because of two dead Americans. Zoë seems to register immediately that it must be Shelley and Bob, which makes her cry. But they have an invisible island to find. All they need now is a boat.

    So, they get one. A captain standing by tells them it’s too windy to go out for a tour, even when they lie that it’s their honeymoon and insist they have strong sea legs. Sarah is at the absolute end of her wits. She shoves the old guy inside the hull, takes his keys, and locks him into his cabin. Zoë gives her a look like, Good for you, girl, which is all Sarah has ever wanted to hear. She takes the helm as they drive forward to try and find the island. Amos has his own menacing black dinghy waiting for him on black-sanded shores. Downey has his own boat, too. Everyone is en route, Malik by chopper, the rest by sea. The question as we head into next week is: Who’s going to get there first? 

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    Rafaela Bassili

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  • The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City Recap: Ladies Who Punch

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    After all the relitigation and denial about what happened on the plane, the wives’ ability to resolve this conflict is unprecedented.
    Photo: Natalie Cass/Bravo

    Did Mary’s church service help to heal (or “hill” if you’re Whitney) our fractured group? Of course not, but one can dream! Maybe they’ll have better luck at the post-service Sunday Social that Mary is hosting for them all at our favorite Salt Lake jaunt: Valter’s. “Oh, your guests are here,” Angie tells Mary when Meredith and Lisa walk in, so then again, maybe not. But at least Mary is gifting them all beta fish as party favors!

    The only person missing from the lunch is Britani, whom Mary called ahead of time to explain that she was snubbing her because she called her ungodly. Britani ultimately apologized, and while it didn’t earn her an invite, it did inspire Mary to think that there might be hope for this group yet.

    So let’s get into it. We’ve heard what all the other women say happened, but Meredith maintains that they’re blowing it out of proportion — so where do we go from here? When Meredith says she couldn’t have tormented Britani the whole flight because she watched two movies, the women begin investigating. What movies? “Crazy Rich Asians, and one other movie I don’t recall the name of,” she says. Rough start. And what happened at the end of Crazy Rich Asians? Genius question. “I don’t remember,” she says. Meredith, you shouldn’t be answering any more of these questions without a lawyer present! “Crazy Rich Asians has a big ending. It’s a big moment, you’ll remember,” Heather says. This is one of the funniest gotcha moments I’ve ever seen on Housewives. Since Lisa watched it too, they ask her if she remembers how it ends, and without hesitation (but with a spoiler alert warning from Bravo), Lisa rattles off the movie’s ending. “I obviously fell asleep before the end because I didn’t see that part,” Meredith chimes in, trying to cover her ass.

    Since Lisa continues to downplay the situation, they tell her that she clearly realized how big a scene it was, and that’s why she didn’t go through customs with them. But Lisa says that was just because she didn’t realize she had Global Entry. Alright, if we’re investigating whether Lisa Barlow has Global Entry to get to the bottom of this mystery, I fear we’re too far gone.

    Meredith then directs her ire to Whitney (as she is wont to do), after hearing that she was gossiping about this incident behind her back (as Whitney is wont to do). Specifically, Whitney told Bronwyn that she was drinking before the flight and wondered whether she blacked out. She proposed three explanations for the incident: “she has hatred in her heart, an anger problem, or a problem mixing substances.” She’s like if Hercule Poirot were a Real Housewife.

    The lunch leaves them with little resolution, and leaves Meredith ally-less, apart from Lisa, whom she meets up with for manicures in spa chairs that I’m convinced get bigger each time we cut back to them. They debrief the lunch, with Meredith expressing her frustration with Heather and Whitney, especially, before Lisa tells her that she met up with Britani to hear her side of things. We flashback to that sit-down, where we hear Britani say, “It was literally, like, the sixth worst thing that has ever happened to me in my entire life.” It’s a sentence that stopped me dead in my tracks. The level of specificity instantly grips me. What were the other five things? And does she have a notes app ranking them? All in all, Meredith basically says she pities Britani and thus is fine to move forward from all of this.

    Then, in a jump cut for the ages, we find ourselves in a U-Haul that Whitney is driving to Heather’s house, where she finds her buzzin’ cousin dressed for a funeral. Specifically, the funeral for her marital mattress, which Whitney is helping her haul away. While she assures us that the stains aren’t from sex, I’m more disturbed by her confession that she’s had the mattress for 20 years. That seems like much too long. She talks about Meredith being mad at her, and Whitney talks about being angry at Bronwyn for ratting, but all I can think about is that geriatric mattress.

