By Mike Redmond | Pajiba Love | January 25, 2024 |
By Mike Redmond | Pajiba Love | January 25, 2024 |
Thanks to her freaking incredible performance in the final season of Succession — and, let’s be real, the entirety of the show — Sarah Snook has been racking up awards left and right. With that comes interviews, and in a recent chat with the BBC she opened up about an early moment in her career when some dickbag producer had the f*cking nerve to yell at her in front of the cast and crew for eating the “tiniest bit of chocolate cake.” Thankfully, a costume designer rushed to her aid, but being young, Snook was understandably mortified. Since then, she’s never let anyone dictate her diet ever again. (Variety)
Not gonna lie, Masters of the Air is stirring up all of my Dad molecules. The show went from barely registering on my radar to a deafening siren’s call compelling me to watch fighter jets shoot down Nazis and maybe eat a sandwich with that mustard I like. (Lainey Gossip)
The New York Times is actually admitting the Biden economy is good? Oh shit, it’s the End Times. RUN! (Wonkette)
Why Shattered Glass endures. (Poynter)
Swifties are preparing for the most important battle of their lives, and I’m not even being sarcastic. This is an infuriatingly serious affront, and whoever’s responsible deserves the world of pain that’s coming for them. (The A.V. Club)
Speaking of a world of hurt, The Pokémon Company is now keenly aware of Palworld and opening an investigation. That can’t end well. (The Verge)
Hope nobody here was attached to Wolf Pack. (TVLine)
SAG-AFTRA is coming to Alec Baldwin’s defense in the Rust shooting. Did not see that one coming. (Rolling Stone)
Trump is already telling states to call in the National Guard to fight off the federal government. Oh freaking good. Wonderful. (Mediaite)
The Vince McMahon situation continues to get worse. (THR)
Christopher Nolan somehow talked Warner Bros. into re-releasing Tenet in theaters to promote… Dune: Part Two? Sure, why not? (Gizmodo)
Halbs used a study guide to keep characters and their relationships straight in Tolstoy’s War and Peace (884 pages of small print). “I am so glad I did. To me, it was an edifying and entertaining read.” Which books do you have on your bucket list? (Cannonball Read 16)