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  • The Best and Worst Super Bowl Commercials, Ranked


    Here is my annual critical ranking of the Super Bowl commercials. This is the pregame edition, with all the available national ads that I could track down; the list will be updated after Sunday’s game.

    The trends so far? Nothing controversial, as you would expect, but also — and perhaps for associated reasons — very little creativity. It’s a bad year for ads; the ones at the top of this list aren’t much better than average. More spots than usual depend entirely on the appeal of a relatable celebrity (who is almost certainly male). Concepts beat ideas — there is a lot of fussy, overly complicated silliness and not much in the way of simple, effective storytelling or mood setting.

    (You may not see every commercial listed here during the game, and you may see commercials not listed here. The various broadcast and streaming platforms will carry different selections of ads, and some ads will only be shown in certain regions.)

    The N.F.L.’s own feel-good promo, “Somebody,” is affecting in a highly produced, can’t-we-all-just-get-along manner. Its implicit endorsement of diversity and inclusion offers a muted contrast to the league’s decision to forgo the “End Racism” end-zone slogan.

    No. 2

    David Beckham learns he has a secret twin, who turns out to look a lot like Matt Damon. Reasonably charming, and Ben Affleck jokes never get old.

    No. 3

    The actor Barry Keoghan rides a donkey around ye olde rural Ireland (he’s back in the world of “The Banshees of Inisherin”), delivering customers’ websites by throwing laptops into farmyards and through pub windows. It’s cute, even though it’s designed to ensure that Keoghan yells “Squarespace!” every few seconds.

    Scheduled for the pregame show, the coffee maker’s stylish “Hello Again” ad seeks to remind us why we once loved Starbucks. And it kind of does!

    No. 5

    Snoop Dogg and Tom Brady trade insults for 15 seconds, spitting out generic reasons for hating each other. Their celebrity is a distraction from the message about tolerance, but when Snoop, now himself, says, “I hate that things are so bad that we have to do a commercial about it,” it still hits home.

    No. 6

    Gordon Ramsay is recruited to cook for a visiting extraterrestrial played by Pete Davidson. The scenario is clever, though the Ramsay-to-Davidson ratio is exactly the opposite of what you would want.

    Those noted grumps Aubrey Plaza and Michael Shannon show off their saltiness, because Ritz crackers are salty. (Bad Bunny drops by, for the sake of variety.) It’s more intelligible than most of the one-joke ads, and Plaza and Shannon are a good pair.

    No. 8

    The likely progress of climate change is charted along the timeline of a newborn girl’s life. A little clunky and sanctimonious in its execution but unimpeachable in its sentiments.

    No. 9

    The national ad for Google’s Gemini personal assistant is likely to be the most slickly handsome production in the field. If the use of Capra-esque family moments to humanize an A.I.-generated voice that coaches a dad for a job interview completely creeps you out, however, feel free to move this to the bottom of the list.

    Dylan Bradshaw and Nate Norell, the winners of a $1 million contest, created an ad with something most of the agencies don’t seem interested in: a story. It’s nebulous — an alien tries very hard to wrestle a bag of Doritos away from its human owner — but it’s there.

    No. 11

    Roger Federer and Elmo debate the spelling of the logo on Federer’s shoes. There’s barely even a coherent thought here, but come on, it’s Roger Federer and Elmo.

    No. 12

    Channing Tatum teaches the actual players of the Wrexham soccer club in Wales — subject of the series “Welcome to Wrexham” — how to do celebration dances. It’s always fun to watch Tatum move, though on the evidence of this and any number of movies, there is no one left on earth who knows how to film someone dancing.

    Catherine O’Hara and Willem Dafoe as pickleball hustlers playing for beer is a nice idea, though it goes on for too long.

    No. 14

    Shaboozey, riding the wave from “A Bar Song” and his guest appearances on “Cowboy Carter,” sings “What a Wonderful World” backed by a gigantic, red, trumpet-playing gummy in a slight but pleasant and colorful spot.

    No. 15

    The presence of the always engaging comedian Nate Bargatze elevates this otherwise indifferent (but frenetic) spot, in which he uses the money he saves on deliveries to clone himself.

    Antonio Banderas is totally in on the joke, and he’s fun to watch as he’s transformed by the glory of his Bosch refrigerator. The appliance and tool company loses points, however, for the odd decision to pair Banderas with an actor playing the wrestler Randy Savage, who died in 2011.

    No. 17

    Vin Diesel and Michelle Rodriguez, in a cool car on a coastal highway, slow down to enjoy ice cream bars to the sweet sound of Smokey Robinson’s “Cruisin’.” The play on their “Fast and Furious” personas is negligible but nice to look at.

    No. 18

    Will the young men who drive beer sales respond to the soft, nostalgic pull of a Clydesdale nosing a keg across the countryside to the sound of the Bellamy Brothers? It’s a sobering thought. The horse is awfully cute, though.

    Issa Rae’s indestructible likability graces a series of mild sight gags about the irritations of tax season.

    No. 20

    A fairy tale is remade as a comic blockbuster, with the ubiquitous Glen Powell — whose anodyne charm is apparently perfect for the current moment — in the role of Goldilocks and pickup trucks taking the place of porridge.

    No. 21

    Andy Reid, who will be on the sideline as coach of the Kansas City Chiefs, is a more natural pitchman than you might expect. He also seems to be aware that the ad, in which he’s cast as a part-time hand model in order to sell slip-on shoes, makes no sense at all.

    To the sound of “Born to Be Wild,” four women of grandmotherly age pile into a convertible and partake in strenuous and mildly racy antics. It all feels a little out of proportion to what’s being sold, which are floor mats.

    No. 23

    The soft-drink brand revives the Pepsi Challenge, pitting zero-sugar colas against one another, with a resolutely utilitarian announcement that has the nice touch of focusing on (what looks like) a 50-year-old TV set.

    No. 24

    Human-sized sloths move, very slowly, through their routines at the office, the gym and other places on the Monday after the Super Bowl. That a case of Coors Light is the appropriate accompaniment for their dazed state seems like a mixed message at best.

    Meg Ryan and Billy Crystal reunite at Katz’s so that she can fake another orgasm, this time inspired by mayonnaise. Crystal’s reactions are seamless, but the punchline doesn’t deliver.

    No. 26

    A high-I.Q. beluga whale with Kieran Culkin’s voice retrieves a klutzy human’s cellphone. The message appears to be that we are a hapless race wholly dependent on the internet, and who can argue?

    No. 27

    A Chris, a Chris and a Kris (Hemsworth, Pratt and Jenner) plug the tech giant’s A.I.-assisted Ray-Ban sunglasses. This pair of intermittently amusing spots sends the reassuring message that contemporary art is just there to be made fun of, with all the wit and grace you would expect from a tech giant.

    A young farm girl, left behind when everyone else heads to the field, plants and tends an equally forlorn potato. The aw factor is very high; the sudden pivot at the end into a public service announcement for family farms is jarring.

    No. 29

    One of two overthought ads featuring Matthew McConaughey (see also Salesforce, below). The cameos by Kevin Bacon, Greta Gerwig and Martha Stewart are nice, but is this the best time to be making jokes about conspiracy theories?

    No. 30

    McConaughey and Woody Harrelson are the attractions in a forced and laugh-free scenario involving outdoor restaurant seating and heavy rain. The product is apparently an artificial intelligence that will book restaurant tables more intelligently than other A.I.s can.

    The much-loved actor Walton Goggins, at the risk of making himself slightly less loved, shills for GoDaddy’s business-creation tool Airo in an overly busy spot that ends up being a plug for his own Walton Goggins Goggle Glasses as well.

    No. 32

    This public-service spot from the seller of soaps and other personal-care items shows an adorable 3-year-old girl running down a sidewalk, then puts up a title saying that when she’s 14 she will hate her legs. The message about positive body images never quite comes through.

    No. 33

    Grocery delivery as a stampede, with familiar brand mascots — a doughboy chef, a green giant, a grinning pitcher — racing across the landscape to arrive together on a homeowner’s doorstep. Seems like a recipe for breakage.

    If you’re not aware that the face on the Pringles logo has a mustache, then this high-concept spot — with its flying celebrity mustaches winging their way to the store to get more chips — will be more than a little bewildering.

    No. 35

    The comedian Shane Gillis and the rapper Post Malone star in a deadpan ode to suburban backyard partying, with cultural undertones and overtones that defy simple analysis. Peyton Manning drops by to lend folksy gravitas.

    No. 36

    The reservation service promotes its “something for everyone” promise with a scattered montage of hotel mishaps that isn’t likely to appeal to anyone in particular. Various Muppets make cameo appearances.

    An animated seal with the face and voice of, yes, Seal sings a parody of the 1994 hit “Kiss From a Rose.” It may induce nightmares, though you have to admit that “My flippers can’t hold Mountain Dew, what a shame” makes about as much sense as “And now that your rose is in bloom, a light hits the gloom on the gray.”

    No. 38

    Imagining the world without “Star Wars” or “The Simpsons” or “The Bear,” this bland spot for Disney’s streaming offerings might make you think, “Yeah, that wouldn’t be so bad.”

    No. 39

    Adam DeVine of the “Pitch Perfect” movies accidentally orders 100,000 Cirkul water bottles, a gag that ties into an actual giveaway said to be taking place during the Super Bowl. It’s hard to say which is more annoying: the ad or the notion of spending money on branded water bottles.

    Confused lovers of the company’s “chocolate lava” candy try to eat actual lava. It’s a head-scratcher.

    No. 41

    Would you base your campaign for frozen pizza snacks on an animated alien who looks like the walking personification of heartburn?

    No. 42



    The Super Bowl is not only the biggest night in football, but also in advertising. Every year, companies shell out millions of dollars to air their commercials during the big game in hopes of capturing the attention of millions of viewers. Some commercials are memorable for their humor, creativity, and emotional impact, while others fall flat or are just plain cringeworthy.

    Here’s a ranking of the best and worst Super Bowl commercials from over the years:

    The Best:
    1. Budweiser’s “Puppy Love” (2014) – This heartwarming commercial featuring a puppy and a Clydesdale horse tugged at the heartstrings of viewers everywhere.
    2. Doritos’ “Ultrasound” (2016) – This hilarious ad showed a baby reacting to a bag of Doritos during an ultrasound, leaving viewers in stitches.
    3. Coca-Cola’s “Mean Joe Greene” (1980) – This iconic commercial featuring the Pittsburgh Steelers player sharing a Coke with a young fan is a classic.
    4. Apple’s “1984” (1984) – This groundbreaking commercial introduced the Macintosh computer and is still considered one of the best Super Bowl commercials of all time.
    5. Volkswagen’s “The Force” (2011) – This ad featuring a young Darth Vader trying to use the Force on various objects was both cute and clever.