    While Britani is still recovering from the plane ride (and I suspect will be for seasons to come), she says it helped her focus on what’s truly important: healing her relationship with her daughter, Olivia. And now, thankfully, they’re getting professional help and are deciding to give a family therapist a real run for her money. It’s mostly a rehash of what we already know, but Olivia says she feels better hearing her mother take accountability, and Britani is happy to finally get the chance to make things right, so this situation seems to be looking up.

    Speaking of mothers and daughters, Bronwyn, Gwen, and Muzzy (and their bobs) spend the afternoon trimming Bonsai trees. Both Gwen and Muzzy say that they’re getting ready to spread their wings and move out, which sends Bronwyn — who has never really lived alone in her entire life — spiraling. You might be thinking, well, doesn’t she still have Todd? But perhaps that’s the problem. Without her whole family under that roof with her, she’s left taking a cold, hard look at her marriage, and she might not like what she sees. After all, if she’s mourning her emotionally abusive mother of all people moving out, then you know things must be rough.

    The episode concludes with a meeting so shocking that I wondered if perhaps I was the one who blacked out after combining substances. Meredith and Britani reunite — on the ground this time — at a park, as if producers were afraid they’d destroy a home or place of business. Meredith kicks things off by apologizing to Britani for being overheard talking to Lisa on the plane, saying it was the wrong place and time and that she didn’t intend to hurt her feelings. This feels almost too good to be true, as if a Bravo HR representative is standing just off camera, holding up cue cards.

    While Britani says she still feels traumatized, she’s choosing forgiveness. And for her part, she apologizes for bringing up the TikTok in the first place, admitting that it was a shady move meant to hurt her. I almost can’t believe what I’m watching. After all this hubbub sent shockwaves throughout the group, the two of them can sit down and communicate in the name of civility. This kind of resiliency and ability to move forward is what makes this show so successful. As I watch them sit across from one another, I’m reminded of a song made famous by Britani Bateman singing it on TikTok…

    And just to clear the air, I ask forgiveness for the things I’ve done you blame me for…
    But then, I guess we know there’s blame to share
    And none of it seems to matter anymore. 

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    Tom Smyth

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  • The Real Housewives of Potomac Recap: Allow Me to Reintroduce Myself

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    I can’t believe it’s been over six years since the infamous barn fight between Candiace and Monique. It honestly feels like a lifetime ago that we saw Monique latch onto Candiace’s wig and summarily fight her way out of a job, but in retrospect, not all that much has changed. Sure, everyone is divorced now, and Candiace has taken her talents for histrionics out of the music studio and into the podcast mic for the time being — but we have the same President, Ashley remains as messy as ever, and Gizelle still won’t bring a man on camera. Some truths remain immutable in the Potomac universe.

    I can be honest and admit that at the time, I was a bit clouded in my distaste for Candiace’s antics in a way that probably let me give Monique a bit too much grace about the situation. For one, the franchises are no strangers to violence: RHONJ occasionally serves as a WWE undercard, depending on the season; Salt Lake City has thrown more drinks in people’s faces than Susan Lucci; and Atlanta couldn’t even keep a slumber party peaceful. During this period, the ladies of Potomac still held onto a delusional pretense that they represented a specific style of Black upper-class genteel that had long been abandoned – the cast may be products of Jack and Jill, but the show is no The Gilded Age. And so once the fight actually aired, over a year after the fiasco had already leaked to the press, we spent an entire season being beaten over the head with the insistence that the cast was above this.

    While I can now recognize that what Monique did was an unacceptable escalation of interpersonal issues in a workplace (which is what the show is, after all), her reunion performance will remain an all-time moment in not just Potomac, but Housewives history simply because she broke the show. Fully knowing she was on her way out, she summarily dismissed Gizelle with the binder moment that aired all over the world (Karen asking “is Jamal coming” with sardonic satisfaction remains etched in my cerebellum), but more importantly forced everyone to acknowledge that despite her being the deserved target of the reunion, all of the women have skeletons in their closet that they were unwilling to confront. Gizelle was reunited with a man who had embarrassed her numerous times with his penchant for skirt-chasing; Robyn was in an endless engagement with a now-husband who, then and now, seemed to barely humor her; Karen is a sugar-baby turned breadwinner who could be found at any watering hole in Potomac; Ashley was married to the personification of the grim reaper.

