The Watch - ‘Avengers: Doomsday’ Footage, ‘Euphoria’ S3E2, and ‘Margo’s Got Money Troubles’ Episodes 1-3
Episode Date: April 20, 2026Chris and Andy talk about the news that ‘Avengers: Endgame’ will be rereleased later this year with new footage that ties into ‘Avengers: Doomsday’ (8:11). Then they discuss Season 3, Episode ...2 of ‘Euphoria’ (18:04). Later, they run through a quick power poll of spring television (43:45), before discussing the first three episodes of ‘Margo’s Got Money Troubles’ and whether this book adaptation would have been better as a movie (49:28). Subscribe to the Ringer TV YouTube channel here for full episodes of The Watch and so much more! Hosts: Chris Ryan and Andy Greenwald Producers: Kaya McMullen and Kai Grady Additional Video Supervision: Sarah Reddy Order and it will come. Like today. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hello, and welcome to The Watch.
My name is Chris Ryan.
And I am an editor at the ringer.com and joining me in the silver slipper.
Good.
Because he loves dance.
Yeah.
It's Andy Greenwald.
And I like free nachos.
Do you think they have those?
I don't remember because I was on ketamine.
But it's possible.
I love to how you pronounce ketamine as like a Jewish dentist from Philadelphia.
First of all, I am much closer to a Jewish dentist from Philadelphia than I am to a
habituay of the silver slipper.
The truth is, you caught me.
I started to back out of the comment,
two-thirds the way through,
but I was pot committed.
And frankly, that's how I live my life.
That's why I love you, man,
because when you're in, you're in,
and we're in on Euphoria Season 3,
which we will be talking about the second episode today,
as well as the first three episodes of the new Apple TV series
and Margot's got money troubles.
Problems or troubles?
She's, Margot's got money.
Well, I think it's troubles.
Again, no way of knowing.
It's troubles.
It's troubles.
Did I say troubles?
Yeah, but you were thinking of Northern Ireland.
That's the problem.
It's like, you know, Margot and the Dairy Girls is a much different thing.
It's really good to see you.
What a weekend for us.
Oh, was it?
Yeah, no, I mean, I just mean, what a weekend for United States of America, the NBA playoffs, the NHL playoffs.
Yeah, sports-wise, you're right to switch allegiances.
You should leave the Phillies hat at home.
I'm fine with the Phillies.
I have the Phillies hat at home.
There's no deviation from the plan.
I told you on Thursday, wait for game 60.
I'm getting miserable texts from you.
But I'm getting actually, honestly, a whole variety of awesome texts.
Yeah, I said some pretty funny texts this weekend, if I do say so myself.
How are you doing?
I have one new story for you today before we get into our TV talk, but I just want to do a temperature check.
Great.
Temperature feels good.
The studio is nice.
Yeah.
No, I mean like emotionally and spiritually and also just like artistically.
Where's your soul at when you're?
Did you search around this weekend and watch anything that was not necessarily an assignment, but just a pleasure?
No, this weekend, there was quite a lot on the TV docket.
Yeah.
You know?
Yeah.
So, no, I was focused.
I was just working for you all weekend.
Yeah, I was actually going to say it might be good after we do beef on Thursday.
So we're going to, I don't know that we're going to cover all of beef, but.
You have beef with beef.
I don't.
I watched the first two episodes.
Okay.
And I would definitely say that it's better than I thought it was going to be.
Well, you had, you were very down.
All I did was say, this is what people are saying about it.
And if it's true, watching eight hours of this is not necessarily what I want to do this weekend.
Straw men everywhere coming up to me on the street.
Tears in their little straw eyes saying, sir, sir, beef season two is underwhelming.
You know, speaking of film production, today I went to go get my custom, not custom, like they make it special for me.
but like my coffee at my coffee shop.
And they were shooting.
Somebody,
they were shooting something there.
Probably fucking nobody wants this or something.
Tim's working.
Be nice.
I was just like,
you guys got to be kidding me.
Of all the gin joints that you couldn't find in London or Budapest in Vancouver.
You decided to take my coffee shop.
Are you zagging on LA film production?
I'm very happy for them.
But like...
This is, wait, hold on.
You're being.
nimbie
about Hollywood film production
within Los Angeles?
I think this is a wild new character for you.
It's just like I have a few things
that need to go right for me
during any given day.
All right, let's go through them.
Finding my, getting my coffee.
Uh-huh.
Having the right kind of Nicorette.
What, like is supposed to off-brand?
Like what?
Well, off-brand or like the new flavors
that the Nicorette company like introduced.
So we talked about this.
Like, it's just like I have to have like everything
kind of line up in the stimulation category.
And then we can get into our day.
But if I show up and Sydney Lumette's like,
now here's what you're going to do.
And it's like, no, man, I need an Americano.
And also, you know what I really don't understand?
You snort the ketamine.
Why do you guys have to shut shit down?
To shoot.
Yeah.
Be like a little guerrilla fulmicking style.
You know, Godard, you know, get in there while I'm ordering.
Sean Baker, tangerine style, iPhone, horizontal.
Put me in a nora.
I'll just be getting my coffee, you know.
I think that not as many people.
people, like passers by are historically not as open-minded and artistic as you.
Yeah.
They do not want...
That's probably because if the camera was on me, I'd just turn to and go.
He would frame mug?
I'm workshopping that slang.
Yeah, you really like the mock thing.
Why don't you get your book out?
No.
I want you to.
You want to save it for the library after dark?
Watch in the books and the stacks?
No, but what if you start, you know, maybe you have an anecdote to camera about a
film you saw, I'll just get a little reading in.
Okay, I did see a film this weekend, and I wanted to recommend it to our viewers.
It's the Christopher's.
the new film from Steven Soderberg
in the news recently
for saying that he was going to use AI
to visualize some of John Lennon's dreams
in an upcoming documentary he has about John Lennon
and Yoko Ono.
That's what he said.
Yes.
He was going to use AI to do some visual effects
or some like imaginative
visualizations of like John Lennon's dream life.
And he was like,
and I never would have been able to do this
or would have been like a visual production house,
effects house that would cost.
me an arm and a leg and now it's easy.
We're not easy, but I...
Basically, is this now under the rubric of like,
he can now do it himself, like he does everything else?
Yeah, I mean, I think he's always been like,
how can I...
What's the...
Not market inefficiency, because I don't even think it's economic.
I think he's just a tools guy.
He's interested in tools.
What if Mike had real magic?
And the magic was AI.
Is that what he's doing?
Do you know what?
Honestly, I think that, you know,
how they name all these goddamn AIs, like just, you know,
what if the AI...
was named Magic Mike.
I would use it.
Yeah, me too.
If I was like, can you make me some furniture, man?
Yes.
Yes.
Can you...
You still hang out with Olivia Munn?
What's that like?
I did have one piece of actual Hollywood news for you.
Christopher's is fantastic.
Ian McKellen, Michaela Cole.
It's essentially a two-hander chamber piece.
It's about a...
I don't know if it would be like a Damien Hirst, Julian Schnabel era.
Like, I can't tell exactly.
He seemed like an unfaunt,
Bresnebla British painter, now in his twilight, living in Bloomsbury, it looks like.
That's hit close to home.
Now I'm listening.
And lovely, lovely three-story, four-story house in Bloomsbury.
And Michaela Cole is an art restorer slash painter who takes a job within McEllen's
aging artist to catalog some of his work.
In his home?
In his home.
So easy access to Essex Market and Farringdon.
All that.
Great lunches.
