Mouth Dreams
Solar Opposites
At some point I felt like I'd outgrown Rick & Morty, or it just fell off for me and I've been neglectful (most likely the case). Solar Opposites is nowhere near as 'smart' as R&M but that's kinda refreshing; it's just a harsh, raunchy, screamingly funny scifi comedy that I can't get enough of. Hitting play on the next episode as I type this.
Conner O'Malley's
Hudson Yards Video Game
I've always loved Conner O'Malley for keeping YouTube wild, weird, wet, and disturbing. He's like a combination of Eric Andre, Tom Green, Andy Kaufman, as well as his own unique brand of abrasive satirical comedy (unfortunately The Eric Andre Show took a giant shit this year [and not in that good way]). More than once Conner's videos have made me laugh so hard I've nearly thrown up and I think it might happen someday, too. It was hard to pick just one, because he had great content this year, but this video is probably the best on his channel. It's one of the most bizarre, striking things he's ever done. It's not his funniest but it's the most inspired and conceptual. It's also fucking brilliant.
PRESS 'B' TO CONTINUE HEARING ABOUT THE OFFICE.
At some point I felt like I'd outgrown Rick & Morty, or it just fell off for me and I've been neglectful (most likely the case). Solar Opposites is nowhere near as 'smart' as R&M but that's kinda refreshing; it's just a harsh, raunchy, screamingly funny scifi comedy that I can't get enough of. Hitting play on the next episode as I type this.
Conner O'Malley's
Hudson Yards Video Game
I've always loved Conner O'Malley for keeping YouTube wild, weird, wet, and disturbing. He's like a combination of Eric Andre, Tom Green, Andy Kaufman, as well as his own unique brand of abrasive satirical comedy (unfortunately The Eric Andre Show took a giant shit this year [and not in that good way]). More than once Conner's videos have made me laugh so hard I've nearly thrown up and I think it might happen someday, too. It was hard to pick just one, because he had great content this year, but this video is probably the best on his channel. It's one of the most bizarre, striking things he's ever done. It's not his funniest but it's the most inspired and conceptual. It's also fucking brilliant.
PRESS 'B' TO CONTINUE HEARING ABOUT THE OFFICE.
The Kendrick Lamar Leaks
I should have probably avoided these--I usually avoid these--but we haven't gotten new Kendrick music in almost 4 years and curiosity got the best of me (not to mention my suspicion that K-Dot himself leaked them, but this isn't about my theorizing). As an unofficial EP it feels like a sequel to Untitled Unmastered. As usual, Kung-Fu Kenny is bringing the most forward-thinking lyricism and song concepts to the entire rap game; one song in particular, The Prayer, is an epic treatise on cancel culture and art vs. artist. More than just that, the song is from the perspective of Art itself; fucking mindblowing. And if these are just a few rough cuts?? SHIIIT, my excitement has no depth for the full album.
Ty Segall's Cover Of
JUMP INTO THE FIRE
As a covers album this is pretty cool but Fire specifically is so goddamn thrilling. The original is obviously great but this electric take sounds like a gigantic oil tanker speeding toward an inferno during a tornado. It's BIGGER, NOISIER, AND MORE ABRASIVE. Listen to it, run 200 laps around the block, and then die. You'll come back to listen to it again.
And again [...]
JUMP INTO THE FIRE
As a covers album this is pretty cool but Fire specifically is so goddamn thrilling. The original is obviously great but this electric take sounds like a gigantic oil tanker speeding toward an inferno during a tornado. It's BIGGER, NOISIER, AND MORE ABRASIVE. Listen to it, run 200 laps around the block, and then die. You'll come back to listen to it again.
And again [...]