    All of the women were trapped in their own cages of misery, trying to make Monique look like the primary cause for their own distress. Monique very much needed to leave, but the chaos she left behind, while occasionally resulting in uneven, stilted television, forced the women to acknowledge their own shortcomings in her absence. Ashley could no longer hide her disaster of a marriage; Robyn’s permanent state of melancholy became unavoidable; Chris Bassett was unable to hold a job longer than a season. I don’t think it’s that much of a stretch to say that women seem to be in 10 seasons is at least partially influenced by Monique wiping the slate clean on her first ousting.

    Monique’s penchant for forthrightness, almost to the point of abruptness, is what makes her reintegration to the cast fascinating already. Thankfully, she makes no bones about addressing the elephant in the room, namely, the state of her divorce. It is no secret that Housewives can be taxing on any marriage, but often we hear it from the perspective of women who come on the show to build a career and a platform to split safely. Monique, however, freely admits that being on the show kept her marriage alive for years longer than it should have. Judging from her original run on the franchise, I fully believe that she held onto her marriage out of spite; at that time, there was no way she was going to let Gizelle have one up on her, and the image of her successful Black family with numerous houses, investments, and businesses was her ultimate trump card.

    It was refreshing to hear the women reflect on that time without the show turning into a forlorn “very special episode.” Gizelle being able to acknowledge the strain she recognized in Monique’s marriage coming from the side of a divorcee is a conversation Monique simply would not have been able to receive five years ago, and I think it’s healthy that both women recognize that. I don’t know if we’ll get Gizelle to admit on camera that Monique gave her a run for her money at that reunion, but we’ll take the small victories where we can.

    Unfortunately, Gizelle and Monique finally finding common ground is not the animating vehicle they are using to structure Monique’s return to the group. Nor are Monique and Wendy finally attempting to establish a relationship outside of Candiace’s sphere of influence after Monique was effectively removed from filming on Wendy’s rookie season. For whatever reason that I am still desperately attempting to make sense of, we are continuing to draw out this tired string of “Stacy being desperate for Chris.”

    Listen, I get it. Stacey is definitely nimble with her understanding of the truth. I have dated enough men who told me they had no girlfriend, only to find out they actually had a wife (this has happened only three times, but it’s crazy that it happened more than once), so I recognize a person whose statements of fact come with terms and conditions. But here’s the thing: I don’t care that she fucked Chris, or didn’t. I don’t care that her husband, Temu, barely wants to be on camera and filming with the rest of the cast, or that they are too lazy to come up with coherent excuses to avoid participating in events. Temu says five words a minute, and to my ADHD brain, it feels like nails on a chalkboard; I won’t miss him if he doesn’t get mic’ed up ever again.

    What Stacey understands well is that if you are not going to give authenticity, you have to sell the fantasy. Stacey has chosen to be the peppy, out-of-touch model who has the spirit of Mary Poppins in the package of Kenya Moore. Whether or not it’s legitimate is irrelevant to me until it fundamentally becomes irreconcilable with her on-camera persona, à la Grande Dame. Perhaps it’s the QVC training, the same stomping grounds that birthed us the scourge known as Lisa Rinna, but you simply cannot move her off her square.

    Stacey’s consistent persona ultimately makes the women look even more deranged for calling it out. Monique already said she couldn’t possibly care less who Chris is dating, but Ashley, Keiarna, Tia, and Gizelle simply couldn’t leave well enough alone. Now I have to pretend that I care that Stacey told Chris that Monique was miserable by the end of her marriage? I’m sure that’s nothing Chris doesn’t already know, whether this Cookie lady is reporting back to him or not. Considering how the last fiasco with a third party bringing gossip went down, I just am not intrigued or inclined to explore this line of inquiry any further unless Stacey ups and leaves Temu for Chris.

    All these shenanigans ultimately end up doing is cementing Stacey as indispensable to the group. I can somewhat understand Tia’s frustration — despite overselling the Nigerian royalty bit, she has, for the most part, been sharing her personal life on camera, warts and all, and is frustrated that Stacey won’t do the same. But Keiarna is getting irate on Monique’s behalf when there is absolutely no indication that Monique would even care or be bothered by this at all, and as a result, Stacey dealt with her accordingly. Keiarna may be a breathtaking beauty, but she was not prepared to step into the ring for a war of words with the Detroit Barbie. Stacey cheekily telling K that “the only time you get heated is about me” was a nice little jab, but when K tried to counter by saying “I would never leave my husband around you,” Stacey had no choice but to hit her with the uppercut: “You don’t have one.” I’m excited to see Keiarna finally show up this season, as I prefer a beautiful bitch on wheels to a sedate one, but unfortunately, she still came up short this time around. See you all next week!