But she is, I mean, Deco, I'm surprised Cafe Deco didn't call.
come up. Deco's at the south end of it, but I would imagine that you would probably get the lunch
deal of quality wines. It's not a deal, dude. You wind up walking out smelling of liver when you go to
quality wines. That's not their lunch special. Oh, okay. What's the lunch special? We don't need to get
into it. I'm just saying it's very reasonable. I want to, I'm interested in the job she took.
She takes it surreptitiously, though, because she's in fact working for Julian's children who want her to
finish a series of unfinished portraits called the Christophers of his lover.
that he did in the 90s
and they would fetch quite a bit of cash
but he has thus so far
refused to finish them. Are you one of the
Christophers? No, sadly not.
But it's, I thought it was wonderful.
It was just like a great, tight movie.
It's going to come up later when we talk about Margot's
got money, troubles.
Problems. No, it's troubles.
God damn it. I really got to get that right.
You know what? Those two
words probably have like different meaning to different
people. Again, in Belfast they do.
I wanted to let you know that
Joe Russo, one of your favorite
filmmakers. Yes, yes, yes.
He is the visionary. He appeared via
Zoom at the St. Andrews Film Festival, which is in Scotland.
And this is a film festival. I believe I've read
about the Russo's being patrons of before.
What do you think that is? I don't know.
I really don't.
Any other podcaster would probably be like, well, you have to understand.
I was waiting for that.
But honestly, I feel like sometimes it's okay to be like, I have no idea.
But I've read
them,
I've read bits and pieces
of them appearing at this festival.
I mean,
he did this via Zoom
to talk about Doom's Day.
What a journey this is been.
I'm trying to do a cool,
like,
intro to this.
It's essentially that,
you know,
they're making Dooms Day
and now they're going to re-release
Endgame.
Yeah.
In September,
I think.
With either re-
contextualize old
footage, I imagine, or perhaps new footage from Doomsday that they are putting into endgame,
but to put Endgame now on the Doomsday narrative rails. And I thought this was really interesting
because, first of all, it is kind of a tacit admission that the last six years of, seven years of
Marvel has kind of not worked between the multiversal shenanigans and Kang and Jonathan Majors and
and some of the other things that they've tried that haven't worked
and the fact that Fantastic Four,
I mean, Fantastic Four is obviously going to be a major part about this,
but was not maybe living up to people's expectations.
Right.
What do you think about the idea of a filmmaker going back
and tweaking something in mid-air
to connect it to another part of the franchise?
Grito shot first.
But they never actually made that canonical, did they?
Well, who's they in this case?
Disney.
George Lucas?
Yeah, if he made it, I mean, he touched it.
Okay, but like,
canon.
But to the point is of like...
Solo, a Star Wars story.
Yes.
I don't know.
I mean, like, has this been done before?
I think the, I think what you're asking is interesting because in terms of like tweaking a prior movie to retcon it into alignment with a sequel, I'd be hard pressed to think of an example of that.
I mean, I think Disney, especially like the animated movies, like Frozen 2, a movie I know that.
near and dear to your heart.
Honestly, this is where your expertise...
I talk to my kids...
We talk about this a lot
because one of the things
that I find really interesting
about that movie
from like a process standpoint
was the entire movie
is created out of whole cloth
of a larger overarching plot
that 100% didn't exist
at any point during the decade
plus development of Frozen.
Okay.
Where they like retcon
that the parents,
like in the opening of the first movie,
the parents went off on a boat adventure
and sadly,
spoiler for the first 30 seconds of Frozen,
did not survive.
The second movie suggests,
that they were actually going on a quest
to discover the origin of their daughter's powers
when they were sunk.
It suggested that they told the daughter
it was a boat, like a cruise,
the lied?
No, we know kings and queens
are always going on boat trips, probably.
Yeah, yeah.
You know, you know.
We've all got troubles.
But no, but to answer your question,
Frozen was not re-released with swashbuckling footage
of the dead parents attempting to get to them.
And I don't know the extent to which
they are going to tweak endgame.
I think it's a pretty savvy idea,
although I'm surprised we're finding out about it
via Zoom in Scotland
instead of like a big cinema con announcement
or like a big, maybe even a trailer
for the re-release of Endgame
to prep you for Doomsday.
Well, I'm sure that's coming.
The Doomsday, there's,
doomsday footage has been screened.
Yes.
They played it at CinemaCon.
It has not released yet,
but every single detail of it has been leaked.
And I think it was intentionally designed
to push back on your, I think, quite accurate observation.
The last six plus years have been a complete wash.
The footage features many characters from this cursed phase engaging with each other.
Like it's Shang Chi fighting Florence Pugh.
No, fighting Gambit.
I read the same recap, bro.
Yeah.
That's a bummer.
Yeah.
I pushed the Atlantic magazine out of the way, and I said, let me read this blog post describing the doomsday trailer.
That was a text I sent you.
I said, attention, a little worried about things at FBI HQ.
Thoughts, question mark?
You didn't respond.
Then I wrote back flyers.
Go flyers.
So I don't know, but they are also, I found it interesting, that they are doing a really interesting thing
where they are trying to convey complete confidence that they have this thing in the bag.
And so there's a beginning drumbeat of this tested better than any.
anything since Endgame. They're dropping all these things like we had 40 actors on set standing in a
blank room, you know, where they drew in the backgrounds later. They're, they are re-releasing one of the,
was Endgame, like top three most successful movies of all time. They're re-releasing that
to prime the pump to remind people of how great this was with new footage to get people in the
theaters. They are claiming that they don't need the IMAX screens that Dune 3...
Oh, because they're making a proprietary technology of like, so that it always,
shows in the way it's...
Infinity Vision?
Yeah.
Can you just make
a proprietary format?
I hope it makes
Euphoria Season 4
an Infinity Vision.
Because, so it'll go on
forever?
The episodes, I think,
are made in Infinity Vision.
Honestly, they breeze right by me.
Incredible.
Yeah.
So, yeah,
I don't know.
I mean, what's your
doomsday temperature check?
I was immediately started
thinking about other franchises
that have perhaps
made some wrong turns
and filmmakers
going back and tweaking.
them. You know, so the first
franchise that comes to mind of Star Wars
and, you know, they've had this
largely
stalled out
movie production development process
where they've given out all these, like,
deals to people to make trilogies and to make
one-off movies that haven't really come to light or haven't
come to fruition. They've continued to kind of
mine these in-between
years between the
trilogies and to some
success, but I think that the thing that's missing
is the feeling of forward
momentum and the feeling of the unknown because like any kind of well-versed Star Wars fan can
watch one of these shows and just be like, yes, and then this has to happen because this happened.
Stars, legendarily, does not mess with Canon.
Marvel is a little bit more like, guess what?
Everybody was dreaming that day, you know?
Or it was a different universe.
Yeah, and they've been playing with that for a few years.
But if you were doing Star Wars and if you were like, hey, why don't we just go back to right
before Force Awakens or why don't we go back to right after the last
Jedi and just do this.
And basically, I mean, it sounds like Steven Soderberg's, the Hunt for Ben Solo movie,
was in its own way, like, well, what if he wasn't dead?
And that was a bridge too far for Bob Iger.
But it is kind of interesting that, like, the same company is like, yeah, we'll tweak a
little bit of end game and probably like yada yada, some of the stuff that's happened in
between.
I think the main difference here is that in the case of Marvel, they are going back to
their last greatest success and just basically moving the off-ramp in a different direction.
Yes, I suppose Steven Soderberg wanted to revisit the last Skywalker.
Well, yeah, because those Star Wars movies...
The Rise of Skywalker, right?
I think in retrospect, those movies are not thought of fondly.
Yeah.
But particularly, they are not just thought of fondly.
They are like ground zero for a lot of the toxicity of fandom and fandom's relationship
to the projects that they love or they love to hate.
