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Tag: vibes

  • Best Of Houston® 2025: Best Vibe Dining – Houston Press

    Best Vibe Dining: Toca Madera

    Now in its second year at The Pavilion at The Allen, Houston’s hottest dining destination serves up fiery Mexican flavors with fire dancers, roaming guitarists and a vibe that’s equal parts luxe and sexy. Think dark and moody interiors with natural accents, an inviting lush patio, two bars, a new private speakeasy, and tableside flaming Tomahawks. Go for truffle quesadilla, crispy wonton tacos stuffed with tun and A5 Wagyu, Mayan prawns dripping in chipotle butter, aromatic cocktails hit with hibiscus, agave, serrano and smoke, and a full-sensory experience you’ll be thinking about long after you leave.

    1120 Dennis 

    281-888-5926 

    tagohtx.com

    Houston Press

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  • Meta AI’s app downloads and daily users spiked after launch of ‘Vibes’ AI video feed | TechCrunch

    New data indicates that use of Meta AI’s mobile app for iOS and Android has seen a significant increase. According to a new analysis from market intelligence provider Similarweb, the app’s daily active users across both platforms jumped to 2.7 million as of October 17, up from around 775,000 just four weeks ago. In addition, Meta AI’s app installs are also up, reaching 300,000 new downloads per day, compared with under 200,000 daily downloads a few weeks ago.

    For comparison, Meta AI’s app had just 4,000 daily downloads a year ago, on October 17, 2024.

    Image Credits:Similarweb

    The firm says it hasn’t seen any meaningful correlation in either search or advertising estimates, but notes Meta could be running Facebook or Instagram promotions that wouldn’t be captured in its model.

    However, there’s also another possible explanation for the sharp rise: the launch of Meta’s new Vibes feed in September, which introduced short-form AI-generated videos to the Meta AI mobile app.

    Meta AI introduced the Vibes feed on September 25, which correlates with the sharp increase in the app’s daily active users on iOS and Android, as seen in the chart below.

    Image Credits:Similarweb

    Recently, OpenAI’s video generator Sora drew headlines as its app reached the top of the App Store when users rushed to try the new technology. However, Meta AI could have benefited from this launch as well. While Similarweb says its data doesn’t prove cause and effect, it’s possible that the attention to Sora drove some people to try Meta AI, in order to compare the two experiences.

    Another possibility is that Meta could be benefiting from Sora’s invite-only status. That is, those who couldn’t try out the OpenAI app may have looked for an alternative to experiment with. This would be an interesting explanation, too, as it suggests that OpenAI’s decision to gatekeep Sora may have directly boosted its rivals.

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    Meta AI's Vibes feed, which showcases AI videos, may have driven a spike in app downloads and usage,
    Image Credits:Similarweb

    As of October 17, Meta AI’s app had seen a 15.58% increase in daily active users worldwide, while ChatGPT, Grok, and Perplexity saw declines of 3.51%, 7.35%, and 2.29%, respectively.

    Sarah Perez

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  • We’re Going to Miss Vibing With Tokyo Vice

    We’re Going to Miss Vibing With Tokyo Vice

    It’s tearing up our hearts to think about saying bye-bye-bye to this show.
    Photo: James Lisle/Max

    Slick back that hair, friends, Tokyo Vice has returned. The sophomore season of the yakuza epic that doubles as an argument for studying abroad displays steady improvement over the first, as the episodes broaden out into more of an ensemble piece while continuing to deliver on its promise of genre delights. But it would be wise to prepare for heartbreak: Given the pints of blood Max has been spilling in recent months, renewal odds aren’t looking too hot. While the series has its admirers (there are dozens of us!), it doesn’t seem to be contributing much to Max’s streaming imperatives in an era of shrinking TV budgets, nor has it attracted much awards hype to warrant shooting in Tokyo, which surely commands a hefty sum. (The White Lotus ended up setting its third season in Thailand instead of Japan for a reason, and that reason is better tax incentives.)