    The Worst:
    1. GoDaddy’s “Perfect Match” (2013) – This commercial featuring supermodel Bar Refaeli kissing a nerdy guy was cringeworthy and garnered a lot of backlash.
    2. Nationwide’s “Make Safe Happen” (2015) – This somber ad about preventable childhood accidents was a major downer and did not sit well with viewers.
    3. Groupon’s “Tibet” (2011) – This controversial commercial making light of the plight of the Tibetan people did not go over well and was quickly pulled.
    4. Just for Feet’s “Kenyan Runner” (1999) – This racially insensitive commercial featuring a white man trying to outrun a group of Kenyan runners was widely criticized.
    5. Chevy’s “Blackout” (2013) – This ad tried to capitalize on the infamous Super Bowl blackout, but fell flat and was seen as opportunistic.

    Whether a Super Bowl commercial is a hit or a miss can have a lasting impact on a company’s brand. These commercials show the power of advertising to make a lasting impression on viewers, for better or for worse.

    Tags:

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  • 10 Greatest Grammy Album Of The Year Wins, Ranked


    There have been 65 Album of The Year winners since the Grammy Awards began, with some becoming staples in the ceremony’s legacy. The race for the night’s highest honor is always tight, and the Recording Academy’s choice isn’t always met with favorable reactions. Several times, the results have ended in uproar. In recent years, this has happened mostly when a different artist has won over Beyoncé. Despite being the most-awarded artist in Grammy history, Beyoncé has never received the Album of The Year Grammy. However, the Grammys have honored a handful of other legendary artists with the award.

    In 1992, Whitney Houston won Album of The Year for The Bodyguard, making her only the second Black woman to take home the award. In 2010, Taylor Swift became the youngest-ever recipient until Billie Eilish took over that title in 2020. However, some incredible artists like Mariah Carey, Elton John, and Prince never received the award despite making a massive impact on the music industry. Though there have been some poor choices, there have also been times when the Grammys got it right, resulting in some iconic wins. The following are the 10 best, from cultural to musical impact.

    10

    Taylor Swift: 1989

    Swift Won At The 2016 Grammys Ceremony

    At the 2016 Grammys, Taylor Swift took home her second Album of The Year trophy. While she was up against some worthy opponents, there was no denying 1989 was the biggest album of the year. It was hard to turn on a pop radio station without hearing one of Swift’s 1989 singles. This was also the era when Swift pulled her music from Spotify, so 1989‘s success came mostly without streaming, though it did remain on Apple Music. After losing Album of The Year for her previous album, Red, Swift made a drastic shift, abandoning country and diving headfirst into pop.

    Related


    Every Taylor Swift Album, Ranked From Worst To Best

    Taylor Swift has released 11 albums (and re-recorded four) over the course of her 18-year career, some of which are better than others.

    It was a huge risk, as no other country artist had ever successfully crossed over into pop music. Swift, however, took it and succeeded, as she often does. Before the awards, Kanye West had released his song “Famous,” which ended their brief friendship and continued their decades-long feud. Swift took the opportunity to praise women for their hard work and remind them to never let a man take credit for their success. Swift went on to win the award twice more, becoming the artist with the most Album of The Year wins. Her 1989 win, however, was the most memorable.

    9

    The Beatles: Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band

    The Beatles Won At The 1968 Grammys Ceremony

    The Beatles became a phenomenon when they hit the music scene, sparking a hysteria coined Beatlemania. It wasn’t until their eighth studio album at the end of the 60s, however, that they’d take home Album of The Year. Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band included tracks like “With a Little Help from My Friends” and “Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds.”

    Related


    15 Underrated The Beatles Songs That Deserve Way More Love

    While The Beatles were responsible for some of the most popular songs ever made, they also have plenty of underappreciated tracks that need more love.

    The two tracks would go on to become some of their most well-known hits. The Beatles’ Album of The Year win also marked the first time a rock album took home the coveted award. It was long deserved as they’d already had eleven #1 albums before finally winning Album of The Year.

    8

    Alanis Morisette: Jagged Little Pill

    Morisette Won At The 1996 Grammys Ceremony

    Before Taylor Swift and Olivia Rodrigo made waves with their angry breakup songs, Alanis Morrisette took the world by storm with her celebration of female rage titled Jagged Little Pill. The album included her best-known song to date, “You Oughta Know,” which both Swift and Rodrigo sang with her on their respective tours. Women have been shamed for their anger throughout history, but with Jagged Little Pill, Morisette encouraged women to embrace their rage.

    The album would inspire a Broadway musical in 2019 and would become the blueprint for other singer-songwriters looking to express their bitter emotions through music. This is now a more common theme in modern music, but it may not be as prevalent were it not for Jagged Little Pill. This cultural impact no doubt makes this a memorable Album of The Year win, especially seeing how it has since paved the way for other artists like Morrisette to achieve a similar feat.

    7

    Bob Dylan: Time Out Of Mind

    Dylan Won At The 1998 Grammys Ceremony

    Bob Dylan was a trailblazer in folk music. He was also fearless in terms of experimenting with new sounds, no matter how much it angered his fans. A Complete Unknown takes audiences through Dylan’s first time performing his rock-inspired album, which didn’t go over well with the crowd.

    Despite his legacy, it wasn’t until 1998 that Dylan won his first Album of The Year for one of his solo albums. Dylan’s win was long overdue and well-deserved, as Time Out of Mind had several legendary tracks, including “Make You Feel My Love.” The song would go on to be covered several times, most notably by Adele for her 2008 album, 19.

    6

    Carole King: Tapestry

    King Won At The 1972 Grammys Ceremony

    Carole King is one of the most prolific singer-songwriters in music history, acting as an inspiration for the ones who would come after her. Tapestry was a profound album, with tracks like “It’s Too Late,” which took home Record of The Year, and “You’ve Got A Friend,” which took home Song of The Year. Her Song of The Year win even made her the first woman to win the award.

    In 2014, Tapestry‘s track “Beautiful” inspired the Broadway musical about her life, and she’d return to the Grammys that year to sing the song with Sara Bareilles. King was only the third woman to win Album of The Year, signifying just how impactful the album was and what her legacy would be. 26 years after her win, Tapestry was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame.

    5

    Stevie Wonder: Innervisions

    Wonder Won At The 1974 Grammys Ceremony

    In 1974, Stevie Wonder won Album of The Year with “Innervisions” and became the first Black artist ever to take the award home. The crowd erupted in applause as Cher presented Wonder with the golden trophy. Wonder gave a powerful speech, hoping his music would continue to influence a better future.

    The singer would win the award two more times, becoming one of three artists with the most wins until Taylor Swift broke the record in 2024. However, his first win will always be the most iconic, as it broke down barriers for Black artists who would come after him. This easily makes Wonder’s win one of the best in Grammys history.

    4

    Frank Sinatra: A Man And His Music

    Sinatra Won At The 1967 Grammys Ceremony

    Frank Sinatra was the second artist to ever win Album of The Year back in 1960. However, he broke a special record in 1967 with his win for A Man and His Music. Not only did the album make Sinatra the first artist to win the award three times, but it was also the first time an artist consecutively won Album of The Year. The Chairman of the Board won in 1966 for his album September of My Years before winning again at the following ceremony.

    To this day, Sinatra and Stevie Wonder are the only artists to ever win Album of The Year two years in a row. A Man and His Music was made up of mostly re-recordings of Sinatra’s previously released songs and acted as a celebration of his revolutionary career. The previously released songs made the win more impressive, as Sinatra didn’t even have to release new music for the Academy to celebrate his work.

    3

    Lauryn Hill: The Miseducation Of Lauryn Hill

    Hill Won At The 1999 Grammys Ceremony

    Lauryn Hill was the third Black woman to win Album of The Year at the Grammys. Part of what made the moment so special was that Whitney Houston presented the award to her, encouraging the crowd to cheer for Hill’s big win. The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill was Hill’s first and only solo album, making her win an even bigger accomplishment, especially because she was up against some big names.

    Hill beat out Madonna, Sheryl Crow, and Shania Twain with her win, so it was quite profound. In her acceptance speech, she highlighted how special it was to win for a hip-hop album as Houston excitedly cheered in the background. The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill was one of the most acclaimed albums of 1998, and remains highly praised to this day.

    2

    Fleetwood Mac: Rumours

    Fleetwood Mac Won At The 1978 Grammys Ceremony

    Fleetwood Mac’s album Rumours is #7 on Rolling Stone‘s 500 Greatest Albums of All Time list. The publication referred to it as the best breakup album ever released, and Grammy voters seemed to agree it was excellent. The album is flooded with iconic breakup tracks, with the 2004 remastered version including the legendary Fleetwood Mac track “Silver Springs.”

    Rumours remains one of the best-selling albums of all time, with all four of its released singles charting in the top 10 of Billboard’s Hot 100. The album has incredible lore with all the behind-the-scenes breakup drama, which only adds to its legacy. However, even without the stories, the music stands on its own and was well-deserving of the Grammys’ highest honor of the night. Only one other Album of The Year win manages to best this iconic album.

    1

    Michael Jackson: Thriller

    Jackson Won At The 1984 Grammys Ceremony

    One Album of The Year winner stands out among the 64 others, and that’s Michael Jackson’s Thriller. The album remains the best-selling of all time, and was a pivotal moment in Jackson’s career. Similar to Taylor Swift’s pivot to pop music, Jackson was frustrated when Off the Wall wasn’t nominated for Album of The Year. The only nominations he received were for his single “Don’t Stop Til You Get Enough.” Jackson was also frustrated about being boxed into the R&B genre, so he set out to become the King of Pop. Needless to say, he succeeded beyond his wildest dreams.

    Related


    10 Underrated Michael Jackson Songs You’ve Probably Never Heard Before

    Michael Jackson is one of the most famous artists of all time, but his discography still holds many widely unknown masterpieces. Here are 10 of them.

    Thriller‘s win represented all the hard work Jackson had put into his career. The singer accepted the award in his bedazzled jacket and iconic sparkly glove, taking the stage with legendary producer Quincy Jones. Thriller was the blueprint for all the pop albums that came after it, and Michael Jackson is still the blueprint for modern pop stars. While the Grammys will continue to hand out their Album of The Year trophy to several more excited recipients, it will be hard to beat the legacy of Michael Jackson’s Thriller.