And so it would just be a minefield to go back
Because it wouldn't just be like
Let me pick up on the really cool adventures
Of Admiral Holdo or whatever Laura Dern's name was
It was like, let us pretend none of that woke shit
That Ryan Johnson did ever happened.
Please attribute that quote to Chris
Because he needs a couple of dings in his Mando armor online.
Come on. I'm just saying.
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Was your reading of the Doomsday
trailer.
Were you excited?
The Scrolls.
Not the scrolls, the scrolls.
I'm choosing to be very excited
about this movie. Why not? Great.
You know? That's fantastic. I want to know how you're
feeling about the X-Men casting
rumors. I know Van doesn't like it
when we talk about that.
I don't know if I saw it. Your girl Odessa
is being circled for Rogue.
I didn't know that.
And our guy, Sir Dunk,
Peter Claffey, is rumored to be Beast.
But they haven't gotten Cyclops.
No.
They haven't gotten the new Wolverine.
Wake me with that happens.
Is there going to be a new Wolverine?
So old-ass Hugh Jackman is going to be hanging out with Peter Claffey and Odessa O'Zion?
First of all, we are now on the other end of these cross-generational.
Why did I get called Odessa O Zion?
Like, she was also in the troubles.
I think that they are going to slow walk Wolverines.
I think they are going to go back to some of the original.
X-Men before he joined.
Okay, cool. Keep me up to date on that.
I will. Hold on. Breaking news. No, let's talk about Euphoria.
Euphoria. Episode 2, America, My Dream.
The title of the episode is
spoken by Cassie, played by Sidney's.
Housekeeper at one point when she's taking some content shots.
Say her name. Wana.
Well, it comes up a lot because there's a lot of jokes
made at her expense. Sure.
This one is a tale of two or three
different TV shows, I think?
Yeah.
I mean, I think
this is a really useful conversation
that I think also bleeds into Margo.
Okay, so let's...
Because it's about, like, tone,
and it's about making a couple of different things at once.
But I think for Euphoria,
personally, for me, it works.
Well, let's also preface this by saying
for people who are just...
This is their first ever episode of The Watch.
Yes.
This is my second ever episode of Euphoria.
And I gotta admit to you something.
I'm about 70% in on this bit,
but the number,
the interest level I have in this bit,
shot up last night when you sent me one text message.
I had a question.
I've tried to avoid asking questions.
9.45 p.m.
and I was just like tomorrow, okay, what are we going to talk about?
And Andy sends a text message that just goes,
is Rue canonically gay?
I didn't know.
And I thought I should, you know, be prepared with that information.
But the word canonically is what got me.
I, because first of all, I need to know who should.
she's romantically interested in before she returns in Doomsday.
Yes. Yes. Yes, Rue is canonically gay.
Thank you. Was that so hard?
But it is an interesting situation for you because I have a question.
Now, we're going to talk a lot about the Rue stuff because that remains the thing that I think
I'm most attached to about this show.
Do you think I should keep a list of questions I almost ask you and deliver them live on the podcast?
Absolutely. Yeah, I am also not necessarily the keeper of Euphoria lore, nor do I think
euphoria is being overly
sort of sanctimonious about like everything
that's happened in these characters' lives
adding up to something. Which I appreciate it. That being said,
I wanted to start in a stranger place than
maybe you thought I would for this episode, which is Nate, the Jacob Allorty
character, who is so far
been portrayed as a sort of flustered
I'm in over my head, but I'm ultimately
seemingly a good guy who likes to get his work done.
And I just don't have the money right now for $50,000 worth of flowers from my wedding.
But I've got an alcoholic dad who's also quite a sex pest.
I have my fiancé Cassie who, you know, is making certain demands of me.
And making certain content.
And making content.
And also he's in Hawk to seemingly like an underworld figure for about half a mill.
Underworld figure in the sense that he services bodies to the underworld.
Literally, he does seem to be like a funeral home.
Dealing out $500,000 and is like in a week that will be $600,000 or whatever, then that's...
Oh, you think he has some untoward...
Yeah, I think the interest rate is maybe above Wells Fargo's, for instance.
I think Sam Levinson is blowing the lid off this whole coffin thing.
But guess what, man?
Yeah, yeah.
Nate's kind of a piece of shit.
Oh!
And I didn't know if you knew that.
No, he seemed like a good guy.
No, not really.
He's pretty dark prints.
One thing about me, I'm very credulous of people.
Well, I was wondering what you thought.
I was wondering, like, there's a line in this episode
when Wana, the aforementioned Wana, the housekeeper,
is going through every single thing from their barbecue.
Yes.
And it's like, would you like to keep this?
Would you like to save this?
Would you like to save that?
And at one point he goes, Wana, I'm going to kill you.
He did say that, yeah.
Now he says it very dryly.
It's a laugh line in the episode, I think.
But that's Nate's vibe.
Like, season one to Nate.
can get pretty fucked up.
It's very, we mentioned this last week,
but there's a brettie Sinellis aspect to it,
that he is a little American psycho,
like he is the perfect Zion of a West Coast dynasty
and has the right jaw line to either run for office
or to go to jail forever for murder.
Yes.
And so I was curious whether or not you picked up on that
as this being your only, your second episode of Euphoria.
I didn't because this episode, well, I'll say two things.
One, part of his storyline is probably at the bottom of my power rankings because we're now two for two in him voicing something that I have to believe is near and dear to creator Sam Levinson's heart, which is that all Californians of good standing should care about P&Z laws and how difficult it is to build here.
Why can't you separate art from artist?
Literally the guy's like all California.
It's like the pit.
He like turns to camera and is like, do you know planning and zoning regulations?
Republican pit.
Yes, this is how we win at podcasting.
Say it slower to the camera.
Actually, women are allowed to make content about whatever they want.
You know, I mean, like, that is sort of what this show is doing.
I don't know if I agree that all Californians should be worried that it's challenging to build here.
How do you feel about the zoning laws of this great state?
It's not my top 20 of current concerns about living in this great state.
No, it's really not.
Okay.
But then again, I'm not really, you know, part of a real estate empire.
The ironic thing is that I don't think it's lost that Nate is complaining about starting a, like, somewhat nefariously funded.
You know, he's like an honest businessman.
It's like, Nate's the furthest from, you know.
I, he's like, have these guys move sand around when the developer, when the investors come.
The reason I've liked my experience watching the show cold is because it is never boring.
And I actually feel like, and this is obviously self-fulfilling,
but that my experiment is supporting itself,
that there's very little that I need to be standing on
to just be present with these characters
as they are going about, whatever it is
they are building towards in this undoubtedly final season of the show.
That said, your question brings up one thing that I was picking up on,
which is as certain threads, threads, currents bubble up,
some of them are tonal, but some of them feel canonical or biographical in ways that I'm at sea with.
And it's hard to...
The Maddie...
So, Cassie, Nate Love Triangle.
Absolutely no idea what any of that was about.
Sure.
Absolutely no idea what Maddie was, who she was and what she was doing. I found that less compelling.
I found that less compelling. I did you look it up on Wikipedia? I didn't. I didn't. I was reading the new Jonathan Franzen novel at the time. And so...
Do you have it with you by any chance?
I do, but I'm pretty locked in right now.
Okay.
And I'll let you know if that changes.
And people watching at home will see as my interest level dips in the show.
It's like retreat to the warm embrace of literature, my true home.
But, yeah, so the backstory of that was a little bit confounding.
And I guess I'll say that the Cassie, Nate relationship, as far as I can tell, I don't actually care
what they were like in high school.
Them as starter pack...
He used to date Maddie in high school.
Sure, but them now as a starter pack
upwardly mobile, you know,
would be Nouveau-Riche couple living in this
hellscape. Like, works for me, it's fine.