EUPHORIA
Special Episode, Part 1: Rue
Trouble Don't Last Always
Special Episode, Part 1: Rue
Trouble Don't Last Always
I didn't want to do any kinda ranking list or countdown so here's my favorite thing of 2020 - movies, music, and TV combined. It's easily my favorite thing, too, because it's all my favorite shit; an hour long dialog-driven bottle episode where two people clash philosophical in a diner and the dialogue is so excitingly, enviably, annoyingly good. It contains some of the sagest, challenging wisdom about cancel culture, moralism, addiction, the utility of religion, the bullshit of corporate allyship, and dating. It feels less like Sam Levinson, a former addict, trying to be profound and more like wanting to get something off of his chest and his catharsis is our enlightenment.
Nothing else from 2020 can top this.
Nothing else from 2020 can top this.
Better Call Saul
Season 5
Until Euphoria dethroned it, this was my favorite thing of the year.
Episode after episode this season was on a glorious winning streak and a good number of them were some of the best media in the entire Breaking Bad canon. It's solidified as one of the most reliable shows on TV but, specifically: the MVP this season is Rhea Seehorn. Praises need to be sung in the highest register for her; she's the best part of the show, and that's saying a lot because it's a fucking GREAT show. She should be a household name like Bryan Cranston because the work she puts in is some of the best acting I've ever seen. If you haven't started Saul yet: do it today, if only for Kim Wexler and the outstanding actor who brings her to full fucking life.
The Joe Rogan Experience
#1419: Daryl Davis
I'm a part-time listener of JRE, it usually depends on the guest, but this interview with Daryl Davis is his absolute best. It's 2 hours, 40 minutes long and not for a second is it ever even close to boring. There are plenty of Davis interviews on the internet but Rogan's interview, specifically, is great because it's such a relaxed-fit atmosphere. Listening to him talk about the minutiae of the KKK and how he convinced over 200 Klansmen, including a Grand Dragon, to hang up their robes, is truly compelling stuff. Davis has lived a fascinating, storied life and he knows exactly how to tell those stories because he's a loquacious dude and that gift for gabbing is exactly how he does what he does. One might feel like Davis' efforts are futile, that he's not dismantling racism as the system of oppression that it is - doing it one person at a time. But he not only risked his life to do it, he's devoted his life to it - that's truly radical.
TheDixie Chicks
Gaslighter
I never got around to listening to the full album but this comeback single from The Chicks is undeniably one of the catchiest songs of the year. Despite what some old heads claim, Country music is on the upswing.
The Vast Of Night
My favorite movie of 2020:
Super 8 and the Twilight Zone reboot completely failed to be everything this is, which is a breathless, endearing 89 minutes of oh-so-boss moviemaking about two kids, one a DJ and the other a switchboard operator, investigating an alien transmission and strange phonecalls. Shot like a lost Spielberg movie it's all engrossing dialogue that wanes from funny to creepy to cathartic. For all I care, Elliott and Fay could bicker for 8 more hours and I'd watch it - their chemistry is off the charts. Don't look up the trailer or anything else about it, just let it woo you like it did me.
Timmy Failure: Mistakes Were Made
I already wrote about this but not enough can be said about it. It's easily the best kids' movie this year (and I sat through a lot of them since I was quarantined with my family and Disney+) but it's also my favorite comedy of the year and I don't say that lightly. If you like your humor dry and silly, this is for you.
Danny Elfman's
HAPPY
What starts like a typical Burton collaboration gradually deforms into a glitchy, thrashy, creepy pandemic anthem; a fun and freaky alternative to Gal Gadot's even creepier Imagine singalong (haha...YIKES).
Kevin James' YouTube Channel
No matter how bad the Blart movies are, or Here Comes The Boom, The Zookeeper, Grown-Ups, Grown-Ups 2, etc. I've always liked Kevin James (I'll admit I find him charming as Blart). I grew up on, and grew out of, The King Of Queens but he's still had something there that's never quite been tapped into. Apparentlyy in short bursts, with great production, he can be really funny. Sometimes the editing is downright seamless and sometimes, not every time, when it's not, it's funny because he's just going with it completely straight faced. There's even a P.T. Anderson cameo in one of them!
Sound Of Metal
Season 5
Until Euphoria dethroned it, this was my favorite thing of the year.