    1. Adele – "21" (2012)
    2. Taylor Swift – "Fearless" (2010)
    3. Billie Eilish – "When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go?" (2020)
    4. OutKast – "Speakerboxxx/The Love Below" (2004)
    5. Fleetwood Mac – "Rumours" (1978)
    6. Lauryn Hill – "The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill" (1999)
    7. Michael Jackson – "Thriller" (1984)
    8. Bob Dylan – "Time Out of Mind" (1998)
    9. Beck – "Morning Phase" (2015)
    10. Paul Simon – "Graceland" (1987)

    Tags:

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    #Greatest #Grammy #Album #Year #Wins #Ranked

  • I’ve navigated Marvel Rivals’ chaotic ranked play and dragged myself out of Plat hell, which means it’s time to start preparing to do it all over again next season


    At the beginning of every season in Marvel Rivals, each player will get a rank reset and will be demoted around seven tiers (unless they’re already floating around the bottom), meaning they’ll all just get grouped in Bronze 3. This reset has meant that the first half of Season 1 has—what I can only imagine—felt like a free-for-all fistfight inside a house that’s on fire, and every so often, one of your teammates pours gasoline everywhere—so, yeah, it’s been fun.

    After climbing up to Diamond in Season 0, I started this season off in Silver 1. I actually wasn’t aware of just how severe this rank reset was going to be, and I was unpleasantly surprised to realise I would be back fighting in Silver and Gold lobbies.



    I’ve navigated Marvel Rivals’ chaotic ranked play and dragged myself out of Plat hell, which means it’s time to start preparing to do it all over again next season.

    After countless hours of grinding, strategizing, and sometimes even raging, I’ve finally made it out of Plat hell in Marvel Rivals. The road to this point has been long and arduous, filled with tough opponents, frustrating losses, and exhilarating victories.

    But now that I’ve reached the coveted rank of Diamond, I know that the real work is just beginning. With a new season on the horizon, it’s time to start preparing for the next climb up the ladder. This means refining my deck, studying the meta, and staying on top of the latest strategies and trends in the game.

    It’s a daunting task, to be sure. But I know that with determination, perseverance, and a healthy dose of luck, I can once again rise through the ranks and prove my skills as a top Marvel Rivals player.

    So here’s to the next season, full of new challenges, new opportunities, and hopefully, a few more shiny new ranks to add to my collection. Bring it on, Marvel Rivals. I’m ready for whatever you throw at me.

    Tags:

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    2. Climbing out of Plat hell in Marvel Rivals
    3. Marvel Rivals season preparation
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  • The Weeknd’s Best Songs, Ranked


    On Friday, The Weeknd will release his sixth album, Hurry Up Tomorrow. It arrives four months ahead of a film starring and co-written by the singer-songwriter based on the record. Whether the movie — described as a psychological thriller co-starring Barry Keoghan and Jenna Ortega — succeeds remains to be seen. But only a fool would bet against the album, given The Weeknd’s commercial track record.

    He is simply one of the most dominant pop stars of recent years. The numbers speak for themselves: He has 25 songs with a billion or more streams on Spotify, more than any other artist ever. He has 67 gold and platinum albums and singles. And he is the first man to headline the Super Bowl halftime and appear as himself in a Safdie Brothers film. (Kevin Garnett still has a shot at the Super Bowl, I suppose.)

    From a critical perspective, The Weeknd is a fascinating figure to ponder. Before he was a pop superstar, he was a mysterious indie artist with an exploding fanbase. He is easily the most successful artist to transition from the Pitchfork world to the world’s stage, and the way in which he achieved this — by both conceding to the sonic mores of mainstream pop while also remaining true to a clearly defined (and frequently transgressive) persona — has been singular and impressive.

    Which is to say: I want to delve deeper into this guy’s career. So let’s do that. The hills have eyes! But I have ears! Who am I to judge? I’m the one writing this column!

    Here are my 25 favorite songs by The Weeknd.

    PRE-LIST ENTERTAINMENT: “LADIES AND GENTLEMEN, THE WEEKND”

    You know the meme. You have seen it at least once every Friday for the past five years. You probably have a friend who still thinks it’s a funny joke to drop in the group text thread. By now, most of you have gathered from context that Daniel Craig is standing on the stage at Saturday Night Live. And you might have even figured out that Daniel isn’t talking about “the weekend” but rather The Weeknd, also known as the Canadian singer-songwriter Abel Tesfaye.

    Two other important tidbits of information tend to get overlooked, however. The first is that the song Craig is introducing is “Blinding Lights,” the first single from Tesfaye’s fourth studio LP, After Hours, set to be released 13 days after this performance. Released four months prior in November 2019, “Blinding Lights” will eventually top the charts for two weeks in early April, and for another two weeks in late April and early May. Eventually, it will reign supreme as the year’s most popular song, and then as the single biggest track of the streaming era, blowing past a staggering four billion plays on Spotify.

    The second important tidbit is that the performance took place on March 7, 2020. And as we all know, that was right before the Covid shutdown. The Weeknd appeared on the premiere weekly showcase for musicians on broadcast television and sang the biggest song of his (or anyone’s) career at the last possible moment in the so-called “normal times.” (Or “relatively normal times.”) And then he proceeded to have one of the biggest albums of 2020, with After Hours spawning five singles and landing at No. 2 on the year-end sales chart (behind, of course, Taylor Swift).

    The Weeknd was already popular before 2020. But 2020 represents his commercial apex. And it occurred during a year that can be credibly classified as “dystopian,” when people were either imprisoned inside of their homes or protesting in the streets against police brutality. It was a time of extreme alienation, hopelessness, and spiritual darkness. It did not make anyone feel positive about the state of the human condition.

    The Weeknd’s music doing extremely well during this period does not seem like a coincidence.

    25. “Loft Music” (2011)

    Speaking of memes: I want all of you kids to gather around Grandpa so I can tell you a story about something called “Hipster R&B.” It was a made-up genre designation to describe artists with an affinity for pop-soul sounds from the seventies and eighties, along with the aesthetics of internet-era indie. It was applied to artists you know and love (Frank Ocean, Janelle Monae) and artists you have probably forgotten (How To Dress Well, Active Child). It emerged as a prominent sound right when critics were locked in the dreaded “Poptimists vs. Rockists” wars of the early 2010s. And “Hipster R&B” was yet another flashpoint, with pop-minded critics charging that Brooklynites in dive bars were avoiding actual R&B music on questionable “snobby anti-pop” grounds. This is what people cared about in the waning days of the first Obama term. It truly was a simpler time (derogatory).

    Alas, capitalistic market forces and the culture-flattening effects of social media soon rendered such debates moot. Soon, all artists would be put in the same bucket and stratifying artists based on their relationship to the mainstream — even artists who wanted to be stratified outside of that system — became impossible. And then there was The Weeknd, the most successful artist to start out in the “Hipster R&B” lane and then transition to legitimate pop superstardom. Though it remains unclear the degree to which he came to the pop world or the pop world came to him. In the end, it was an indefinite mixture of both.

    This is easy to forget now, but The Weeknd started out as an indie dude. And I mean that in the literal sense of the world — he got famous as an unsigned artist by posting his songs on YouTube and maintaining a mysterious public facing persona. Was The Weeknd a guy? Was The Weeknd a band? Was The Weeknd a front for secretly released Michael Jackson demos? For a little while at least, all those possibilities (and more) were on the table.

    Now, he was always destined for bigger and (mostly) better things. In a later Rolling Stone profile, the chief executive of Republic Records recalls an L.A. area show in 2012 that attracted representatives from all the major labels, “like the Five Families all in one room.” But if you’re looking for an example of “Hipster R&B,” you couldn’t find a more on-the-nose example than “Loft Music,” from the first Weeknd mixtape, House Of Balloons. The mood is murky and cinematic. The Beach House sample is instantly recognizable. And the lyrics are seedy and escapist in the most depressing possible way, with Tesfaye relating a soulless sex-and-drugs scenario with his incongruously sweet tenor, the core formula to The Weeknd’s music. He will repeat it over and over, with progressively bigger budgets and more dazzling production, in the years ahead.

    24. “Prisoner” (2015)

    In 2019’s Uncut Gems, Tesfaye plays the version of himself from 2012, when he was a self-described “relentless punk.” We see him perform one of his earliest viral hits, “The Morning,” in a club before sneaking off to sniff cocaine and proposition Julia Fox in a bathroom stall. The Safdie Brothers’ attention to detail is on point. The Weeknd behaves exactly how you would imagine The Weeknd behaving at the time. But there’s also the implication that this is not real, because Tesfaye is in on the joke. The sequence plays like a self-aware extension of the decadent misadventures endlessly unspooled on his early mixtapes, and a send-up of the character that Tesfaye portrays under the umbrella of The Weeknd and repeatedly insists is a character.

    Read any profile of Tesfaye, and one of the themes inevitably will concern how he is not like the songs he writes and sings. Even though his early media narrative leaned heavily on his misspent youth as a quasi-homeless Dionysian hustler set loose on the streets of Toronto. But now that he’s famous, he insists, he’s a changed man. Sometimes this is conveyed in literal terms. (“When people meet me, they say I’m really kind — contrary to a lot of my music,” he told Rolling Stone in 2015.) And sometimes this is expressed via anecdotal information (like the bit in his 2021 GQ profile about how he apologized, like a good Canadian, for showing up seven minutes late to an interview).

    I take Tesfaye at his word that he is not a misogynist ingesting Scarface-levels of blow on the regular. But a lot of critics don’t pay him the same courtesy. The reception to his star-crossed HBO series The Idol — and the accompanying exposé alleging skeezy behind-the-scenes behavior — suggests a media compulsion to reveal the alleged real-life scumbag behind the artistic façade.

    In that way, Tesfaye is still linked with the indie artists he came up with. And I’m not talking about the other folks lumped under the “Hipster R&B” banner. I instead refer to his duet partner on “Prisoner,” Lizzie Grant aka Lana Del Rey, and Josh Tillman, whose debut as Father John Misty arrived the year after Tesfaye’s opening salvo of mixtapes eventually collected on 2012’s platinum-selling Trilogy. What these three artists shared in the early 2010s was an interest in adopting transgressive identities that subsequently confused, enraged and/or enraptured critics, who as a group tend to be way too literal-minded when it comes to reading lyrics as straight autobiography. Regular listeners, in fact, tend to be more sophisticated in that regard. (Or they just care less about the words.) In comparison to the indie artists associated with the Trump era, who were more careful to present the “correct” morals and ideologies, these elder millennials reveled in explicitly “bad” personas while also gently distancing their “real” selves from them.