I think that the show, it's interesting
to hear you say that. I think that the show is very
much depicting them as like frozen
and amber out in Calabasas somewhere
and not truly
part of like the kind of
zeitgeist and maybe even tapped into
the money stream that runs.
through Los Angeles.
Right. Cassie is very excited
to be on the roof
of the peninsula.
Yes.
And where's like,
what was that,
magenta fuchsia?
What was her top?
What color?
Was that?
I was not staring
at her top in that scene.
I have to say I was not
focused on that.
Because...
What were you looking at?
The Hildebrand family
in 1971, Chicago,
they're the protagonists
of Crossroads.
It was pretty interesting.
Did you like this episode of TV?
I actually,
I really did enjoy it.
But I really enjoy it
because the...
First of all, I do like the chaos theory approach.
Sorry, does that make me the bad guy?
There are other things on the screen.
I am enjoying full stop, like we said last week, I'm enjoying Zendaya.
I don't know what's going on with this character or where she's headed,
but I just think it's pretty funny.
And I also really like that I have no sense of how much time is passing at any moment in an episode of the show.
So the fact that she, like, goes to this Silver Slipper Club.
I have no idea where this is either.
It looks like it's...
Amelope Valley, Palmdale, Lancaster.
Maybe Nevada.
I don't know.
Unclear, but she immediately just starts running shit there
and it's just like hanging with everyone.
I found that to be kind of fun.
Yeah.
And I also have to say that I'm interested in the way...
Okay, so wait, one step back.
During the long gestation period for this season,
we had heard all these stories about the type of show
that it would euphoria, if it were to return,
how it would return.
And the one that obviously we fixated on
was, oh, it's going to be a private detective show.
Watching this episode particularly,
there were moments when Sam Levinson moves the camera
or sets up scenes in ways that suggest the things
that interest him may have outstripped
the bounds of the show that he's making.
So when Maddie arrives at the peninsula
and it does this wide shot of her crossing the boulevard
and it's like classic Hollywood noir
and I'm interested in that.
And I kind of like the idea
of him casting his Hollywood Fantasia,
whatever this is, spectacular,
with not just the actors from his previous high school piece,
but the characters of his high school piece
who are now playing very different roles
in the movie he wishes he was making.
When the show so far has elevated to me this season,
that's what he's been doing,
and that's when what's on screen
and what clearly is in his head seem to align.
The moments that I'm less interested in,
are on the margins and lead to me almost sending you text like I almost did in the first 10 minutes of
this episode asking if this blonde woman coming to L.A. during COVID was the Cassie origin story.
Didn't she go to high school with them? Because again, maybe I wasn't looking at the right part of her.
I didn't, I thought that was Sidney. No, it was not. You were just staring at her eyes.
Just locked in.
So it's interesting to hear you say that. I probably give this show credit because it's doing something that I rather
enjoy when TV shows at least effort to become, which is the bucket show that allows a showrunner
or creator to basically be like, on the side of the bucket, it says euphoria or on the side of
the bucket, it says leftovers or the Americans or whatever. Industry. Industry. But we're going to
make it a receptacle for everything that we're interested in. And for Sam Levinson, obviously,
he is interested in the American dream,
the American debt,
the absolute attraction repulsion nature of California
to the point where he talks about
its geological evil magnet that's underneath.
The big magnet under the soil attracting evil.
It's spoken by a character named Angel.
I like that.
Yeah.
And I think he's obviously playing
with a bunch of different styles of filmmaking
within this.
And for him, you know,
if zendaya jacob alorty and sydney sweeney are in something 20 million people about are going to watch it every week so
it's going to be this big this big thing and he can kind of then get away with making a spaghetti western
mystery movie if he wants to or a uh like pop art almost commentary on exploitation slash also a piece of
exploitation itself i think that's fascinating and i think also like this show is not boring and i've been
struggling for the last couple of months with the shows that aren't ones that you can tell
that Andy and I have really positively responded to, that it's hard for me to get by on like a
65 or a 70 with a show. It's like it's pretty good. It's like this show like is exciting to watch.
I don't know what's going to happen next. Yes, there are things that perhaps like offend people and
there are things that I feel like I've watched that pig conversation like the one that Alamo and
Marshaun Lynch have in any number of Tarantino and Tarantino ripoff movies.
Like, there's definitely like homage that borders on...
This was Kirkland Tarantino.
Sure.
But I just give it a ton of credit for holding my interest and for being...
I don't want this to be clipped, but stimulating.
I'd like to be clipped but connected to something we were talking about about two, three minutes earlier.
I'll come into the studio with you guys later.
It's a...
The show is stimulating.
I never thought I would say this, but I understand Sam SML better.
No, when our friend Sam would come on the podcast and do his top 10 list,
often what he would rail against would be, you know,
what he was joking about as laundry folding shows.
And he would praise things that were aesthetically bold and directorially driven
even past the point of what I and maybe sometimes we felt were reasonable or like entertaining
or even generous in terms of the effort they were making to include an audience.
Now, Sam, despite being very successful and very good at making television, historically doesn't
love or watch a lot of television.
So he's less interested in the things that we praise for hitting familiar, comforting,
technically excellent beats, like The Pit, for example, or the story connecting, the bits
on Mad Men, where despite pushing things forward
visually and thematically, they are
just a family in the workplace at the end of the day.
All of that being said,
the moment
we're in with television where everything
is received
through this lens and viewed through this lens,
that everything is excellent and everything is
prestige, whether it's because of the money, Apple,
or whomever has spent on it or the actors
who were in it, were used to seeing them in films,
when, in fact, a lot of
the meat of television shows from minute 14 to minute 48
or laundry folding.
You know, this will come up with Margot as well, I think.
It can be elite laundry folding, but it's laundry folding.
And the best thing that I want to say at the end of this long
digression is there's no laundry in the show.
And if I had been watching it,
with any laundry in mind over the past few years,
I think that I would be having a lot,
harder time just breezing along. But because I have no stakes here, I like the fact that I don't have any
idea where it's going and that everything on the screen, somebody had an idea. Sometimes too many ideas
maybe and too many ideas piled on top of each other, but they had some ideas. Yeah, and I also, I mean,
frankly, find the photography of Southern California and the desert that he's doing to be as, like,
exciting as anything that happens inside of the silver slipper.
Like I think that he's doing really, really beautiful work in being evocative of the entirety of
the Southern California region.
Yeah, it's Southern California, not L.A. in a way.
But it's a relationship to Los Angeles and this idea of suburbs and city, it's almost antiquated
or at least because I moved here so late in life, it never really resonated with me as like,
you know, growing up in the valley but going into the city for fun, like that doesn't.
scan for me.
Yes.
But it is obviously something as an LA kid that he is thinking about.
Yeah.
Maybe as an LA kid he's thinking about that, but also maybe as an L.A. rich person,
he's thinking about it the same way, like, you know, the great Kanye song, No More Parties in L.A.,
which is basically about how annoying it is to drive from Calabasas to a party, super relatable.
But, like, this is a show built by people who exist only in siloed spaces and only ever traverse
through the middle of the city either ironically or being driven in an air-conditioned SUV.
And I'm not saying that Rue's perspective is of a rich person, but I think the vision of it,
which is not to invalidate the vision.
It is incredibly haunting and it feels very of the moment and it's claustrophobic and also agoraphobic
and equal measure.
But everything about it is siloed.
And I think intentionally, and I feel like that aesthetically is kind of interesting to me,
that Cassie goes from her golden prison somewhere.
we're out in the hills.
And where she goes, it's exciting to her,
is the roof of a building.
We never see her actually touch the ground.
And suddenly she's around people again.
Or at the very end, when Rue goes to visit Jules,
who's a character I've never seen before or encountered before.