    So it’s highly likely this season’s ten episodes are the last we’ll see of Tokyo Vice. We’ll miss it! The series is far from perfect, but it does possess a certain je ne sais quoi that makes it distinct from so many other prestige-y crime dramas. Scholars call this ineffable quality a “vibe,” that little blanket shows can throw over themselves to make them more than the sum of their parts. As a preemptive farewell, here’s an appreciation of a few things contributing to Tokyo Vice’s general vibey-ness that we’ll sorely miss when the show finally gets called up to the seedy nightclub in the sky.

    Photo: James Lisle/Max

    Nobody conveys “man weighed down by the existential weight of masculinity” like Michael Mann, whose protagonists in Thief, Heat, Miami Vice, Blackhat, and Ferrari are singular figures prone to melancholy staring, weary affect, sly cunning, and an overall exhaustion with the experience of being alive. I love them all! And although Mann’s involvement in Tokyo Vice seems fairly limited (he is an EP and directed the pilot), some of the series’s most evocative visuals are clearly modeled after the chilly, muscular look of his work. The first season included a good number of Neil McCauley–like images of gangsters and cops staring out of windows to get at the idea of criminality as their deadly passion and terrible joy, and season two takes that mentality to other locations: a yakuza walking in a snowy forest, Katagiri hiding in shadows during a police raid. Tokyo Vice is selective with its big action set pieces (and they’re very good, in particular season one’s home invasion and assassination attempt against Chihara-kai oyabun Ishida), so the series’s visual language has become more dominated by these compositions, which reflect the interiority that Mann’s work has always been about. —Roxana Hadadi

    Photo: James Lisle/Max

    For a hyperviolent show about organized crime and the dark underbelly of society, Tokyo Vice is an unexpectedly cozy affair. As far as I can tell, only some of the show takes place in the wintertime, but cinematographer John Grillo’s emphasis on keeping things moody and shadowy — even in the daytime! — means there’s ample opportunity for paradoxical hygge. Relentlessly dark rooms are cut by the warm glow of table lamps or comfy side lighting. Tokyo’s neon signs add a dash of East Asian noir to night scenes, but the way their liveliness cuts against the muted blues and grays that paint the rest of the show creates an unexpected feeling of comfort. The wardrobing is a standout in this regard, with sweater vests in particular being the MVPs. Jake’s bald-shaven co-worker Tin Tin (it’s never terribly clear why they’ve stuck to the nickname) is the king of the dweeby but oh-so-cozy sweater vest. And at the end of the second-season premiere, we find Ken Watanabe’s Katagiri breaking into a politician’s house and threatening him with dismemberment while rocking a sick puffer. You can’t extract information without feeling padded, you know? —Nicholas Quah

    Photo: James Lisle/Max

    Tokyo Vice is actually a travel show. There’s a touch of anthropological tourism at play with the series’s tumble down the yakuza rabbit hole. As it unspools its story of warring criminal factions, it’s also wandering through a subculture that expresses something intimate to the history of a whole other country. Mostly, though, the travel-show stuff really comes through in the abundance of noshing on display. Food plays a huge world-building role in some of the best HBO dramas. (Yeah yeah, Tokyo Vice is a Max show, but roll with me on this.) Think McNulty and Bunk eating crabs in the evidence room, or Tony Soprano constantly confronting Italian delicacies, or Hot Pie being Game of Thrones’s resident Top Chef. Tokyo Vice operates on that wavelength, too. Decent chunks of the show take place in smoky izakayas and eateries. In the second-season premiere, Jake and his journo-bros are chowing down on an assortment of small plates — I see skewers, tempura, pickled veggies — when they get the call about their office being on fire. The nomming isn’t just limited to restaurants, either: At one point last season, Sato cooks Samantha a tamagoyaki so fine it gives Sydney’s omelet in The Bear a run for its money. Ugh, I’m starving. —NQ