    I call this “The Power Of The Theoretical Asshole.” There’s a long tradition of this in popular music, just as there is in every mass market artistic medium. The rogue, the anti-hero, the difficult man (or woman) — audiences have always lapped up this sort of thing, even when they periodically make a show of condemning it. And nobody has exploited this ingrained human impulse more in music in the past decade than The Weeknd.

    23. “D.D.” (2011)

    I had mixed feelings about Trilogy, particularly the songs from the other two mixtapes, Thursday and Echoes Of Silence. After House Of Balloons, The Weeknd seemed woefully bereft of ideas, favoring samey-sounding, draggy ballads with ridiculously disreputable lyrics. His first proper album, 2013’s Kiss Land, was even worse, and it started to look like he might go the way of so many other “Hipster R&B” also-rans.

    And then he made Beauty Behind The Madness, one of the most shameless (and best) “sellout” records of modern times. Frank Ocean would never write songs with Max Martin, and that’s why people love him. But The Weeknd absolutely would, and that’s why people love him. Beauty Behind The Madness is where he officially left “Hipster R&B” behind, and detonated the genre from the inside.

    The sellout era is where I signed on as a fan. Initially my attraction to Beauty Behind The Madness was as Michael Jackson methadone. I’m a lifelong MJ fan, which has some obvious baggage I don’t want to get into lest my inbox be filled with messages from the least rational lunatics on God’s green Earth. I have found my Michael Jackson methadone from various places — the first two Justin Timberlake albums, the third Tame Impala LP, etc. But The Weeknd has been my most consistent supplier.

    It’s not a perfect replication. Tesfaye’s vocals are reminiscent of MJ’s, but only his softest and least virtuosic mode. That hard, rhythmic, aggressive thing that Jackson can also lean into — see “Smooth Criminal” or the most paranoid and delusional songs from Dangerous and HIStory: Past, Present, And Future, Book 1 — eludes him. Which isn’t his fault: Michael Jackson was one of the greatest singers who ever lived, and Abel Tesfaye is not.

    And then there’s the matter of genuine darkness vs. performative darkness. Abel Tesfaye is a nice guy (presumably!) playing a monster. And Michael Jackson is a monster (allegedly!) playing a nice guy. The text of The Weekend’s songs can’t touch the subtext of Michael Jackson’s songs when it comes to contemplating the blackest voids of human existence. Which is to say that The Weeknd’s cover of “Dirty Diana” doesn’t have nearly the depths of psychosexual drama that Jackson brings to the original. But it’s an essential text for understanding Tesfaye’s work regardless.

    22. “Kiss Land” (2013)

    I used to think this song was terrible. But now I appreciate its terribleness. When he sings “You can meet me in the room where the kisses ain’t free / you gotta pay with your bo-dy” it’s like he’s doing a “Weird” Al version of a Weeknd song.

    21. “In The Night” (2015)

    The most blatant MJ rip-off on Beauty Behind The Madness, even more than one of the album’s two signature songs, “Can’t Feel My Face.” According to a New York Times article, the head of Sony Music Publishing responded ecstatically to hearing “In The Night” for the first time by exclaiming, “It’s ‘Billie Jean’! It’s ‘Billie fucking Jean’!” Actually the music (or at least the rhythm) is more reminiscent of “The Way You Make Me Feel.” Though the lyrics — which allude to childhood sexual abuse — do evoke that aforementioned baggage that we’re not going to get into right now.

    20. “Alone Again” (2020)

    Beauty Behind The Madness was The Weeknd’s commercial breakthrough, but After Hours is his pop-music masterstroke. It is the decade’s finest example of “stadium pop,” a term that Questlove once used to describe Michael Jackson’s follow-up to Thriller, 1987’s Bad, in Spike Lee’s documentary about the album. Only Tesfaye couldn’t perform the songs from After Hours in actual stadiums until more than two years after the album was released. But you get a sense of that record’s hugeness when you watch the 2023 concert film, The Weeknd: Live At SoFi Stadium, or listen to the accompanying LP, which I would argue presents the songs at least as well as the studio record. This is certainly true of “Alone Again,” which opens the album and the show, where the isolation of the lyrics is juxtaposed with the throngs of 70,000 people staring down the red-suited, masked, and Joker-ified Tesfaye. And like that, The Power Of The Theoretical Asshole has been fully harnessed.

    19. “Sacrifice” (2022)

    My favorite album by The Weeknd is Dawn FM, which is also the weakest selling release of his post-sellout era. Is it possible that I am, at heart, a “Hipster R&B” guy? I plead “not guilty” to those charges! But the general public certainly seemed to be bewildered by the downbeat, conceptual nature of this record. Dawn FM is a strange beast, obsessed with death and spiritual rebirth and narrated by a zombified Jim Carrey. Musical speaking, however, Dawn FM picks up where After Hours leaves off, especially the record’s thrilling first half, which unleashes one stadium pop banger after another. (Dawn FM is the rare Weeknd album that is front-loaded rather than back-loaded — he typically comes out of the gate a bit slow and then closes strong.) A highlight of that opening salvo is this roided-out disco-funk track, which is clearly cut from the Off The Wall mold.

    18. “Gasoline” (2022)

    Another heater from the front half of Dawn FM, only this time the reference point is icy eighties English synth pop. Tesfaye slips, hilariously, into an arch faux British accent on the verses in a manner that evokes The Human League. He also namedrops R.E.M., and pairs it with what may or may not be a reference to the third studio album by The Cure. (Coincidentally or not, he nods to “Losing My Religion” on the song “Faith,” from After Hours.) This gumbo of disparate musical allusions is another foundational element for Tesfaye, and it goes back to his childhood. “I was the kid wearing the Pink Floyd shirt and listening to Ginuwine in my ear,” he once recalled to Rolling Stone.

    17. “How Do I Make You Love Me?” (2022)

    (This song must be placed at No. 17, as it follows “Gasoline” on the record and the pacing of Dawn FM simply cannot be trifled with.)

    16. “Party Monster” (2016)

    The philosophical concerns of Dawn FM — mortality, the afterlife, the deadening effects of media and materialism, etc. — are relatively elevated for an album by The Weeknd. For the most part, the man is preoccupied by writing songs about getting wasted, hooking up with some anonymous rando, and then brooding about the experience with a mix of self-hatred and menacing swagger. There’s plenty of both in this song, which also is infused with the atmosphere of the eighties thrillers to which Tesfaye nods throughout his work. You can plainly hear the synths that evoke prime-era John Carpenter, as well as the mix of filthy-old-man eroticism and ugly violence associated with David Cronenberg. Actually, “erotic” probably isn’t the right word, as “Party Monster” isn’t remotely sexy. Tesfaye regards the sex in his songs like the average slasher-flick director thinks about the fornicating teens in his films. Sex is an activity associated with dread and ultimate destruction, not, you know, pleasure.

    It goes back to The Power Of The Theoretical Asshole. There are three reasons why audiences crave this act from entertainers. 1) Bad guys are more interesting (and fun) than good guys; 2) Escapism from Judeo-Christian/common everyday decency norms; 3) Catharsis. But the allure of asshole-dom sits side-by-side with extreme guilt and shame. We must indulge, but we must also be punished.

    The Weeknd understands this. In his songs, badness and punishment always arrive simultaneously. You get the “party,” but you also get stuck with the “monster.”

    15. “High For This” (2011)

    Tesfaye somehow rose to prominence during an era when his type of thing was openly reviled in pop culture. But he did not skate through without scrutiny. In a 2015 cover story, Rolling Stone took him to task for his habit of depicting sexual encounters in his lyrics that occur under the influence of drugs and alcohol. The magazine singled out this particular song, a defining number of his “Hipster R&B” era, for criticism. (It also focused on the far more despicable “Initiation,” in which a woman is made to sleep with the scumbag protagonist’s buddies before she can be with him.) In terms of his “problematic drug-fueled sex” songs, “High For This” is the ur-text, starting with the title. It’s more subtle that simply calling the song “I Hump On Drugs,” but just barely. But it’s also just a song, with a sick but presumably fictional premise. Pressing Tesfaye for an apology — “Everything is consent,” he awkwardly insisted to the magazine — is like guilt-tripping David Cronenberg for all of the imaginary “intercourse with TV sets” action that goes down in Videodrome. The point of “High For This” is to make you feel bad in a tuneful, catchy way, and in that respect it is an unmitigated success.

    14. “House Of Balloons / Glass Table Girls” (2011)

    A sister song to “Party Monster.” The synth line has the same “eighties horror movie” feel, and the lyrics likewise dwell on a “Jesse Pinkman with PTSD”-style party where people do dirty things from which they derive zero happiness. What makes this two-part track marginally more effective is that Tesfaye was closer to his own youthful “decadent party” life when he made it. And the production being somewhat less pristine actually enhances the scuzzy atmosphere. If “Party Monster” is Scream, “House Of Balloons / Glass Table Girls” is The Last House On The Left.

    13. “Heartless” (2020)

    During the pandemic, I decided to introduce my kids to songs about problematic, drug-fueled sex via The Highlights, the rare modern day “greatest hits” album. It’s appropriate that The Weeknd embraced his format — his catalog is tailor-made for the best-of compilation treatment. All his proper albums have the same flaw, which is having at least four or five too many songs. (He also has a strange habit of putting the best track — or even the biggest hit — at the end of the record.) But The Highlights is a perfect hits collection, and it makes a convincing case for The Weeknd being the best male pop star of the last 10 years. I have played this album on countless family trips, and it’s the music (like pre-scandal Michael Jackson) that everyone seems to agree on. Even a song like “Heartless,” which is about how The Weeknd is heartless, for all of the reasons we have already enumerated.

    12. “After Hours” (2020)

    It’s one of the best songs on his second-best record, so of course it’s the penultimate entry on the track list. Tesfaye has said an inspiration for the record was the 1985 Martin Scorsese film of the same name, and this song comes closest to matching that movie’s vibe of relentless, nocturnal paranoia. He’s in a waking nightmare he can’t escape; he just wants to lay next to his girl and “share babies / protection, we won’t need.” Is there a woman alive who could possibly resist that sales pitch?

    11. “Starboy” (2016)

    I’m joking, of course. “Share babies” is an odd rhetorical construction I have yet to wrap my head around. No matter: Like I said earlier, many songs by The Weeknd (including the great ones) have an element of dumbness. Sometimes it’s intentional, sometimes it’s not. This is not a criticism. Or, at least, it’s not a unique criticism. Every classic pop song lists “dumbness” among its primary ingredients. But sometimes The Weeknd sprinkles a little more dumbness than usual for extra flavor. “Starboy” is a classic example. “I’m a motherfucking Starboy” is a very dumb line, and it will not leave your head for at least three days after hearing it. You will, involuntarily, introduce yourself as “a motherfucking Starboy” to strangers. And those strangers will think you sound even sillier than The Weeknd when he says it. It’s just how it works.