    • The more Angel carries on about her imagined issue with Wendy, the less rational she sounds. Her husband can’t even pretend to be bothered about this nothingburger of an issue on his wife’s behalf. Every time she insists that Wendy somehow betrayed her more than Gizelle by defining what a catfish is, a clown nose starts to sprout on her face spontaneously. Wendy and Gizelle were indeed being messy and mean, but nothing about that warranted the weeks-long spiral our WAG has been going through.

    • Wendy was really rocking the finger waves! It’s such a shame that her best season to date is coming on the heels of what we know to be a precipitous downfall. (Yes, yes, I know she gave a gracious showing at BravoCon and had a generally good reception, but when your local paper is reporting claims of alleged aliases and over 40 credit cards, there is clearly still a long road ahead.)

    • When it comes to crossover moments, I allow/overlook them if they make sense for the show and the groups’ connections. The Vanderpump Boys on Summer House, sure, whatever, they basically helped launch that franchise. Cynthia making a guest appearance on any franchise she wants is fine because I appreciate any excuse to swoon over her cheekbones. Bringing in competitors from the Love Hotel, however, is where I have to draw the line. I’m sure Wale is a lovely man, but this isn’t Marvel, and I’m not about to start watching three other franchises just to understand what is on my TV screens. I already have to monitor the subreddits like a hawk!

    • At this point, “What is GNA” could be a Jeopardy category. We have gone from clothing line to wellness brand to events promotion to philanthropy, and now we’re making floats. Many companies do PRIDE floats, but they are usually selling something. What, pray tell, is GNA selling? I still have no clue.

    • Ten million downloads on Reasonably Shady? Y’all are really listening to that podcast? Color me shocked.

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    Shamira Ibrahim

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  • Survivor Recap: Lost in Space

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    Photo: Robert Voets/CBS

    I can’t believe the first thing that I’m going to say about Survivor 49 is that the man, the myth, the legend, R-I-Z-G-O-D, Rizgod, baby, might actually be a good Survivor player. Does this mean he’s one of the two from this season coming back for Survivor 50? (If I had to guess, I would say it’s down to Rizo, Savannah, Sage, or maybe Jawan.) The episode starts with Rizo and Savannah returning from a half-assed tribal council where only half of the people voted and they’re triumphant. Everyone at camp who didn’t vote thinks that Sophie would go home for being a challenge beast and that they would flush Rizo’s idol. Neither of those things happened. Instead, Rizo convinced everyone to eject MC, saying she had too many allies back at camp and that this was their chance to get rid of a strong competitor. By the end of the episode, he would sway yet another vote and continue to hold onto that idol that absolutely everyone knows about.

    Before the reward challenge, Sophie says something that really stuck with me. She’s upset that everyone assumed she would be going home, and that made her rethink her alliances. “My freshman floor friends are not my friends,” she says. Yes! Exactly that. I’ve written before about how three small tribes of six is an unmitigated disaster, and this sums it up perfectly. When you first arrive at college, you bond with those immediately around you out of survival. You’re new, you’re lonely, you want to do keg stands and hook up, and all of those other things college kids are supposed to do. But you slowly find out there are others out there who you gel with, who you have more in common with, and you leave those freshman floor friends for your real people. On a tribe of six people, you have to make those close connections for survival. But, because everyone on their tribe does the same, that is how you end up with “Hina Strong” throughout the game, because there are not enough available people to connect with who also want to connect with you. Players end up sticking to their original tribe not out of any real affinity but because of game mechanics.

    I’m glad that Sophie is coming out of that nightmare and wants to play her own game. As it stands right now, it seems like there are a few axes of power in the game, all of which think that they’re in control. There is Jawan and Sage, forged in their mutual hatred of Shannon, who have a close alliance that everyone knows about. There are Steven and Kristina, who were on their first two tribes together with Sophie, still hanging around the periphery. Then there are Rizo, Savannah, and Soph, who seem like the strongest group in the game, mainly because they have an idol, an extra vote, and a Knowledge Is Power, respectively. Alex is knowingly playing in between all of these groups and refusing to pick a side until he sees where things shake out.

    The reward challenge divides the group into two teams of four, with Soph sitting on the bench. The only remarkable thing is that Kristina’s team, with Sophie, Alex, and Savannah, wins the challenge, and Kristina decides to give her spot at the fried chicken dinner to Jawan, the only person left in the game who has not eaten real food at a reward. He doesn’t want to accept it, saying he doesn’t feel like he earned it. Finally, after some cajoling from the rest of the crowd, he says, “I think I want to eat the chicken, Uncle Jeff.”