Episode after episode this season was on a glorious winning streak and a good number of them were some of the best media in the entire Breaking Bad canon. It's solidified as one of the most reliable shows on TV but, specifically: the MVP this season is Rhea Seehorn. Praises need to be sung in the highest register for her; she's the best part of the show, and that's saying a lot because it's a fucking GREAT show. She should be a household name like Bryan Cranston because the work she puts in is some of the best acting I've ever seen. If you haven't started Saul yet: do it today, if only for Kim Wexler and the outstanding actor who brings her to full fucking life.
The Joe Rogan Experience
#1419: Daryl Davis
I'm a part-time listener of JRE, it usually depends on the guest, but this interview with Daryl Davis is his absolute best. It's 2 hours, 40 minutes long and not for a second is it ever even close to boring. There are plenty of Davis interviews on the internet but Rogan's interview, specifically, is great because it's such a relaxed-fit atmosphere. Listening to him talk about the minutiae of the KKK and how he convinced over 200 Klansmen, including a Grand Dragon, to hang up their robes, is truly compelling stuff. Davis has lived a fascinating, storied life and he knows exactly how to tell those stories because he's a loquacious dude and that gift for gabbing is exactly how he does what he does. One might feel like Davis' efforts are futile, that he's not dismantling racism as the system of oppression that it is - doing it one person at a time. But he not only risked his life to do it, he's devoted his life to it - that's truly radical.
The
Gaslighter
I never got around to listening to the full album but this comeback single from The Chicks is undeniably one of the catchiest songs of the year. Despite what some old heads claim, Country music is on the upswing.
The Vast Of Night
My favorite movie of 2020:
Super 8 and the Twilight Zone reboot completely failed to be everything this is, which is a breathless, endearing 89 minutes of oh-so-boss moviemaking about two kids, one a DJ and the other a switchboard operator, investigating an alien transmission and strange phonecalls. Shot like a lost Spielberg movie it's all engrossing dialogue that wanes from funny to creepy to cathartic. For all I care, Elliott and Fay could bicker for 8 more hours and I'd watch it - their chemistry is off the charts. Don't look up the trailer or anything else about it, just let it woo you like it did me.
Timmy Failure: Mistakes Were Made
I already wrote about this but not enough can be said about it. It's easily the best kids' movie this year (and I sat through a lot of them since I was quarantined with my family and Disney+) but it's also my favorite comedy of the year and I don't say that lightly. If you like your humor dry and silly, this is for you.
Danny Elfman's
HAPPY
What starts like a typical Burton collaboration gradually deforms into a glitchy, thrashy, creepy pandemic anthem; a fun and freaky alternative to Gal Gadot's even creepier Imagine singalong (haha...YIKES).
Kevin James' YouTube Channel
No matter how bad the Blart movies are, or Here Comes The Boom, The Zookeeper, Grown-Ups, Grown-Ups 2, etc. I've always liked Kevin James (I'll admit I find him charming as Blart). I grew up on, and grew out of, The King Of Queens but he's still had something there that's never quite been tapped into. Apparentlyy in short bursts, with great production, he can be really funny. Sometimes the editing is downright seamless and sometimes, not every time, when it's not, it's funny because he's just going with it completely straight faced. There's even a P.T. Anderson cameo in one of them!
Sound Of Metal
A
stellar performance from Riz Ahmed, an even better supporting performance from left-field actor Paul Raci, immersive sound design, and potent
drama makes this one of the best movies in a year without many best
movies (it'd stand out in a good year). Watch it with
subtitles and headphones on if you can; it's a movie about going
deaf so the sound is the most important part of the experience, especially when it's
absent.
i'm thinking of ending things
I already wrote a gigantic fucking post about this and I'm still exhausted from it so I'll keep it brief:
Good movie, thinky movie, horror movie, funny movie, sharp edits, Zemeckis, performance from redhead good, brain hurty.