    10. “Can’t Feel My Face” (2015)

    Upon the song’s release, “Starboy” scanned as an ironic commentary on the popularity of the previous record, Beauty Behind The Madness. But then, when The Weeknd headlined the Super Bowl halftime show in 2022 and opened with “Starboy,” it no longer seemed ironic. He was now, clearly, a motherfucking Starboy. “Can’t Feel My Face” followed a similarly trajectory. When it came out, the obvious cocaine reference in the title felt like a nod to old fans potentially put off by his new mainstream pop trappings. And then the song became one of the most inescapable smashes of the mid-2010s, and the druggy naughtiness was completely strip-mined out of its core. Now, “Can’t Feel My Face” seems positively wholesome by Weeknd standards.

    9. “Less Than Zero” (2022)

    What does relative wholesomeness do to a man who has harnessed The Power Of The Theoretical Asshole? It causes him to record a song like “Less Than Zero,” in which he approaches contrition: “I’ll always be less than zero / You tried your best with me, I know.” Naturally, he does this under the guise of a Bret Easton Ellis reference, just to let you know that the “theoretically asshole”-ness of it all hasn’t been fully abandoned. Meanwhile, the specter of “Hipster R&B” also lurks — if this song wasn’t at least partly influenced by A Deeper Understanding I’ll never write another word about The War On Drugs again.

    8. “In Your Eyes” (2020)

    We are entering the heart of The Highlights territory here. “I just pretend / that I’m in the dark,” he sings at the start of this song, and it feels like a confession. The big hits from After Hours strike a balance between deepening The Weeknd’s inter-album mythos — the man definitely has a weakness for grouping records into trilogies — and operating as pure candy-cotton pop songs.

    7. “Save Your Tears” (2020)

    Like this song, for instance, one of Tesfaye’s sweetest confections. Though he does manage to smuggle some bile inside that indelible eighties pop music beamed from the shiniest roller rink in the sky. He spies a former love on the dance floor and feels a tinge of bitterness when he sees her having fun. But then she spots him, with a theatrical “single teardrop falling” from her eye, and he relishes her still-broken heart. He claims to want her back but you don’t believe him. Because this is bubblegum pop laced with strychnine, like a Wham! song written by This Year’s Model era Elvis Costello.

    6. “The Morning” (2011)

    Tesfaye once described his childhood, with questionable sensitivity, as “Kids without the AIDS.” That’s the vibe of this song. Yes, there are some lyrical clunkers. (“Girls get timid / but behind closed doors they get poles so rigid.” Groan.) But there’s a reason why Tesfaye got people’s attention with relative quickness and then built an all-time pop career. He transformed amoral grime into riveting, seductive listens.

    5. “What You Need” (2011)

    Oh, and he also had a ton of promotional help from Drake. Can’t forget that! Though Drake, in the long run, (allegedly!) took more than his share from The Weeknd in return. Just how much Tesfaye contributed to Drake’s best album, 2011’s Take Care, has been disputed. Tesfaye claims Drake plundered nearly half of House Of Balloons, while Drake has denied that claim. But the evidence that Drake jacked The Weeknd’s vibe is plainly discernible in this song, which sounds like the blueprint for Drake’s sad-guy horn-dog act during the rest of the 2010s.

    4. “Take My Breath” (2022)

    The first 85 seconds of this song are about as awesome as stadium pop gets. (The Live At SoFi Stadium version is even better, because you can hear the audience lose their minds.)

    3. “Blinding Lights” (2020)

    ‘‘These kids, you know, they don’t have a Michael Jackson. They don’t have a Prince. They don’t have a Whitney. Who else is there? Who else can really do it at this point?’’ Abel Tesfaye said that 10 years ago. I admire the metric ton of chutzpah required to make such a bold declaration publicly. And I appreciate that he was actually able to realize his stadium-pop ambitions, with this song being his greatest achievement. It’s one thing to emulate Michael Jackson, but to create a song to approaches his level of ubiquity must be saluted in these famously fractured and hero (or anti-hero) deficient times. Even if “Blinding Lights” sucked I would have to put it in the top three. But, thankfully, it does the opposite of suck.

    2. “I Feel It Coming” (2016)

    Daft Punk’s unexpected role as the Quincy Jones of the 2010s truly reached its apotheosis here, my kids’ favorite track by The Weeknd. It sounds so sweet that the kiddies never notice the line about “the heat between your legs” in the minivan. (If they have noticed they haven’t told me, which is just as well.) It helps that this is the rare Weeknd sex song where both involved parties appear to be mostly sober, at least in the first verse. But this is a song I never tire of hearing. It’s like “Get Lucky” if I weren’t sick to death of “Get Lucky.”

    1. “The Hills” (2015)

    Is there a more quintessential lyric by The Weekend than “when I’m fucked up that’s the real me”? It’s not the real Abel Tesfaye, but it’s definitely the purest manifestation of his creative Id. Out of all these songs, none has more “theoretical asshole” energy than “’The Hills.” And none sound quite as enormous as this song. “The Hills” is “Hipster R&B” blown up by a factor of 100 million, which is also the number of records that Michael Jackson wanted Bad to sell. He didn’t get there, nor will anyone else. But The Weeknd did perform “The Hills” at the Super Bowl, which seems like some kind of accomplishment, particularly if you like the idea of 120 million people having a communal moment over a song about (surprise!) loveless sex in the Hollywood Hills. Given that America feels (emotionally speaking) ensconced in its own “loveless sex” era, blindly chasing short-term thrills in lieu of lasting sustenance, “The Hills” is exactly the national anthem we want and deserve.


    1. "Blinding Lights" – This infectious pop hit from The Weeknd’s album "After Hours" is a fan favorite and a commercial success.
    2. "Can’t Feel My Face" – This upbeat track showcases The Weeknd’s signature falsetto vocals and catchy hooks.
    3. "Starboy" (feat. Daft Punk) – The collaboration with electronic duo Daft Punk resulted in this chart-topping hit.
    4. "The Hills" – This dark and moody track perfectly captures The Weeknd’s mysterious persona.
    5. "Save Your Tears" – A standout track from "After Hours," this song combines 80s-inspired synths with modern pop production.
    6. "I Feel It Coming" (feat. Daft Punk) – Another collaboration with Daft Punk, this song is a smooth and sensual R&B track.
    7. "Earned It" – The Weeknd’s contribution to the "Fifty Shades of Grey" soundtrack showcases his soulful vocals.
    8. "In The Night" – This catchy track features retro-inspired production and a memorable chorus.
    9. "Wicked Games" – One of The Weeknd’s early hits, this song set the tone for his dark and brooding sound.
    10. "Call Out My Name" – This emotional ballad showcases The Weeknd’s vulnerability and raw talent.

    Tags:

    The Weeknd, best songs, ranking, top hits, music, R&B, pop, artist, chart-topping, popular songs, albums, lyrics, music videos, Grammy-winning, Canadian singer, songwriter

    #Weeknds #Songs #Ranked

  • Every Hunter Schafer Movie And TV Show, Ranked


    Hunter Schafer
    made headlines as an activist before she began acting professionally, but she is rapidly establishing herself as an impressive performer with critically acclaimed movies and tv shows. Schafer has been someone willing to campaign for social justice and the causes she believes in. Her work against discriminatory bathroom laws in North Carolina even saw her honored by Teen Vogue and interviewed by Hilary Clinton.

    While working to make the world a more inclusive place, Schafer also worked to get a foot in the door in the entertainment industry. She started modeling before breaking into acting through a role on the HBO series Euphoria. Since that breakthrough role, Schafer has been steadily working in Hollywood, including on high-profile franchises like The Hunger Games.

    5

    Kinds of Kindness (2024)

    As Anna

    Kinds of Kindness is a fascinating work from Yorgos Lanthimos and Efthimis Filippou. The duo have teamed up multiple times before, and this time around, they provide audiences with a “triptych fable.” The movie is made of three stories which are actually connected, but the main actors in each chapter play multiple roles across the stories. Those actors include frequent Lanthimos collaborator Emma Stone, Jesse Plemmons, and Margaret Qualley.

    Hunter Schafer, on the other hand, only appears in one of the three stories. She also appears in a role that is little more than a cameo appearance. While her appearance is a fun one as she is essentially auditioning to be someone who can bring the dead back to life, this movie might rank higher among her projects if she had a larger role that allowed her to more thoroughly explore the character.

    Related


    Every Emma Stone Movie, Ranked Worst To Best

    Double Oscar-winner Emma Stone has an impressive list of movie credits to her name, including experimental dramas and intelligent comedies.

    4

    Belle (2022)

    As Ruka Watanabe

    01626564_poster_w780-1.jpg


    Belle

    Release Date

    July 16, 2021

    Runtime

    121 minutes




    Stream


    Many movies made in one country are dubbed into another language to be distributed in another. Japanese movies, especially animated projects, tend to be dubbed into English because they are particularly popular in English-speaking countries. That is the case for Belle.

    Belle is titled The Dragon and the Freckled Princess in its Japanese translation. The movie adapts the story of Beauty and the Beast, drawing inspiration from the French story and the Disney version of the tale. A young woman still grieving the loss of her mother takes refuge in a virtual reality where she can sing and sees her online popularity increase as “Belle.” She bonds with a user called the “Dragon” who is fiercely protective of others and draws the ire of some online bullies. The young woman takes it upon herself to find his identity and help him.

    Schafer does not voice one of those two characters in the virtual world, but instead, one of the real-life friends of the young woman who finds refuge there. Ruka is one of the most popular girls in school and one of the few friends the main character has. Ruka is one of the characters who help find the real location of the Dragon. Schafer does a fantastic job at bringing the character to life, especially since this is her first voice role.

    Art from the movie is now used in a Japanese art textbook in schools as of 2024.

    3

    Euphoria (2019-)

    As Jules Vaughn

    Euphoria Poster


    Euphoria

    Release Date

    June 16, 2019

    Showrunner

    Sam Levinson




    Stream


    Schafer got her big break thanks to the controversial teen drama Euphoria. The HBO series is dark and gritty and does not quite fit in with soapier teen offerings on other networks.

    Euphoria centers on Rue (Zendaya), an addict trying her best to get through each day. The rest of the characters that populate the series are her friends, her classmates, her love interests, her dealer, and her family members. The world all spins out from Rue.