    Photo: James Lisle/Max

    Given that the series is born out of Jake Adelstein’s book Tokyo Vice: An American Reporter on the Police Beat in Japan, it was inevitable that Jake’s time working at the Meicho Shimbun, a thinly fictionalized version of the publication Adelstein actually worked for, would be a major narrative focus. But unlike, say, The Newsroom, Tokyo Vice doesn’t suggest that journalism is the only thing that can keep a society in check. The writers and editors of Meicho Shimbun don’t all agree on the best way to tackle the yakuza, nor are they all objective on the issue, and those differences in opinion make for great tension between Jake and his editor and mentor Emi (Rinko Kikuchi) and the newspaper’s higher levels of power. Tokyo Vice takes time to show the everyday negotiations that occur between Jake and Emi and the sources they need to do their jobs — citizens affected by the yakuza’s shady business practices, cops Katagiri and Miyamoto, club hostesses like Samantha, and of course, the yakuza themselves — and that push-pull contributed to the first season’s immersive pacing. Season two amps this up with a newsroom mole and unexpected friction between Jake and his fellow early-career reporters; plus, no grandiose Aaron Sorkin–written speeches that make me grit my teeth until they crumble into dust! —RH

    It’s easy to forget that Tokyo Vice is a period piece beginning in 1999, when boy bands were at the height of their power. You simply could not escape Backstreet Boys, ’N Sync, and the competition between them, and it’s frankly delightful that Tokyo Vice doesn’t pretend they weren’t huge international artists with gigantic fanbases. Why wouldn’t the yakuza be into these groups? They were delivering bops! They were popular with women! They were easy to dance to! It’s very fun to watch Jake, Sato, and other yakuza members sing along to “I Want It That Way” and “Tearin’ Up My Heart,” and also unsurprising that these same 20-somethings would find a way to make those tracks a little erotic and a little vulgar. There’s a geeky earnestness to watching these young men drop some of their posturing masculinity and give themselves over to the music, and that lightheartedness makes for a nice balance with the series’s brutality. —RH

    Photo: James Lisle/Max

    In another of the show’s turn-of-the-millennium pleasures, characters rock good ol’ dumbphones and are starting to play around with the World Wide Web, courtesy of then-cutting-edge 56k modems. But given contemporary Japan’s continued usage of what we’d consider retro technology, the line between present and near-present is fairly blurry in a way that lends a fun temporal weirdness to the show. It’s a country where compact-disc sales are still vibrant and retro gaming stores continue to be everywhere. Indeed, few tangible objects on the show actually feel distinct to the place at that time. The elaborate vending machines, a hallmark of Tokyo in the cultural imagination, are as ubiquitous today as they were in the late ’90s and early 2000s. And so when the show cuts to shots of workaday journalists banging away at (beautiful) boxy laptops around the Meicho Shimbun newsroom, it usually takes me a beat to remember, Oh right, MacBook Airs aren’t around yet. That dislocation is terribly entertaining. —NQ

    Photo: James Lisle/Max

    More than 50 years after the release of The Godfather, Francis Ford Coppola’s film and its two sequels still loom large over gangster stories. Unerring loyalty to the family, the collapse of personal relationships at the expense of that loyalty, the sense that no amount of money and power will ever really be enough — that’s all intrinsic to this genre. And without giving too much away about the series’s second season, Tokyo Vice really digs into those archetypes in this set of episodes. There’s a relationship that evokes Vito and Michael’s bond, family dinners converging various yakuza clans to smirk and sneer at each other, shockingly bloody attacks and fights, a destructive arson scene that nods back to the first-season premiere, and grandiose moments of revenge (including a couple moments that nod at another gangster classic, The Departed). The tropes are familiar, even predictable, but Tokyo Vice puts its own moody and stylish spin on them in a way that feels like homage, not mimicry. —RH

    You can see Shun Sugata as Chihara-kai leader Hitoshi Ishida and Show Kasamatsu as Chihara-kai up-and-comer Sato, right? With their magnificent cheekbones, self-assured body language, and smoldering glares? Do I really need to say anything else? —RH