Jules is a major, major, major character on the show.
Once again, like, absolute siloed somewhere at the penthouse of a building with no one else around.
A lot of Jules and Rue, this is, Jules has historically been the sort of, I would say
the love of Drew's life, but in some ways you wonder whether she's just an object of her
kind of fascination and affection more than it is like a life partner kind of thing just because
of the way they are talking at the end of that episode. A lot of their romance tends to happen
in an almost fantasy world, at least to my eye visually. And you could see in the flashback
of Jules' time at art school when Rue goes to visit.
her, it's taking place in a loft that looks like a soundstage basically.
And that, it's like a Hollywood romance.
And her high-rise apartment, luxury apartment that she's living in, that Jules is living in at the end,
has like the fakes of fake sort of nightscapes outside of the window.
So I think from scene to scene and from storyline to storyline and from coupling to
throughout the show, it almost has a completely different visual language.
It's to a credit, to the show's credit, that you can have something.
something like Cindy Sweeney's bubble gum, like, far out, like, pop, pop, pop, L.A., the sort of glam luxury night noir of Jules's L.A.,
Rue's desert scape, and that you can go from, like, Cindy Sweeney's pretty comic arc so far this season,
to Rue in a bathroom with another woman.
telling her that her best friend just died of a fentanyl overdose
and that it's being kept from her.
And then that woman spiraling out on drugs.
Who's the character who I met last night, who I'm forgetting?
Who's working as a management manager of Nate's ex.
Maddie.
And Maddie's storyline, which is more or less the Rachel Senate storyline
from I Love L.A., you know, which is just like the day-to-day nuts and bolts
of managing this crazy town, you know.
But I say that to support your point
that there's all these different visions of it.
Ultimately, in terms of vision,
why I am good faith enjoying this exercise
is because the shot of Rue begging her mother to come home
while a gas station light,
the gas station goes out behind her,
it's an astonishing image.
It's a beautiful image.
She's acting the hell out of it.
And every so often,
every time the show starts to trip into something
where I want to take out my like stern little red pen and mark it up,
it does something that is genuinely moving and quite eye-catching and breathtaking and beautiful.
And that's enough to keep me going.
I would say largely, and we don't need to segue now, although we could,
and you don't need to have watched both episodes for this point to be relevant and not spoilery.
Euphoria and Margo have both staked out some terrain on OnlyFans Island.
What a moment for OnlyFans.
Great. I'm just glad the little guys are succeeding, as in the people who,
fans is dead.
Oh, no.
Did he set everything up, so are his children going to benefit?
Look, probate court.
Probate court is a mess, you know, so I hope that he had his affairs in order.
I think it was the only fans guy.
Yeah.
Yeah, it was.
But we don't know about who's...
I don't know who's taking the little taste.
Yeah, I mean, in some ways, we all are.
We're all sharing in the wealth because OnlyFans redistributes, you know, it goes back to
the content creators.
You know, really, Carl Marx was only a fan of that kind of redistribution of wealth.
Yes, we could get into more go if you'd like, yeah.
But we don't need to segue necessarily.
I just wanted to make the point that the euphoria vision of this is, in keeping with there
is a devil magnet underneath the San Andreas fault, and everything is absolutely cynical and evil.
And this is just a turbocharged vacuum attached to what was already a soul-sucking enterprise of
celebrity and fame and devaluation of human spirit.
And then you have the Margo vision of it, which is, isn't that neat?
We can all take advantage of this and become better people and pay for diapers.
Sure.
And I would like to pause it.
I know this is a little radical, that somewhere in the middle of these two aesthetic
viewpoints, there might be some nuance and an even more interesting story.
I wish you luck with your third way.
My third way.
I'm going to do the Andrew Yang storyline of Onlyfans.
Clip that, I dare you.
I'm trying to think about anything.
else really to say about euphoria.
There's not, obviously, Eric Dane, this is his final performance on camera.
Do you think he will appear in other episodes?
Do we know?
I do think that this season seems to be building towards this wedding.
I have not, we have not watched ahead.
But obviously, the wedding is an opportunity to bring together the entire cast in a way
that I don't know necessarily we will have otherwise.
Right.
and I would imagine given everybody's, you know,
release schedules in the major movie theaters
that he shot Zendaya stuff
and sometimes Alexis Demi would be on set for that.
And he shot Sidney-Sweeney stuff with Jacob Allorty.
And, you know, like, I think he kind of had to work around
a lot of schedules to do this.
And so maybe some of the separation is representative of that.
But then again, you know,
you're not necessarily always around people you went
to high school with even if you live in the same city.
So I think it is a legitimate depiction of their lives,
even if it doesn't necessarily feel like they're all on the same TV show all the time.
I have not seen what people have, many people have,
many people celebrated Eric Dane's performance on the show,
that it was very different than what he'd done before.
But even without that knowledge, I thought this was pretty great.
I have to say that him being vulnerable enough about his illness,
but that took his, I believe it was MS, correct?
No, he had Lou Gehrigris.
Sorry, ALS.
To take that and be like, what I'll do is have,
we can have Cal basically be always four beers deep.
Yeah, and seated, and they seemingly treated him with dignity
and gave him the opportunity to deliver a very good performance
that was not in any way like a, it wasn't just like a, you know, moist-eyed tribute.
Yeah, here you go, big guy.
Thanks, man.
Yeah, it was really cool.
Honestly, like, just the Zendaya note that I will hit every week,
which is that she's compulsively.
watchable. She communicates so much of the necessary ambiguity that should come with a show like
this because it would be easy to take everything at face value. But like obviously her trepidation,
so as you obviously probably have deduced, the Rue character has been through several
like rehab and intervention situations including just absolutely astonishing intervention.
in the second season.
Her dropping Angel off at this sort of
looked like K-Town
sort of like fly-by-night rehab
facility that didn't quite scream
wellness to me.
It seemed like she was going to be...
It seemed like a way station.
It seemed like where you stash people
that you don't want out in the world
for whatever reason.
Potentially never want them to appear again.
Yes.
And the lighting of that whole scene
and her promising her
that she was going to come pick her up
in a couple of weeks,
I thought it was great.
And that they never come
out and have Rousse say, like, this place doesn't seem like a reputable facility, but I'm going to
look into it. It's just everything is looks, everything is the texture of the plexiglass between the
person who's just playing video games behind the counter. It's just really good. The one counter
to your beautiful bucket analogy that I generally agree with in terms of ongoing television shows,
because honestly, nothing is worse than a show in which the creative team behind it has lost interest
in what they're doing and going through the motions. I'll say,
that the, even as, you know, potentially overheated and pulp fiction coded as the whole
Alamo Silver Slipper storyline is, I would be really interested in the, this is the first season
of that show of Zendaya working at this place in the middle of nowhere.
Yeah, Zendaya's strip club Michael Clayton. Yeah. I mean, when you put it like that, but yeah,
like that, that pops. Yeah. And the rest of the stuff is interesting, but it is not that.
I'm just going to throw up a quick note here.
Okay.
I was trying to do a power pole of shows that are on right now.
This is like a post-pit rooster DTF.
So stuff that's-
We were very busy watching all three of those shows.
I think I gave DTF a college try.
I have not received,
there's never been a show I have received more contentious emails about
basically insisting that I did not get it
and that I should try again.
People want Joe Russo to go back
and change the ending to that podcast,
like they're changing endgame.
Yeah.
So that you become a big DTF fan.
So Bill often does,
Bill Simmons often does like power pulls
in the midst of an NBA season
where he's just like,
I'm just going to kind of go from bottom to top here
or from top to bottom and rank these shows.
We have not watched maybe enough of this
to do a hearty power pole.