    Schafer plays Jules, a transgender teenage girl who is relatively new in town. She and Rue become friends, then on-again-off-again girlfriends in the series. Jules is able to explore her sexuality because of her relationship with Rue, but the series also addresses themes of identity through her character.

    Schafer’s work on the series does not end in acting though. She also co-wrote an episode centered on her character in therapy in which Jules discusses womanhood. While Schafer’s work in the series has been groundbreaking and has likely helped to open doors for other aspiring actors who happen to be transgender, Schafer has spoken at length about hoping to be cast in the future simply as “a girl” after being offered “tons of trans roles” (via GQ).

    Related


    Euphoria Season 3: Cast, Story & Everything We Know

    Euphoria season 2 ended its eight-episode run more popular than ever before and with a long wait until season 3, here’s everything we know about it.

    2

    The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds And Snakes (2023)

    As Tigris Snow

    There’s something elegant, even regal, in the way she carries herself as Tigris.

    One of the most anticipated movies of 2023 was an installment of the Hunger Games franchise. The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes was a prequel to the original story featuring Katniss Everdeen. This time around, the focus is on the man who would become President Snow as a teenager and the tribute he has to mentor. The movie chronicles just how Coriolanus Snow begins his arc to become the villain of the franchise.

    Schafer stars as the cousin of Coriolanus Snow. She helps to take care of him when they are kids, and in turn, they take care of the grandmother who raised them after the deaths of their parents. Tigris Snow is glamorous despite the fact that the Snow family is living in the ruins of what was once their family estate. She is always surrounded by sketches of clothing and finding the beauty in the world around her despite the ugliness of the society they live in.

    Schafer is perfect for this role. There’s something elegant, even regal, in the way she carries herself as Tigris. Even though she is not the focus of the movie, her work makes the fans interested in seeing what happens to her next.

    1

    Cuckoo (2024)

    As Gretchen

    Cuckoo 2024 Film Poster


    Cuckoo

    Release Date

    August 9, 2024

    Runtime

    102 Minutes




    Stream


    Cuckoo makes it clear that Hunter Schafer is going to be a star.

    Though she voiced a grieving character in 2022, here, she plays a character grappling with grief in live-action. She also does it in a horror movie, something Schafer had not yet done at this point in her career.

    Cuckoo sees a teenager (Schafer) move in with her father in Germany after the loss of her mother. Her father’s boss offers her a job at the new hotel they are working on as a receptionist. While there, she starts to notice strange occurrences at the hotel, especially concerning the female guests, and she teams up with a local detective to find out just what is going on.

    Cuckoo received mostly positive reviews from critics, being called “an energetically outlandish fusion of stylish atmospherics, old-school reproductive horror and pro-flickknife advertorial” by Variety. In particular, the performances of both Dan Stevens and Hunter Schafer were praised. Schafer proves herself capable of being the lead instead of a supporting player here as she commands every single scene she is. The emotional weight of the movie is well on her.

    Cuckoo makes it clear that Hunter Schafer is going to be a star.


    1. Euphoria – Hunter Schafer’s breakout role as Jules Vaughn in the hit HBO series has earned her critical acclaim and a dedicated fan base.
    2. The L Word: Generation Q – Schafer joined the cast of this beloved LGBTQ+ series revival in its second season, bringing her unique talent and presence to the show.
    3. Unpregnant – In this comedic road trip movie, Schafer plays the role of Bailey, a quirky and lovable character who helps the protagonist on her journey to get an abortion.
    4. Euphoria Special Episodes – Schafer’s performance in the special episodes of Euphoria, which delve deeper into her character’s backstory and struggles, further showcases her range and talent as an actress.
    5. The L Word: Generation Q Season 2 – Schafer’s continued presence on this series demonstrates her versatility and ability to bring depth to her characters.

      Overall, Hunter Schafer has proven herself to be a versatile and talented actress in both television and film, with a promising career ahead of her.

    Tags:

    Hunter Schafer, Hunter Schafer movies, Hunter Schafer TV shows, Hunter Schafer filmography, Hunter Schafer ranking, Euphoria cast, Euphoria actress, transgender actress, LGBTQ representation in media

    #Hunter #Schafer #Movie #Show #Ranked

  • The Most Popular ‘FBI’ Cast Members, Ranked | Alana De La Garza, CBS, EG, evergreen, FBI, James Chen, John Boyd, Lisette Olivera, Missy Peregrym, Popularity, Roshawn Franklin, Shantel VanSanten, Slideshow, Taylor Anthony Miller, Television, Vedette Lim, Zeeko Zaki | Just Jared: Celebrity News and Gossip


    FBI returns tonight (Tuesday, January 28) on CBS at 8 p.m. ET!

    The series follows the inner workings of the New York field office criminal division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), as they fight to keep New York City and the country safe.

    We’re taking a look at the main cast of the series to see who has the biggest following of the cast. They’re all super popular, and it’s interesting to see who the biggest stars of social media are!

    With Season 7 set to continue in 2025, we’re sure all of the stars will only get even more popular online. Find out who we know isn’t coming back for Season 8.

    Click through to find out who is the most popular star of FBI…





    With the success of the hit CBS show “FBI”, it’s no surprise that the cast members have gained a strong following among fans. From the dynamic duo of Missy Peregrym and Zeeko Zaki to the charming Taylor Anthony Miller and the talented Alana De La Garza, each actor brings something special to the table.

    Here is a ranking of the most popular ‘FBI’ cast members, based on their fan base and overall impact on the show:

    1. Missy Peregrym
    2. Zeeko Zaki
    3. Alana De La Garza
    4. Taylor Anthony Miller
    5. James Chen
    6. John Boyd
    7. Shantel VanSanten
    8. Vedette Lim
    9. Roshawn Franklin
    10. Lisette Olivera

    Whether you’re a fan of action-packed crime dramas or just love a good mystery, these talented actors are sure to keep you entertained. Who is your favorite ‘FBI’ cast member? Let us know in the comments below!

    Tags:

    FBI cast members, Alana De La Garza, James Chen, John Boyd, Missy Peregrym, Roshawn Franklin, Shantel VanSanten, Taylor Anthony Miller, Vedette Lim, Zeeko Zaki, CBS, EG, evergreen, popularity, television, slideshow, Just Jared, celebrity news, gossip

    #Popular #FBI #Cast #Members #Ranked #Alana #Garza #CBS #evergreen #FBI #James #Chen #John #Boyd #Lisette #Olivera #Missy #Peregrym #Popularity #Roshawn #Franklin #Shantel #VanSanten #Slideshow #Taylor #Anthony #Miller #Television #Vedette #Lim #Zeeko #Zaki #Jared #Celebrity #News #Gossip

  • Alan Cumming’s The Traitors Season 3 Looks, Ranked (PHOTOS)


    Not only is The Traitors host Alan Cumming a devilishly delightful master of ceremonies for Peacock’s Emmy Award-winning competition series, but he shows up for every episode festooned in costumes that honor his beloved homeland of Scotland and his love of fashion. 

    RELATED: Alan Cumming’s Rescue Dog Lala’s Most Fetching Looks on The Traitors (PHOTOS)

    All about making The Traitors host Alan Cumming’s immaculate wardrobe

    Sam Specter has worked as Alan’s go-to, on-screen designer since the series premiered on Peacock in 2023, and the pair collaborate on every look from the jump.

    Alan Cumming stands in front of a table with gold on it on The Traitors Season 3 Episode 1

    “I want it to still feel like Alan,” Specter told Fashionista of the host’s wardrobe. “Alan’s an East Village guy that has this punk vibe, so we use some of those themes to get inspired as well. So I’ll do a chunky boot because that’s in style right now. I take fashion inspiration and work it into the Scottish themes … It’s the set, it’s the location, it’s the wardrobe, it’s the hair and makeup — it all makes this character, because he’s really playing a character. We like to say that it’s like this Scottish James Bond villain, because it’s a dark comedy show. Whenever he comes on, I just start laughing. It’s so kitschy, fun and dark. The wardrobe helps play into that.”

    For Season 3, Alan’s wardrobe is already getting gasps from the contestants and audiences at home for the pair’s audacious choices. So, we feel duty bound to celebrate these selections. Here are some of our favorites this year, so far:

    6. The Traitor Turret Classic: Edward Gorey meets Agatha Christie

    The costume that ties the series together. Alan’s secret subterfuge outfit has become synonymous with any nefarious midnight machinations associated with the Traitors. If you’re a long-time Alan fan, this look also gives allusions to his prior gig introducing Masterpiece Mystery! for PBS, which opened with the black and white line art of Edward Gorey.

    This whole ensemble looks like it could have originated from the artist’s pen. The cloak and dagger silhouette also gives Alan stature and a sense of omnipotent power. Worn next to those flowing Traitor robes, he could be the leader of a Slytherin choir, and we love it. 

    5. Dragon Age Selkie

    For the first challenge of Season 3, Alan coordinated his breastplate with his tartan colors. The hardware accessories and Loch backdrop immediately had us fantasizing about Alan becoming a playable character in our favorite fantasy video game series. 

    RELATED: The Brand-New Rule That Will Make The Traitors Trickier (and More Dramatic) Than Ever Before

    4. Alan Goes Green

    How do you celebrate the Scottish Highlands? You become the Highlands…or at least incorporate some of it into your garb.

    In Episode 3, Alan became one with the emerald grasses and summer feel of the grounds of Ardross Castle by wearing a tailored blazer that was adorned with actual moss, then swathed himself in green gauze. It was like high-concept camouflage more interested in being fabulous than functional. 

    3. Cabaret of Curiosities

    The Traitors producers brought back the scary carnival vibe early this season, and Alan met the moment with this ensemble that immediately brought to mind his Tony Award-winning role as the Emcee in the Broadway revivals of Cabaret.

    The goth-inspired, black bleeding tear, the top hat, the tailored blazer, the second-skin black gloves … we were waiting for him to break out in song at any minute. No, we were not serenaded, but Alan’s whole upside-down Greatest Showman vibe more than made up for that disappointment. 

    RELATED: The Traitors Experience Reopens Its Doors to All You Traitors and Faithful: Ticket Details & More

    2. Fierce Harry Potter meets Vivienne Westwood 

    When Alan dragged the contestants out into the woods to complete their Episode 2 challenge, he appeared like fever dream Harry Potter who accidentally cast an Incendio spell on his Highland kilt. High couture meets the Forbidden Forest. Even lovely Lala is dressed to impress by his side. This is an outfit that even the legendary Vivienne Westwood would approve. 