Dave Chappelle's SNL Monologue
Four years after his triumphant return to the spotlight, Chappelle comes back to deliver 16 more minutes of bold, insightful, and funny wisdom that breaks up the monotony of SNL. He touches on all the typical topicals of 2020 but in a way that only he could, bypassing the censors and taking full advantage of his clout blanche: not only does he go on for 16 minutes, and it's some of his best material, but he doesn't even bother to cap it off with the customary "we've got a good show for you tonight..." He ends it like a stand-up set. I needed it and I'm thankful for it.
MOONBASE 8
A workplace comedy lying somewhere between the purely wholesome and surreal comedy of Joe Pera Talks With You and the boneheaded silliness of '90s sitcoms, MOONBASE 8 is a great antidote to the year of the virus. It's dumb, fun, and surprisingly sincere. And with a cast this good, who even needs to praise them? They're them and if you love 'em, then...
The Devil All The Time
With time this might climb as my favorite of this year, I love it for a lotta reasons, but in a year that's as bleak as this one was, I can't quite stomach it as much as the goosebump-inducing whimsy of Vast Of Night nor the innocent comedy of Timmy Failure. Devil isn't misery porn, though, it's quite funny and hopeful, but like a Jennifer Kent movie: you suffer as you enjoy it. In its defense, I haven't seen it since it came out but from what I remember it's an ambitious southern gothic ensemble piece. At the center of the mosaic is a a coming-of-age story that gives Tom Holland a chance to reveal his range and for Robert Pattinson to give, in my opinion, his most complex performance to date. And if you're a slut for a good narrator, Donald Ray Pollock brings so much personality and insight to your ears.
The Safdie Brothers & Ari Aster On Scorsese
If you're down to listen to three accomplished, highly talented, intimidating filmmakers turn into pretentious, lame, goofy nerds gushing about Scorsese, then this video is Heaven. Josh Safdie won't shut up, Benny keeps hitting his mic and upsetting the sound girl, Ari is always inserting himself to be heard, it's all shouting -I love every single fucking second of it. It's so relatable because it feels like every conversation I've had with fellow media hounds, especially a bit where one of the Safdies talk about watching The Big Shave on YouTube and then having to search for it every time it was taken down. If that's not relatable on this site then I don't know what is.
The Trailer for THE BATMAN
This had to be on here. I thought maybe it didn't really 'fit' the theme but whatever. I spent enough time watching it (over and over and over) that it's probably added up to a movie's length. It's a perfect trailer because I know nothing about it yet everything about it grabs my curiosity by the throat. It feels like Matt Reeves gets Gotham. It finally looks like I've always pictured it when reading the comics and watching The Animated Series: like a gothic noir. The fact that he says "I'm vengeance," not "I'm Batman," is the most comics-accurate thing I've seen in any of the movies. What makes this trailer ecen more special is it came out the night of my birthday and it felt like a beautiful gift-wrapped tease. In a year where every fucking movie was put on hold for another year, this trailer dropped and then we were told it's delayed for TWO years. It's exciting but it's also fucking maddening, in the best way possible, because it looks fucking good but also like it could be the definitive Batman movie made by a truly passionate fan. I believe in Matt Reeves.
The Outsider
This joins The Shining (1980) and Carrie (1976) as one of my favorite Stephen King adaptations ever. It's what It Chapter 2 failed to be: a mature, character-driven story about an ancient interdimensional monster, but with a procedural twist to ground it. True Detective season 1 danced on the edge of the metaphysical, to great end, but The Outsider heaves into the abyss - think HBO's answer to The X-Files.