For instance, I have not watched any of the miniature wife
with Elizabeth Banks and Matthew McFadden.
Neither have I.
But Margot's got money troubles.
Your friends and neighbors.
Euphoria beef.
Big mistakes, which is the new series from Dan Levy on Netflix,
which honestly wasn't that bad.
I watched two episodes of that.
Look at you doing the work.
Honestly, it's like an end of the evening kind of like before we fall asleep thing.
And I was like, this is pretty good.
It's a comment. Yeah.
Bandy, which we talked about last week,
Roshant's new Martinique-based.
What were the numbers on our bandy convo?
I don't know.
It's still in the top 10 of Netflix.
You know what I'm saying?
Like sometimes you got to look beyond your echo chamber, you know?
Thank you.
I appreciate that.
Hacks, which I have not discussed.
Have you discussed it when I wasn't looking?
No.
Okay.
Abbott Elementary, which I still watch and still have...
Huge in my house, but we're behind.
Okay.
The kids are watching it on Hulu a season.
We're behind.
And then two AMC shows, one, which I have often said to my own detriment,
I have not watched Dark Winds, but I want to and I was half thinking.
about just euphoria.
Pulling a greenwald and just jumping in on season four and then if it works going back.
And the audacity, which is a new series with Billy Magnerson and Zach Gallafenakis.
I feel like we owe that a watch.
Because we run AMC as a network.
Well, no, we're going to be inheriting it and we're going to have to make the decision
about green lighting season two.
His inheritance seems to be on your mind.
Well, it's heavy.
Yeah, yeah.
You know, I'm trying to accrue powers of attorney as much as possible.
across, you know, any field in relation to my parents?
Do you think you'd like that responsibility for me?
To have your power of attorney?
Yeah, you'd just be letting all my doctors know DNR.
Listen.
He's here for a good time about a long time.
He's coming in because he tore his labor and weightlifting,
but don't take any extraordinary measures to keep this guy on the table.
But by all means, compliment him on what it's done to his physique.
No, I don't want that smoke.
In your estimation, I mean, obviously I think, against all odds,
euphoria
would seemingly be your number one right now?
Yeah, although I, you know, I'm approaching beef
with excitement.
With open, and optimism.
With an open, and an empty stomach.
Empty stomach. Big appetite.
Yeah, so this is an interesting moment.
There's no clear alpha is what you're saying.
Yeah, and I think also with something like your friends and neighbors,
which has already been renewed for season three.
Oh, yeah.
And I could see being a four, five, six
for as long as ham wants to do this kind of thing.
you kind of get to a point where there's some of these shows and you're like this is going to be what it is and I will if I like it I'll keep watching it before we even answer the question you're smartly asking I will say that this is an interesting snapshot of kind of what TV is now in a way that it hasn't been this is what I wanted to get into this is a number of the shows you're mentioning especially shows like your friends and neighbors and and rooster those are ongoing shows they're designed to be ongoing shows they're
going to be greenlit before the first seasons or, you know, current seasons have, have,
uh, have, have, uh, have ended. Um, and similarly, the other types of shows that we're talking
about in the margins, Margo and stuff, like there's, if Apple had its way, there is always going to be a
margot like show on the air. And we will discuss and debate the merits of the show in particular,
which I think is worthy of our conversation, but a, what's interesting about all the shows we're
talking about is that they are starry at a certain level and they are.
safe on a certain level. And I don't mean that judgmentally. When we talk about them individually,
I'm happy to be judgmental about their attitude towards risk and storytelling. But they are
dependable. And even like your friends and neighbors in the season three announcement, and this wasn't
a surprise that it was getting renewed again even before the second season premiered, much like last year,
they said it's coming back. And James Marsden will be one of the friends and neighbors this year.
Michelle Monaghan is joining Friends and Neighbors. And who better to represent that certain type of
affable, contemporary,
television plus celebrity
than those two.
Very, very high approval ratings.
Absolutely.
Good in basically everything,
dependable,
and feel like the people
who have always been on these shows,
even if they haven't been before
and even if they're only doing an arc.
Yeah.
This is a relatively healthy snapshot
of a moment that even if we're not engaging
with a lot of it,
or are we necessarily fired up about it?
And I think some of it is
firing these shows all off
around one another
to get in under the wire for Emmy consideration.
Usually that window ends around May 31st.
Yeah.
So the next couple of weeks will also be busy.
I'll be curious to revisit this list
after we've gotten a chance to maybe watch some more of beef,
maybe the audacity.
I think we'll pick hacks up as a...
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Let's talk about Margo,
a show from David E. Kelly.
It's adapted from a novel.
By Rufie Thorpe.
by Rufie Thorpe.
It's only 24 novels,
so it's a quick turnaround
from page to screen.
She's been recommended to me
is a bard of Orange County?
Do you know Rufie Thorpe at all?
Yeah, I read this book.
There you go.
This is actually useful.
And Kaya, if you feel like it,
please jump in.
I don't have a specific prompt for you.
I felt mid about it.
That's how I feel about this show.
But here's why I want to ask you.
You know,
ever since The Wire,
we've talked about TV
is the great opportunity to novelize story.
To tell a long-form story.
And I think now we've kind of bled into,
especially since Apple has thrown its weight around
in the adaptation space and Amazon as well.
And a bunch of these places are now like just buying up novels
that seem to have a viable screen story for TV.
If you gave me L. Fanning, Michelle Pfeiffer,
and Nick Offerman,
and if you even gave me a Fullerton
English student
unexpectedly gets pregnant
by her creative writing teacher
or her writing teacher
and decides to keep the baby.
I don't know if in like
a hundred years I would have come up with this
specific mixture
of character and tone that this show
did. And I wonder whether
or not it's just because it's like
we're adapting this book and that's what the book is like.
Yes. But
I'm starting to wonder whether or not
TV is the right place to adapt novels.
because this to me is like a perfectly fine example of like in the
in 1996 this would have been an adaptation of a Mona Simpson novel that lots of people liked
Can you imagine Curtis Hanson's Margo's got money troubles?
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
Would have been very enjoyable.
And you know what it would have been better than anyone expected and really satisfying?
Yes.
And there's something about this.
You were talking about the safety.
of it, I think we were talking about
the element of surprise
that euphoria packs in to each
scene, to each shot.
There's, part
of it is because I know what is going to happen on this show
because you watch a trailer for it so you know that Margo
gets into OnlyFans and you know that
her father was an ex-professional
wrestler who's gotten out of rehab to come back
to her and... Yeah, I mean, the logline of the book
was like
it almost felt like a
like a chat GPT stunt to get
optioned. Yes.
Which is, again, people really like the book.
Caya, not so much, but like it was a hit book, and it is a legitimate thing.
I am not trying to discredit the author.
But the series of words strung together, I was like, well, that's going to get adapted.
I've been having a sensation when I'm watching shows now.
Kate Heron directed the third episode.
Like, it looks cool.
Like, Elfinding is wonderful.
Dearba Walsh, who did Bad Sisters, really talented Irish director.
I hate one scene start and I know exactly how they're going to end.
oh, I am, if you think I'm insufferable, imagine me watching the show saying what was going to happen in this, yes.
And it's not like, oh, let me guess she's actually going to do only fans, but I mean like, let me guess she's going to get insulted by this HR work person.
Or let me guess like Michelle Pfeiffer's not going to be able to take care of the baby's night, so she's going to ruin her restaurant job.
Or let me guess. And I, yes, like TV, there's a huge.
swath of television where I'm like I want a reliable,
repeatable, emotional experience.