    Photo: James Lisle/Max

    Yes, the yakuza, as depicted in Tokyo Vice and just about everywhere else, are super scary. Stabby-stabby, lots of blood, very dangerous. But darn if I don’t tip my hat to the fine fits on this show. Those matching white jumpsuits that the lower-ranking yakuza members wear when they’re hanging out in the clubhouse? They look comfy as hell. Later in the second season, we meet a new character who’s all about massive collars and loud shirts that, honestly, totally work. Oyabun Ishida is all about those wide, loose-fitting suits that were so popular in the ’80s they bled straight through to the early 2000s, and again, the fact that it’s supposed to be a period detail flew right over my head because the look would be so hot right now. Sato’s no slouch, either, though it is interesting that his suits are tailored more tightly than his peers’. A pioneer, this guy. —NQ

    Photo: James Lisle/Max

    As depicted in the text, Jake Adelstein is kind of a smarmy doofus. Capable and probably gifted as a reporter, sure, but very much a cad — a white Japanophile unleashed. Nevertheless, in bursts, there’s a charm to this fictional Jake. Part of this is attributable to Elgort’s derpy performance and gangly height, but the hair is doing most of the work. It’s hard not to clock the oceanic quality of the thing, how it flops around when he’s getting beaten down. It’s the little things that make up a vibe, you know? —NQ

    Roxana Hadadi,Nicholas Quah

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  • Night Country gets True Detective’s vibe better than True Detective ever has

    Night Country gets True Detective’s vibe better than True Detective ever has

    True Detective is the rare show that was much more exciting and complicated after seven episodes than it is after three seasons. What started out as a brooding series about detectives looking into the dark heart of senseless, seemingly occult killings eventually transformed into a detective show mostly about men being sad. What is remarkable about the show’s newest season, True Detective: Night Country, is that in just one episode, new showrunner Issa López has managed to bring back the creeping, supernatural horror vibe that gave the first season so much promise.

    The new season is set in the small town of Ennis, Alaska, and this first episode is mostly concerned with setting up the peculiarities of the town and the bones of this season’s mystery, along with getting to know our latest true detectives, of course. The show’s opening, and its central mystery, is classic cold-weather horror: A group of researchers in a secluded winter base suddenly disappear, only to be found far from their base, frozen deep in the ice.

    Where the first season of the show hinted at the supernatural and the ways it sometimes may (or may not) peek through into our world, Night Country leaves no room for doubt. By the end of this episode, more than one character has had visions, and the condition the scientists are found in seems impossible to imagine happening naturally. But the true underline that makes the supernatural elements of the story undeniable is that local weirdo Rose (Fiona Shaw) is the one who finds the frozen scientists for the police, and the only reason she knew where to look is because some long-dead friend showed her the way.

    López doesn’t let the supernatural overwhelm the rest of the world in Night Country’s first episode, but she’s unambiguous about its existence. This feels like a pointed response to the True Detective stories that have come before. Not combative, per se, but direct. While the previous seasons, particularly the first, led its characters from the natural and explainable world of crime toward something more supernatural, Night Country’s mystery is starting at unexplainable and working its way back.

    Photo: Michele K. Short/HBO

    But for all the ways that López seems to be responding to True Detective’s past in the first episode of her season, she makes her love for the series clear, too. When it comes to the cops looking into this case, López revels in characterizing them as every bit the same kind of broken bastards that original series creator Nic Pizzolatto placed at the center of his three seasons writing the show. Leading the investigation in Night Country is Liz Danvers (played marvelously by Jodie Foster), a brilliant cop with a mile-long record of pushing people away by being an absolute asshole. Then there’s Liz’s old partner Evangeline Navarro (boxer turned actor Kali Reis), a self-destructive hothead who let one case get stuck in her craw and consume her whole career.

    The two cops don’t share the same dynamic as Matthew McConaughey’s Rust Cohle and Woody Harrelson’s Marty Hart, exactly, but it’s clear that López was after the same crackle the two had between them, and through just one episode she’s already seemed to nail it. The two only share brief scenes in episode 1, but the chemistry they have is instant and the bickering is pitch-perfect for cluing us in to the fact that they’re sure to work together again eventually.