DEVS
Someone told Alex Garland that he couldn't write sci-fi, so he wrote Sunshine to spite them and continued by adapting Never Let Me Go, Annihilation, and writing both Ex Machina and DEVS. Always indulge in rubbing someone's nose in your talent if they don't believe in you because DEVS is Garland's successor to Twin Peaks: The Return. There have been plenty of those who've been influenced by it, just like Peaks' original run, but DEVS is the first one to truly capture the spirit of it without being outright derivative. This isn't Garland doing David Lynch but him artfully tearing down Silicon Valley's hipster facade for 8 hours. He plays with structure, pacing, and subverts expectations in wildly unexpected ways. For example, toward the end of the season, he thrusts us into a great episode that halts plot momentum for a game of frisbee while everyone discusses matters of life and death... and relationships. It's funny, tense, and all-around fantastic. DEVS might have a few problems with its writing on a small scale but its large scale ideas are so heady, ingenious, and existentially haunting. Saul might be the best TV I saw last year but DEVS was the most ambitious (with some truly inspired casting of Nick Offerman).
Joe Pera Talks With You
Season 2
The most wholesome, gentle, folksy ASMR therapy that [adult swim] could ever produce. It's like Twin Peaks if there was no Black Lodge, Roadhouse, or One-Eyed Jack's but, instead, Andy and Lucy breaking the fourth wall to give us innocent musings on the mundane. I wouldn't call it 'pure,' though, there's a great streak of odd, surreal humor throughout, especially episodes written by Conner O'Malley. The reason season 2 is so significant is because it has more of an ongoing frame narrative as well as a better sense of everyone else around Joe, like his girlfriend Sarah, his best friend Gene, and Gene's wife Lulu. I don't just see it as a calming ASMR novelty show anymore, I'm invested.
The Gretel & Hansel Score
I thought I loved this movie but on rewatch it's mostly just a good mood piece with great photography. It's not bad but Oz Perkins is definitely punching under his weight. Honestly, it should have been a miniseries because it feels, in a bad way, like a pilot episode with its brief but intriguing world-building and scant character development. That said, this score is fucking incredible. Instead of the typical string sections and woodwinds, it's a soundscape of synth and electric guitar that I've been addicted to since February. It's like Tangerine Dream's score for Legend but less soapy and crystalline, more nocturnal and grand.
clipping
Chapter 319
I already wrote a gigantic fucking post about this and I'm still exhausted from it so I'll keep it brief:
Good movie, thinky movie, horror movie, funny movie, sharp edits, Zemeckis, performance from redhead good, brain hurty.
Dave Chappelle's SNL Monologue
Four years after his triumphant return to the spotlight, Chappelle comes back to deliver 16 more minutes of bold, insightful, and funny wisdom that breaks up the monotony of SNL. He touches on all the typical topicals of 2020 but in a way that only he could, bypassing the censors and taking full advantage of his clout blanche: not only does he go on for 16 minutes, and it's some of his best material, but he doesn't even bother to cap it off with the customary "we've got a good show for you tonight..." He ends it like a stand-up set. I needed it and I'm thankful for it.
MOONBASE 8
A workplace comedy lying somewhere between the purely wholesome and surreal comedy of Joe Pera Talks With You and the boneheaded silliness of '90s sitcoms, MOONBASE 8 is a great antidote to the year of the virus. It's dumb, fun, and surprisingly sincere. And with a cast this good, who even needs to praise them? They're them and if you love 'em, then...
The Devil All The Time
With time this might climb as my favorite of this year, I love it for a lotta reasons, but in a year that's as bleak as this one was, I can't quite stomach it as much as the goosebump-inducing whimsy of Vast Of Night nor the innocent comedy of Timmy Failure. Devil isn't misery porn, though, it's quite funny and hopeful, but like a Jennifer Kent movie: you suffer as you enjoy it. In its defense, I haven't seen it since it came out but from what I remember it's an ambitious southern gothic ensemble piece. At the center of the mosaic is a a coming-of-age story that gives Tom Holland a chance to reveal his range and for Robert Pattinson to give, in my opinion, his most complex performance to date. And if you're a slut for a good narrator, Donald Ray Pollock brings so much personality and insight to your ears.