Yes. Along with a couple of laughs or a couple of thrills every week for 42 minutes or
59 minutes or an hour and five minutes or whatever it is. But more and more, I think
TV like the pit and industry and, you know, euphoria kind of makes it hard for me to watch
stuff where I'm like, no shit. Well, that happens. If you're committing to eight,
10 hours of something, you don't necessarily want extremity, which I think was a misunderstanding
of a lot of the last 10 years in terms of pushing genre things or violence or shock to the forefront
to get people to keep watching. You don't need to be surprised. I think you ought to be delighted.
And when you get the feeling that things are moving along a predictable track, that for me
saps my enthusiasm of spending this much time watching something. Now, if I had a lot of laundry to fold,
I get it.
I will also say that, like, this is from the book.
I am, this might be considered a zag, considering I am the Daddington of this particular
island, but I do find the unexpected pregnancy story arc to be diminishing returns.
I dare someone to show me a version of this story that follows a different path other than
throwing up in public and finding out the hard way and taking multiple tests and saying, no, no, no.
And then the chat, like, it's hard.
And this is a legitimate part of the human experience.
but dramatically
it's increasingly kind of inert
because it follows a very similar pattern.
Before we get specifically even more into the weeds
of the show, I wanted to say some positives.
I think that the
production design,
I'm biased, this is Richard Bloom
who worked on my show, but I think he did a beautiful job
showing a part of attention, Sam Levinson,
a part of Southern California that is very specific
and not the version you often see.
This is like on the outskirts of Pomona-ish.
And one of the things that I noticed that I really appreciated is like in Margot's apartment,
Margo's the main character played by L. Fanning, it doesn't look like poverty porn.
No.
And it doesn't look like there's a bowl of plums on the table for no reason, which is often the case.
It's right in the middle.
It's right in the middle.
It's like, oh, some people live here and sometimes they eat cereal.
And I noticed that in location to location to location.
And when the show does like put a little curlicue on it, like the scene in Bloomingdale's
when Margo has sort of a panic attack and falls on the ground.
Michelle Pfeiffer is yelling at her to get up.
You can see that he hung these furry Cassie and Nate-esque lelike lamps over her,
which I don't believe her a feature of Bloomingdale's, but accentuated the shot.
I was just in Bloomingdale's last weekend.
You shopping for strollers?
No.
As a gift.
We were looking for home goods and we went to a Bloomingdale's that didn't have them.
Okay.
Well, you should go to the one in your Pomona.
It's classier.
And, you know, the music, original music is by Nathan McKay.
we love from industry and executive producer and I think essentially day-to-day showrunners,
Eva Anderson, who's incredibly talented writer who I work with who I love to see her succeed
in something like this.
I will also credit one other huge thing here that maybe goes against our initial take.
The episodes are like 36 to 42 minutes.
Bravo.
Huge.
Let's normalize this.
Once you get through your friends and neighbors trailer, 38 minutes.
Although this started with a trailer for itself.
Yes.
Which I was like, relax Apple.
You have a winner.
I'm here.
I really appreciated that.
Like there's nothing, few things worse,
few things worse than you fire it up and it's like 64 minutes.
I'll tell you right now.
But you know what else is worse than that?
A 36 minute half hour comedy.
But if you tell me it's an hour long drama and you hit that 40 minute sweet spot,
I'm paying attention.
I sincerely would probably be, I would watch every episode of Fallout if they were 42 minutes.
It makes a huge difference.
Huge difference.
So there's that.
I think the other thing, I will say, that's really positive,
is I think Nick Offerman is amazing so far in this show.
Three episodes in, he's playing a, just out of rehab,
former wrestling great.
Name jinks.
Name jinks.
He, this feels a little like, you know,
you talking about the tops on Euphoria to say this,
but like the version of the show that's focusing on the man is pretty interesting.
He's really good.
Well, this is kind of the thing.
But it's a different show.
Yeah, and I was most delighted by the opening episode, the first episode,
specifically Elf Anning in college.
And like maybe being in Fullerton and having a gift that should be bigger than Fullerton.
The great Michael Angerano, who I love wearing a weird gold button blazer.
Yeah, but like suburban.
Ex-Burban California higher education,
living in an apartment with a bunch of roommates
who all seem like they could have their quirks
and would be pretty interesting to get to know.
And L. Fanning kind of working at a Benegans or a Chili's or whatever
and having dreams beyond Fullerton but not really sure how to get to them.
In a different world, that's enough.
That's a good show.
That's a good show, man.
I would watch El Fanning doing Francis Ha.
You know, like, I would watch her kind of just be like, yeah, like, I wish there was something bigger out there for me.
But I think part of it might be because when you get big, big, big stars, like Michelle Pfeiffer, who is married to David E. Kelly and I think has made a turn to television in these last few months with the Madison and this.
Her storyline with Greg Kinnear is kind of bigger than I thought it would be or maybe bigger than it needs to be.
and then Offerman could just be a dad that comes back into the picture,
but you add on this whole element of wrestling.
It's a lot of extra.
But I would also, and the baby becoming the fulcrum to reunite this kooky family
and make things work out.
I mean, look at us.
We're just a couple of kids who started a TV podcast,
and now we're talking about Michelle Pfeiffer projects twice a month.
So really the culture moved to us.
So thank you.
Gratitude.
Practice gratitude.
I found the tone and the consistent.
of the characters to be all over the place, and I wondered if it was the creeping reach of celebrity.
And what I mean by that is when we first meet Michelle Pfeiffer's Cheyenne character, she is, and it's
interesting, she is made up heavily and is seemingly trying to embody this lower-class ex-Hooters waitress,
piecing it together, now trying to pretend to be a different person to marry a preacher who
apparently only dines at chain restaurants, played by Greg Kinnear.
The next time we see her, she looks completely different and a little bit more like she does
on the Madison, which is Michelle Fyfer looks incredible all the time at any age of her life and in any
setting.
And she seemed a lot softer and more likable and nicer.
And so then when the turn is that she won't hold the baby, her grandchild or take care of him or help or talk to her daughter,
it felt like suddenly we've twisted it again.
the drift towards likability and wanting to be a hero in a story that almost inevitably will turn to some kind of mush started really, really early.
Maybe it's the familiarity with these characters.
Maybe it's a little bit of the ego of who they want to play and how they want to be seen creeping in.
But what I didn't understand really was the troubles that anybody was in.
Up to a certain point, everything seems to be working out fine.
you know, she's spending hundreds of dollars
and diapers and things up until one of the roommate moves out
and then suddenly the crisis is writ large for us.
Yes.
Suddenly she says, I could have moved in back with you,
but your dresses filled in the other rooms.
And I don't really understand the peril.
Everything is a little bit agreeable.
Everything is a little bit nice
until it's not for the purposes of the plot.
So a character who is kind in one scene
comes over to pick another fight with someone else
because we're in episode three
and we need more conflict.
Yeah, and we introduce, I think it's in,
Is it two or three that we introduced, Marsha Gay Hardin, who plays Michael O'Rongo's mother?
Michael Angerano's character is a professor, is the father of the baby.
Marsha Gay Hardin shows up, really shows up and turt up as a character who immediately announces that her hair looks like a skunk.
Raccoon.
Sorry, a raccoon.
Are you sure it was raccoon?
I think it was skunk.
Raccoon because she's like, and I fight like one, too.
That's generally, again, you know, I've been paying a lot of attention to inheritance and things.
family matters and legal stuff.
That's generally how people behave in legal mediation type of circumstances.
You show up and you say, I'm a villain.
Now please speak to my attorney.
It's all over the place.
Yeah.
Right?
I feel like I'm sounding more negative that I intended to be because it is a good expression
of what Apple likes to do and tends to do on things either executive produced by Nicole Kidman
or spiritually executive produced by Nicole Kidman.