    Let’s stop right there. Of all the things about the new era that I hate, the one I hate the most is calling Probst “Uncle Jeff” or, even worse, “Uncle J.” Yes, I know that we’ve all been watching this man on television for 25 years, and he feels a part of the family. However, Jeff is not your uncle, Jeff is not your brother, Jeff is not your friend. This man has you out there starving, running around in challenges, and voting each other out for his amusement. Also, Jeff is the one who keeps making the game harder. He’s taken away rice from the tribes, he has started stealing the flints of the losers, he is making it even harder to bargain for the basic necessities of life, and they think this guy is cute and cuddly? You’re absolutely crazy! I don’t think that Jeff would take kindly to being called “unc” in the modern sense if he knew that it meant everyone thinks he’s old.

    Before the immunity challenge, there are two schools of thought on who needs to go. Kristina and Steven are trying to whip people to get rid of Rizo because he has an idol. They want to split the vote between him and Savannah so that if he plays it, she catches the stray and gets sent packing. Sage is on board with that plan because she thinks that Savannah gives off “mean girl energy,” and that is just what I love about her. Rizo is working to convince Savannah, Soph, and the rest that Alex is dangerous because he’s playing in the middle. Jawan thinks that there are bigger fish to fry than Alex and wants to get rid of Savannah.

    The immunity challenge has players holding up a heavy disc with just their feet; when the disc drops, they are out. The twist is that there is immunity for the last man remaining and the last woman remaining. Almost immediately, Rizo and Kristina drop, and Jawan asks Steven, who is a rocket scientist, to distract them all with space facts. He starts rattling them off like Charlie Davis from Survivor 46 rattling off Taylor Swift songs. This show is not beating the allegations of being full of nerds. After 10 minutes of space facts, Sage finally drops, and Jeff says, “Sage can’t take it anymore.” He doesn’t mean the challenge; he means the extreme nerdery happening around him. And neither can Jeff because after that, he’s basically like, “Respectfully, shut up with the space facts.”

    They may have helped Steven win the men’s immunity, besting Jawan. It was another showdown between Savannah and Sophie, with Savannah taking the necklace for the second time in a row. Here they were all worried about Sophie being the comp beast, and it’s little Savannah and her Pilates body who keeps taking down these endurance challenges. This reconfigures the whole alchemy of who is going home that night. Steven and Kristina think they can just swap Soph out for Savannah as the target who goes home if Rizo plays his idol. That’s the plan that they’re selling everyone.

    Meanwhile, Rizo is going around blowing up Alex’s game and alerting everyone that he is playing the middle. The emphasis is on what is going on with Sage and Jawan, who are crucial to either side’s numbers, especially if Steven and Kristina’s plan to switch votes is going to work. Jawan says that he wants to get rid of Rizo and flush that idol, but that Alex is making that plan difficult because no one can read what he is going to do. It seems like Soph being the new backup target isn’t enough to sway Sage and Jawan, who really only liked splitting the votes if it ricocheted on mean girl Savannah. Sophie is another factor, because Steven and Kristina think she’s still with them, but she’s trying to get rid of her freshman friends for good and find some new people whose games more closely align with hers.

    Going into tribal, I have no clue who it will be. There are two options, and I know why and I know how it might happen, so this is the perfect kind of editing. We’re in suspense, but we’re not totally in the dark. When the votes are read, Rizo gets his way for the second week in a row, and Alex goes home. “This is what I get for playing both sides. You guys all talk?” Alex says on his way out, to lots of laughs. At least he can cop to what he did and why he went home.

    Personally, I don’t know why Rizo was so fixated on getting rid of him when he could have turned it on Kristina or Steven, who are actively gunning for him, which he knows because both Soph and Sophie alerted him to those plans. Alex might have been hard to pin down, but he’s not the opposition. Also, he could be a number in the future if he really was playing the middle. Now, Rizo still has just as much opposition, and everyone is locked into their voting blocs. But this leaves him in a great position. He has Savannah and Soph on lock with Steven and Kristina the only ones (besides Alex) left out of the vote. They now know that Sophie can’t be trusted and that Jawan and Sage might not be as keen to work with them as they anticipated. They’re on their own, and all the power seems to rest with someone who I don’t want to admit might just be the man, the myth, and the legend.

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    Brian Moylan

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