The Safdie Brothers & Ari Aster On Scorsese
If you're down to listen to three accomplished, highly talented, intimidating filmmakers turn into pretentious, lame, goofy nerds gushing about Scorsese, then this video is Heaven. Josh Safdie won't shut up, Benny keeps hitting his mic and upsetting the sound girl, Ari is always inserting himself to be heard, it's all shouting -I love every single fucking second of it. It's so relatable because it feels like every conversation I've had with fellow media hounds, especially a bit where one of the Safdies talk about watching The Big Shave on YouTube and then having to search for it every time it was taken down. If that's not relatable on this site then I don't know what is.
The Trailer for THE BATMAN
This had to be on here. I thought maybe it didn't really 'fit' the theme but whatever. I spent enough time watching it (over and over and over) that it's probably added up to a movie's length. It's a perfect trailer because I know nothing about it yet everything about it grabs my curiosity by the throat. It feels like Matt Reeves gets Gotham. It finally looks like I've always pictured it when reading the comics and watching The Animated Series: like a gothic noir. The fact that he says "I'm vengeance," not "I'm Batman," is the most comics-accurate thing I've seen in any of the movies. What makes this trailer ecen more special is it came out the night of my birthday and it felt like a beautiful gift-wrapped tease. In a year where every fucking movie was put on hold for another year, this trailer dropped and then we were told it's delayed for TWO years. It's exciting but it's also fucking maddening, in the best way possible, because it looks fucking good but also like it could be the definitive Batman movie made by a truly passionate fan. I believe in Matt Reeves.
The Outsider
This joins The Shining (1980) and Carrie (1976) as one of my favorite Stephen King adaptations ever. It's what It Chapter 2 failed to be: a mature, character-driven story about an ancient interdimensional monster, but with a procedural twist to ground it. True Detective season 1 danced on the edge of the metaphysical, to great end, but The Outsider heaves into the abyss - think HBO's answer to The X-Files.
DEVS
Someone told Alex Garland that he couldn't write sci-fi, so he wrote Sunshine to spite them and continued by adapting Never Let Me Go, Annihilation, and writing both Ex Machina and DEVS. Always indulge in rubbing someone's nose in your talent if they don't believe in you because DEVS is Garland's successor to Twin Peaks: The Return. There have been plenty of those who've been influenced by it, just like Peaks' original run, but DEVS is the first one to truly capture the spirit of it without being outright derivative. This isn't Garland doing David Lynch but him artfully tearing down Silicon Valley's hipster facade for 8 hours. He plays with structure, pacing, and subverts expectations in wildly unexpected ways. For example, toward the end of the season, he thrusts us into a great episode that halts plot momentum for a game of frisbee while everyone discusses matters of life and death... and relationships. It's funny, tense, and all-around fantastic. DEVS might have a few problems with its writing on a small scale but its large scale ideas are so heady, ingenious, and existentially haunting. Saul might be the best TV I saw last year but DEVS was the most ambitious (with some truly inspired casting of Nick Offerman).
Joe Pera Talks With You
Season 2
The most wholesome, gentle, folksy ASMR therapy that [adult swim] could ever produce. It's like Twin Peaks if there was no Black Lodge, Roadhouse, or One-Eyed Jack's but, instead, Andy and Lucy breaking the fourth wall to give us innocent musings on the mundane. I wouldn't call it 'pure,' though, there's a great streak of odd, surreal humor throughout, especially episodes written by Conner O'Malley. The reason season 2 is so significant is because it has more of an ongoing frame narrative as well as a better sense of everyone else around Joe, like his girlfriend Sarah, his best friend Gene, and Gene's wife Lulu. I don't just see it as a calming ASMR novelty show anymore, I'm invested.
The Gretel & Hansel Score
I thought I loved this movie but on rewatch it's mostly just a good mood piece with great photography. It's not bad but Oz Perkins is definitely punching under his weight. Honestly, it should have been a miniseries because it feels, in a bad way, like a pilot episode with its brief but intriguing world-building and scant character development. That said, this score is fucking incredible. Instead of the typical string sections and woodwinds, it's a soundscape of synth and electric guitar that I've been addicted to since February. It's like Tangerine Dream's score for Legend but less soapy and crystalline, more nocturnal and grand.
clipping
Chapter 319
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