Maybe it's Hello Sunshine Core,
but it's also like,
it's not dissimilar to how I feel about
the episodes of shrinking that I've watched,
which is,
this is about taking these incredibly vulnerable,
destabilizing moments in characters' lives,
but creating the feeling that everything is fine and safe and good.
And...
Cushinging.
I don't mind going either way.
You know what I mean?
Like, I don't necessarily need everything
to be last,
exit to Brooklyn, but if somebody loses their wife in a car accident or someone has an
unexpected pregnancy and finds themselves in dire straits economically, I find it difficult
to sometimes like square the circle of, but actually in the terms of the television
experience that you're going to have, it's fine, you know? It's like, it's safe and it's cool
and it's nice and like you're going to get to know and love these characters. And honestly,
let's just try to keep these characters in play for two, three seasons, but keep them more or less in the same way.
So we're going to want them all existing in this same world and in these same circumstances forever.
Yes.
And in some ways, that's how I feel about your friends and neighbors, which is like a cool concept that I would have liked to have watched a 90 minute to 120 minute movie about a guy who's fallen out from an investment bank and starts robbing houses in his rich neighborhood.
But when you're like, here's episode 11 of him doing this same thing.
But also, the central problem with your friends and neighbors,
and maybe this is just the note that they don't give it Apple,
or maybe this is just Apple,
where everything is smooth and contoured and works out fine.
Well, maybe they're like, this is exactly what we want.
That's what I'm saying.
Yeah.
John Hamm's character and your friends and neighbors
turns to a life of crime for reasons that are kind of shrug emoji.
Like, he loses his job that pays him seven figures,
so he starts stealing paintings, but don't worry,
his daughter still gets into Princeton.
The stakes are never really that bad for them, even when they try to create the sense that they are.
The biggest risk he has is of maybe not being able to pay for the tennis club membership anymore or hang out in the sauna with his equally rich friends.
This is not really a problem.
It is a conceit for a television show.
Fine.
But we are living in this moment where it does feel like some of these streamers, studios, creators are trying to cherry pick the trappings of
a grungier, more intense kind of drama
that we have history and success with on television,
but really just standing off the edges
and making it TV.
Maybe you can't get in the door unless you're like,
here's the sticky, hooky part of this.
If you pitch John Hamm loses his job
at a big-time investment fund
or private, you know,
a hedge fund,
and in the midst of a divorce
needs to recalibrate
how he fits in to this Tony
Long Island community,
that's just like John Hamdo and John Cheever
and I'd probably be really into it
and I wouldn't have any expectations about
how he does and doesn't change
but to get it sticky you have to be like
and then he turns to a life of crime
but don't worry it's not like breaking bad where like
it's not like breaking bad I mean this is the
this is the example
it is not something we generally do which is hold up
one of the you know generally
acknowledged greatest shows ever
Rushmore shows ever and say well you're not doing that
nobody needs to do that very few people
could do that and if they
did it again, we'd be like, you're just doing that. I hear all of that. But early on in that show,
Walter White reaches the first of what ends up being, you know, dozens upon dozens of absolutely
existentially catastrophic decision points. And he does the thing that you can't believe that he's
going to do. It begins with the first, you know, the guy who's in the basement, who they then have to,
like, they melt his body in the bathtub. You can't really walk back from that. What a lot of these other
shows do is they create a clever opportunity and circumstance parachute to get away from,
you go near the body in the bathtub, but then you're not really responsible for it, and he was
just sleeping anyway, and you're off to flirt with danger again the next week. Yeah.
That's kind of a bummer, and I can understand why you might do it in an ongoing show, but...
But it's like something about the mechanics of the storytelling sticks out to me, too. If you were going to
pitch justified as a movie, you would pitch it as Olafon versus Gagans and the end of the movie
would be their showdown. If you pitch it as a TV show, you're like, this is a week-to-week show
about a really cool Marshall who returns home to Kentucky after he gets in trouble in Florida and has
to deal with all of the rural crime outside of Lexington in the hills outside, you know,
and that's awesome. And then it emerges over.
the course of the season
that there's gonna be this big bad.
But they are like, from any given week,
you're not gonna know what the story is gonna be.
And it's all these different cool little procedural martial stories.
I don't think that they are using the same logic
of like what makes an entertaining television show
week to week anymore, understandably,
because a lot of people are waiting for all the episodes
of your friends and neighbors to go up
so that they then just watch them over a weekend or whatever.
And I don't know,
With Margo, it's the same thing.
It's like, how much, how long can you do a show about someone who didn't expect to be a mother and now is?
Well, I think it's, you probably could do it for a while, I guess.
But we should sell, we could separate the conversation because, Kayap, how would you characterize the book?
Like, is the book surprisingly dark at times, or is it essentially like a fun read that touches on contemporary society?
Yeah, I would say the latter.
I think my issues with the book are also like my, I watched the first episode of this.
And my, I think the tone of the book was a little bit off-putting to me,
similarly in the way that the tone of this show is a little bit off-putting,
where it just feels like overly twee.
Yeah, I think, like, I don't think it's not necessarily fair to combine that into this conversation.
Because if this is true to the spirit of the book, like one thing that David Kelly is just expert at,
and especially in this later part of his career,
is he's really good at finding the thing that made the thing successful.
And he just expands on that and celebrates it.
So turning this into a glossy but affirming sort of twee, magical, creative family story,
that's fine.
There's plenty of space to that on TV.
There are a lot of talented people working to make that happen.
And maybe it'll have a couple twists and turns along the way.
And also with a show like this, it's like, oh, that's Carrie Kenny Silver in one scene being funny.
that's Laura San Giacomo as a minor character
who haven't seen her in a minute.
That's great to see.
Like it's attracting Marsha Gay-Harden.
Like it's of a very, very high level.
But the bummer is when that sensibility,
that kind of apple just contours,
smoothing everything out sensibility,
becomes the lingua franca of the medium
or becomes the expected thing.
Now, to bring it all the way back to the first point
we were making when you were talking about
what's out there right now,
historically TV is pretty laundry folding and affirming and magical and fill space and fill time.
And it's okay to bring some of that back into our lives.
The pit proves that you can be pretty boundary pushing and thrilling within some, using some of that old language.
I think the problem becomes when all of the resources at the shrinking number of streaming services pour all of those resources into that.
Now, we're not at that point.
There's still 300 new shows.
and Apple UK especially is putting out a lot of really interesting things.
And this also might speak to the difference between watching TV as a professional pursuit versus watching TV as like a way to let off steam at the end of a long day.
Yeah.
So I acknowledge that and I, you know, I, but there is something fuzzy going on with me and with these shows where I'm just like, I'm not connecting with as many as I usually do.
Well, I think that goes back to the, I think you were right about the shrinking observation.
And I also think that it's just a lot of hours to.
fill. Like, not many stories are deserving of this much of our time, frankly. You know, and some,
even some of the spy shows that maybe people think we overrate, it's like, well, I also read a lot
of spy books in my spare time and probably couldn't tell you about half the plots. Like, that is a,
that is something that I enjoy doing once I'm in that world. But I wouldn't give the same,
I probably wouldn't give the same grace to books in different genres just to fill time. It would
have to earn my attention. Thanks for your participation in the show today.
Thanks to Sarah Kay and Kaya.
No.
I got another pod I got to go to.
Oh, well, please, by all means.
And we'll be back on Thursday with Beef, Top Chef, and...
Wild Card?
I mean, I listed all those shows.
Maybe we should check out the audacity for that.
I mean, I don't want to over-commit because it's kind of a busy week, you know,
with all the probate stuff I got going on.
I don't really...
I got to get to the bottom of this.
Now it's just a bit.
Thanks, everybody for listening.
We'll be back on Thursday.
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