    Through just one episode, True Detective: Night Country feels like what True Detective was always supposed to be. Impossibly, it captures the vibes of the series’ best episodes better than anything in the second or third seasons ever achieved. López feels at war with the series’ history, not because she hates it, but because she loves it enough to want its best version. What Issa López wants is the twisty, supernatural, pitch-black mystery show that had the internet in an eight-week chokehold in 2014. And so far, she’s off to a great start.

    Austen Goslin

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  • Why is Captain Laserhawk called a ‘Blood Dragon Remix,’ anyway?

    Why is Captain Laserhawk called a ‘Blood Dragon Remix,’ anyway?

    Ubisoft and Netflix’s new animated series Captain Laserhawk: A Blood Dragon Remix has very little to do with the Far Cry game series, from which it draws part of its title. Viewers of the mixed-media show don’t need to know anything at all about Far Cry, or its strange, neon-infused spinoff from a decade ago. But series creator Adi Shankar said it would be “disingenuous” to not reference Far Cry 3: Blood Dragon, the 2013 video game that was a shocking aesthetic swerve in Ubisoft’s open-world survival adventure game.

    Shankar said that calling his new mashup show, in which the worlds of Assassin’s Creed, Beyond Good & Evil, and the Tom Clancyverse collide, is him “paying homage, paying credit” to Far Cry 3: Blood Dragon.

    “When you look at how important Far Cry 3: Blood Dragon was, it’s a seminal fucking piece of art,” Shankar said in an interview with Polygon. “At some point people are going to look back and say there were seminal things [in that game] that seeded this online art movement, which continues to grow. Blood Dragon was one of them. So this is me wanting to acknowledge that.”

    Captain Laserhawk is more like a reverential cousin to Far Cry 3: Blood Dragon. Both pieces of media are set in dystopian futures, and steal liberally from ’80s-era influences: synthpop music, VHS tapes, video games, and effortlessly cool action stars. Far Cry 3: Blood Dragon’s hero was a mishmash of the T-800 Terminator and Kyle Reese wearing an NES Power Glove holding RoboCop’s hand cannon. Captain Laserhawk’s Dolph Laserhawk is similarly cybernetic, with a gun arm that evokes Mega Man’s Mega Buster or Samus Aran’s arm cannon.

    Far Cry bad guy Pagan Min does make an appearance.
    Image: Netflix

    There are clear similarities and distinct differences between the two Blood Dragons. Shankar described his show as “more of a vibe” as opposed to “adapting the ‘tome’ of Far Cry 3: Blood Dragon.” In fact, when Shankar’s show was first announced back in 2019, it was called Captain Laserhawk: A Blood Dragon Vibe.

    Captain Laserhawk is “part of the same lineage” that the CRT-filtered, laser beam-slathered Far Cry game spinoff was, an aesthetic that has permeated through other works of art over the past decade. Shankar specifically namechecked Destiny 2, The Weeknd’s music videos, and the Duffer brothers’ Stranger Things as examples of contemporary works existing on the same creative lineage.

    “It all just kind of organically happened via the internet and Blood Dragon was a seminal moment in that,” Shankar said.

    And while the Far Cry 3 and Blood Dragon influences may be a small part of Shankar’s animated series, especially compared to how much Beyond Good & Evil influence it contains, there is some Far Cry at the show’s heart — and at its periphery.

    “Well, you know [Far Cry 4’s] Pagan Min is in this, reinterpreted through a JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure lens,” Shankar said. And, he teased, “the universe is populated with other Far Cry characters. They exist, and you may not see them here, but they’re out there in the universe.”

    Michael McWhertor

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  • I accomplished a thing

    I accomplished a thing

    I’ve been trying to get this 1CC for a while now. And now I got it! Havin a good ******* night and I just wanted to share the good vibes cause this ******* challenge was way harder than I thought it was gonna be. That final level is brutal even when you know what you’re doing.

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