    1. Green Goddess Mode

    Has Alan already fashion peaked in Episode 5? Because we were ready to give him the standing ovation of the season when he revealed this number. Without uttering a word, this outfit was giving us major, “Give me your dumb, your confused, your huddled riddle players yearning to breathe free…” in silent rebuke to the rest of the cast still playing for the potential $250,000.

    Let’s be honest, the gang’s gameplay didn’t always deserve the brilliance of this fiery outfit, but we’re so glad he showed up and showed out with this kind of audacity. 

    Circle back here until the finale as we continue to assess, and rate, everything Alan is serving us all season long.

    New episodes of The Traitors Season 3 premiere on Peacock on Thursdays at 9/8c, with the season finale and reunion premiering on March 6.

    All episodes of Seasons 1 and 2 are available to stream right now on Peacock

    Shop The Traitors Merch


    1. Sleek and sophisticated: In this look, Alan Cumming sports a sharp suit with a crisp white shirt and tie. The tailored fit and classic color combination exude elegance and professionalism.
    2. Edgy and modern: Cumming rocks a more contemporary look with a leather jacket and distressed jeans. The edgy vibe is complemented by his slicked-back hair and statement accessories.
    3. Casual and cool: The actor opts for a laid-back ensemble, consisting of a graphic tee, denim jacket, and sneakers. The relaxed yet stylish outfit showcases Cumming’s effortless sense of fashion.
    4. Dapper in plaid: Cumming steps out in a plaid suit, adding a pop of color and pattern to his wardrobe. The bold choice demonstrates his fearless approach to fashion and willingness to take risks.
    5. Timeless in tuxedo: Finally, Cumming stuns in a classic tuxedo, exuding old Hollywood charm and sophistication. The timeless look highlights his impeccable style and impeccable taste in formal attire.

      Overall, Alan Cumming’s wardrobe in The Traitors Season 3 showcases a diverse range of looks, each reflecting his unique personality and fashion sense. Which look is your favorite? Let us know in the comments below!

    Tags:

    1. Alan Cumming
    2. The Traitors Season 3
    3. Alan Cumming’s The Traitors
    4. Season 3 Looks
    5. Alan Cumming The Traitors Season 3
    6. Alan Cumming The Traitors Looks
    7. The Traitors Season 3 Ranking
    8. Alan Cumming The Traitors Photos
    9. Season 3 The Traitors Review
    10. Alan Cumming The Traitors Season 3 Looks

    #Alan #Cummings #Traitors #Season #Ranked #PHOTOS

  • 10 Best Emilia Clarke Movies & TV Shows (That Aren’t Game of Thrones), Ranked


    Emilia Clarke became uber famous when she was cast in Game of Thrones as the dragon queen Daenerys Targaryen. Emilia accumulated a massive fan base because her character is an icon in the A Song of Ice and Fire universe. At the time when she took on her role, Emilia had only a few minor roles in three projects, but after the success, many wanted to work with her.

    Emilia has worked on over 20 projects since then, and while none of them outshone her portrayal as Daenerys, she has proven that she can play various types of characters. With several Marvel projects, a role in the Star Wars universe, and even an appearance as Sarah Connor in Terminator: Genesys, this British Thespian has built a solid career since her Game of Thrones days. The busy actress has six projects in the works, among them An Ideal Wife, a biopic on Oscar Wilde’s wife.

    10

    Thunderbirds Are Go Is an Homage to the Original Supermarionation

    Role: Doyle

    Thunderbirds Are Go - All the main characters

    Thunderbirds Are Go is a combination of live-action models and animation based on Supermarionation from the 1960s. Thunderbirds Are Go follows the adventures of the Tracy brothers, a team of heroes running International Rescue, dedicated to saving lives around the world. From their hidden island base in the Pacific, they use advanced vehicles called “Thunderbirds” to handle daring rescue missions.

    Related


    Emilia Clarke’s Controversial Movie Becomes Streaming Hit 9 Years Later

    A controversial film starring Emilia Clarke that led to protests around the world is becoming a streaming hit 9 years after its release.

    Thunderbirds Are Go was produced in New Zealand and the U.K., and premiered in the US in 2015. The series was well-received and had three seasons. Generally, critics and fans loved the visuals, the designs, and the respectful nods to the original series. Emilia Clarke played a character named Doyle in the series’ second season, and although the role was relatively brief, it was a fun cameo from the accomplished actress.

    Role: Bridget / Fancia Buttslam

    Robot Chicken - Season 8, Episode 14

    Robot Chicken is an animated short film series that ran for a staggering 21 years. Created by Seth Green, the story follows a chicken who is found dead by a mad scientist. He brings it back to life by turning it into half robot, half chicken. He tortures the robot chicken by showing a series of stop-motion sketches of pop culture references, TV shows and movies, and real-life celebrities.

    Robot Chicken was a large success with an 82 % popcorn rating on Rotten Tomatoes, and throughout its television run, it featured a variety of memorable actors. In Season 8, Emilia Clarke lent her voice to Bridget / Fancia Buttslam, making her part of the iconic comedy series’ extensive cast.

    8

    Secret Invasion Is About Nick Fury’s Mission to Destroy the Skrulls

    Role: G’iah

    Secret Invasion is a six-episode miniseries on Disney+ that premiered in 2023. The story centers on Nick Fury and Talos as they race to expose and thwart a secretive plot by a faction of shapeshifting Skrulls aiming to take over Earth. The series was created by Kyle Bradstreet.

    Emilia Clarke plays G’iah, Talos’s daughter, who is aligned with Gravik’s faction. Clarke described G’iah as having a “punk” edge, shaped by her hardened life as a refugee. She resents Nick Fury for failing to deliver on his promises from Captain Marvel to find the Skrulls a new home. Clarke and Ben Mendelsohn collaborated to develop G’iah and Talos’s backstory, envisioning her upbringing as regimented and combat-focused. G’iah is fiercely independent and critical of her father’s decisions. While Secret Invasion received quite a bit of criticism, most thought that Samuel L. Jackson and Emilia Clarke delivered solid performances.

    7

    The Pod Generation Explores Nature Vs Technology

    Role: Rachel

    Emilia Clarke and Chiwetel Ejiofor go to counseling in The Pod Generation

    The Pod Generation (2023) was written and directed by Sophie Barthes. This Sci-Fi story follows Rachel (portrayed by Emilia Clarke), a rising tech executive, and Alvy (portrayed by Chiwetel Ejiofor), her nature-loving botanist husband. When Rachel secures a spot at the Womb Center — offering pregnancy via artificial wombs — Alvy reluctantly embraces this high-tech approach to parenthood. Their journey becomes a witty exploration of technology versus nature in the quest to have a baby.

    This movie was a good choice for Emilia, who possesses a natural charm and excels at romantic comedies. The chemistry between these two actors is great, which elevates this film’s dense storyline.

    The Pod Generation temp poster

    The Pod Generation

    Release Date

    January 19, 2023

    Runtime

    101 minutes

    Director

    Sophie Barthes

    Writers

    Sophie Barthes





    6

    The Amazing Maurice Is About Cat Becoming an Investigator

    Role: Emilia Clarke

    The cast of The Amazing Maurice poses
    Image via Sky Cinema

    The Amazing Maurice is an animated fantasy comedy directed by Toby Genkel and co-directed by Florian Westermann, adapted from Terry Pratchett’s novel The Amazing Maurice and His Educated Rodents. The film features an impressive cast, including Hugh Laurie, Emilia Clarke, and David Thewlis, who voiced the main characters. The storyline centers around a cunning ginger cat named Maurice and a group of intelligent rats orchestrating an elaborate con in Bad Blintz.

    Partnering with Keith, a human “pied piper,” they plan to trick the townsfolk by staging a rat plague, leading them away with their scheme. When they arrive in the town, they discover an unusual absence of local rats and team up with Malicia (played by Clarke), the mayor’s daughter, to investigate the mysterious food shortage and uncover the hidden truth behind the city’s rat problem.

    the-amazing-maurice-poster-orange-cat-animated.jpg

    The Amazing Maurice

    Release Date

    December 16, 2022

    Runtime

    93 Minutes




    Stream


    5

    Animals Is a Dark Show About the Similarities Between Humans and Animals

    Role: Lumpy

    Lumpy and two rats sit together in HBO's Animals.
    Image via HBO

    HBO MAX’s Animals. is an animated series that dives into the hidden, neurotic world of New York City’s urban wildlife. Created by Phil Matarese and Mike Luciano, the show offers a darker comedic look at animals experiencing very human-like challenges—from gender-questioning pigeons to lovesick rats and bedbugs navigating midlife crises. With its sharp, cynical humor, the series transforms ordinary city creatures into complex, existentially troubled characters.

    Related


    Game of Thrones Star Emilia Clarke to Lead Spy Thriller Series

    Games of Thrones actor Emilia Clarke lands another role as she headlines an upcoming Cold War-era thriller.

    Animals. ran for three seasons and had many famous guest stars in each episode. Emilia Clarke voiced a character named Lumpy. Animals. received great ratings from audiences and critics alike.

    037837_poster_w780.jpg

    Animals.

    Release Date

    2016 – 2017

    Network

    HBO




    Stream


    4

    Solo: A Star Wars Story Is a Hidden Gem in the Star Wars Franchise

    Role: Qi’ra

    Solo: A Star Wars Story takes fans back to the early days of Han Solo. Directed by Ron Howard, the 2018 film follows Han (Alden Ehrenreich) as he escapes the oppressive life in Corellia, joins the criminal underworld, and meets Chewbacca and Lando Calrissian. Packed with heists, betrayal, and high-stakes adventure, the film captures the spirit of the original trilogy while adding layers to Han’s backstory. Despite a lukewarm box office performance, Solo has been praised as an underrated gem in the Star Wars saga.

    One of the standout elements is Emilia Clarke’s portrayal of Qi’ra, Han’s childhood friend and love interest. Clarke imbues Qi’ra with charm and complexity, making her journey from ally to antagonist both heartbreaking and compelling. Her layered performance adds emotional depth to the film, leaving fans eager for more of Qi’ra’s untold story. Unfortunately, Emilia might not get a chance to explore her character further as Disney won’t do a sequel due to its modest performance in theaters.

    3

    Me Before You Depicts a Bittersweet Romance With Hard Choices

    Role: Louisa Clark

    Will and Louisa next to each other at a concert in Me Before You.

    The romantic drama Me Before You was Thea Sharrock’s directorial debut in 2016. The story follows William Traynor, a wealthy and adventurous young man, who becomes paralyzed after a motorbike accident. Struggling with physical pain and emotional despair, Will isolates himself on his family’s estate. His parents hire Louisa Clark (played by Emilia Clarke), a quirky and optimistic young woman from their small British town, for companionship.

    Despite her lack of experience, Louisa is determined to lift Will’s spirits and bring joy back into his life. As the two form an unexpected bond, Louisa introduces Will to new experiences, rekindling his desire to embrace life. However, Will remains resolute in his decision to pursue legal euthanasia in Switzerland. The story is a heartfelt exploration of love, personal choice, and the transformative power of human connection. Throughout it all, Emilia Clarke brought her charm and enthusiastic personality into the role of Louisa Clark, providing an effective contrast to the brooding Will.

    me-before-you-movie-poster.jpg

    Me Before You

    Release Date

    June 3, 2016

    Director

    Thea Sharrock

    Writers

    Jojo Moyes





    2

    Futurama Is One of the Most Successful Animated Shows of All Time

    Role: MarianneFuturama - Season 10 Episode 12 - Emilia Clarke

    The animated sci-fi sitcom Futurama has been on TV for over 25 years now and is highly rated on IMDB as well as on Rotten Tomatoes. David X. Cohen and Matt Groening managed to consistently come up with hilarious and outlandish storylines, combining classic science fiction tropes with sharp humor. Futurama has received 58 Award nominations and won 30 awards, including six Primetime Emmy Awards.

    Related


    Emilia Clarke to Star in Animated Alice in Wonderland-Inspired Holiday Movie

    Game of Thrones alum Emilia Clarke lands another part, a voice role in an upcoming animated Christmas film alongside Gerard Butler.

    Emilia Clarke voices Marianne in Season 10, Episode 12, a flower shop girl, who becomes Zoidberg’s girlfriend. Marianne has no sense of smell, and therefore she is not affected by Zoidberg’s horrible stench. But Marianne desires nothing more than to be able to smell and experience the scent of the flowers she sells. Eventually, Zoidberg grants her wish and performs a nose transplant, but all his fears of losing her vanish when she wakes up and actually likes his smell because she never learned the difference between good and bad scents.

    1

    Last Christmas Is a Heartwarming Tale of Unexpected Connections

    Role: Kate

    Kate (portrayed by Emilia Clarke), a struggling sales clerk at a year-round Christmas store, is a changed person after recovering from a near-fatal health incident the previous year. Irresponsible and self-absorbed, she couch-surfs to avoid her overbearing mother while pursuing an unrealistic dream of becoming a musical theater performer. Her life takes an unexpected turn when she meets Tom, a volunteer at a homeless shelter, who persistently engages with her despite her initial dismissal. As Kate develops feelings for Tom and perceives him as emotional support, his increasingly elusive nature and unclear intentions create tension, leaving their potential connection uncertain and dependent on the mysterious reason behind his initial persistence. The final scene reveals that Tom is not real but the person whose heart she received a year earlier.

    As with all her comedies, Emilia Clarke’s natural personality shines through, and the chemistry between her and Henry Golding was one of the reasons for the film’s success. Last Christmas was directed by Paul Feig and written by Bryony Kimmings and Emma Thompson and received an 81% rating on Rotten Tomatoes.

    last-christmas-movie-poster.jpg

    Last Christmas

    Release Date

    November 8, 2019

    Runtime

    103minutes




    Stream



    1. Me Before You (2016)
    2. Terminator Genisys (2015)
    3. Solo: A Star Wars Story (2018)
    4. Last Christmas (2019)
    5. Voice from the Stone (2017)
    6. Spike Island (2012)
    7. Above Suspicion (2019)
    8. Dom Hemingway (2013)
    9. Triassic Attack (2010)
    10. Shackled (2012)

    Tags:

    Emilia Clarke, movies, TV shows, ranking, best, Game of Thrones, actress, filmography, career, non-GoT roles, top 10, must-watch, Emilia Clarke roles, acting, television, cinema, Hollywood, entertainment.

    #Emilia #Clarke #Movies #Shows #Arent #Game #Thrones #Ranked

  • Vanderbilt ranked in women’s AP Top 25 for 1st time in 11 years


    Vanderbilt entered the Associated Press women’s basketball Top 25 on Monday at No. 23, its first ranking in more than a decade, while Texas returned to the top five and Ohio State and Duke both jumped back into the top 10.

    Shea Ralph’s Vanderbilt team is in the poll for the first time since Feb. 10, 2014, and has two wins over ranked teams for the first time since the 2015-16 season. The Commodores topped then-No. 19 Alabama on Sunday as the Crimson Tide were one of a dozen ranked teams to lose last week.

    The top four teams remained the same as UCLA, South Carolina, Notre Dame and USC all avoided upsets last week. The Bruins received 31 first-place ballots from the 32-member national media panel after winning their three games on an eight-day East Coast trip. They beat then-No. 25 Baylor, Rutgers and formerly eighth-ranked Maryland.

    UCLA, which picked up two first-place votes this week, is the only undefeated team left in Division I basketball after then-No. 5 LSU lost to the Gamecocks. South Carolina garnered the other top vote.

    Texas leapfrogged UConn to move up to fifth and the Huskies remained sixth. LSU dropped to seventh. Ohio State, which also beat Maryland, moved up four places to eighth. The Terrapins dropped to 14th after losing all three of their games last week.

    TCU and Duke rounded out the top 10. The Horned Frogs split a pair of games with Oklahoma State and Baylor.

    In and out

    Oklahoma State and Florida State reentered the rankings this week at Nos. 24 and 25, respectively. The Seminoles were ranked in the preseason poll and topped North Carolina on a buzzer-beater by last week’s AP Player of the Week, Ta’Niya Latson. The Cowgirls have been in and out of the poll the past few weeks.

    Michigan, Minnesota and Baylor all fell out.

    Oh baby!

    Tennessee coach Kim Caldwell gave birth to her first child a week ago and was returning for the 18th-ranked Lady Vols’ game against South Carolina on Monday night. Caldwell gave birth to Conor Scott a week earlier while dealing with the flu. She missed a single game, an 80-76 loss at No. 7 Texas on Thursday, as assistant Jenna Burdette filled in as acting coach.

    Conference breakdown

    The Southeastern Conference had eight teams ranked this week and the ACC has seven. The Big Ten dropped to five teams with Michigan and Minnesota exiting the poll. The Big 12 has four ranked teams and the Big East one.

    Games of the week

    Columbia at Harvard, Friday. The undefeated Lions will visit the Crimson in a battle for first place in the Ivy League. Columbia is undefeated while Harvard has one loss, a last-second defeat at Princeton.

    No. 12 Kentucky at No. 13 Oklahoma, Sunday. The Wildcats will visit the SEC newcomer Sooners. Kentucky is currently in a tie for second in the conference standings at 6-1.



    Exciting news for Vanderbilt fans! The women’s basketball team has been ranked in the AP Top 25 for the first time in 11 years. This is a huge accomplishment for the team and a testament to their hard work and dedication on the court. Let’s show our support for the Commodores as they continue to make waves in the world of women’s college basketball. Go ‘Dores! #AnchorDown #VanderbiltWBB

    Tags:

    Vanderbilt women’s basketball, AP Top 25, Vanderbilt athletics, women’s college basketball, Vanderbilt women’s team, SEC basketball, Vanderbilt Commodores, NCAA women’s basketball, Vanderbilt sports, Vanderbilt news

    #Vanderbilt #ranked #womens #Top #1st #time #years

  • Timothee Chalamet’s ‘SNL’ Sketches Ranked (Jan. 25, 2025 Episode)


    Timothée Chalamet hosted SNL for a third time and starred in six sketches that made it to air Saturday night (Jan. 25) in an episode that also had him on the bill as musical guest.

    Pulling double duty as host and music act, Chalamet seamlessly shifted between being himself in his monologue and embracing his Bob Dylan side in his music performances — and portraying SNL sketch characters including a bungee class icon, a barista who thinks he’s a stand-up comedian, an AI creation, a small dog, an animated version of God and a gassy cardiologist. (Fans in the live rehearsal audience report there were sketches cut for time, like a Grammys roundtable skit that had Chalamet bringing back his SNL personality SmokeCheddaDaAssGetta. Fingers crossed it surfaces on SNL‘s YouTube channel later.)

    “I’m so grateful Saturday Night Live is still doing weird stuff like this 50 years in,” Chalamet, who stars as Dylan in the biopic A Complete Unknown, joked to the audience during his monologue. “They’re either really nice for letting me do this or incredibly mean, and this is all a big prank. I sincerely can’t tell. We’ll find out.”

    Chalamet seemed to overcome any nerves that accompany leading and performing on the SNL, which tapes in front of a live audience in New York. There are pre-taped sketches, as well, but all of the actor’s parts broadcast this weekend were live, other than his voiceover role as God. Perhaps Chalamet has his performing arts high school alter ego, the show-stealing rapper Timmy Tim, to thank for preparing him for this very moment.

    One highlight of Saturday night’s episode not listed here is the cold open, which unfortunately didn’t feature Chalamet. It did have a surprise cameo by Lin-Manuel Miranda, who reprised his Hamilton role in a post-Trump inauguration sketch about America’s founding fathers.

    Here’s a ranking of every sketch Chalamet was in Saturday night, when SNL‘s Jan. 25 episode aired. Watch all six sketches below.


    1. "The Grabbies" – This sketch was a hilarious parody of award shows like the Oscars, but instead of celebrating achievements in film, they were giving out awards for the best grabs. Timothee Chalamet played a pretentious actor who won the award for "Best Grab of an Inanimate Object" and his acceptance speech had the audience in stitches.
    2. "The Locker Room" – In this sketch, Chalamet played a high school jock who gets caught up in a scandal when his teammates discover that he’s been using a fake ID to buy beer. The awkward interactions and Chalamet’s comedic timing made this sketch a standout.
    3. "The Dating Game" – Chalamet played a contestant on a dating game show who is completely clueless about how the game works. His awkward attempts at flirting and answering questions had the audience laughing out loud.
    4. "The Haunted House" – Chalamet played a terrified teenager who gets more than he bargained for when he agrees to spend the night in a haunted house. His reactions to the spooky events were both hilarious and endearing.

      Overall, Chalamet’s performances in these sketches showcased his versatility as an actor and his comedic chops. It’s clear that he’s not just a dramatic actor, but also has a knack for comedy.

    Tags:

    Timothee Chalamet, SNL, Saturday Night Live, sketches, ranked, Jan. 25 2025, episode, comedy, celebrity, performance, review, highlights

    #Timothee #Chalamets #SNL #Sketches #Ranked #Jan #Episode

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