Current:Home > MyWhat's Making Us Happy: A guide to your weekend viewing and listening -MoneyMatrix
What's Making Us Happy: A guide to your weekend viewing and listening
View
Date:2025-04-11 14:08:03
This week, things got dicey for Elmo, people just kept on being weird about Taylor Swift, and we we said goodbye to the great, great, great Chita Rivera.
Here's what NPR's Pop Culture Happy Hour crew was paying attention to — and what you should check out this weekend.
One Direction - A Fan Story
One Direction - A Fan Story is a BBC podcast hosted by Maddie Grace Jepson, written and produced by Gráinne Morrison. It is a beautiful retelling of the rise of One Direction from the view of a now grown-up Directioner. It has eight episodes, each no longer than 20 minutes. It's so well-produced – it's sound-rich, high-energy, and full of archival tape. I love that the BBC put really great production into documenting what was a visceral, emotional thing in a teen's life And it's really interesting to hear it from a British perspective. — Candice Lim
The Artful Dodger
The Artful Dodger on Hulu is a spinoff of the 19th-century Dickens novel, Oliver Twist. For those who are unfamiliar, Oliver's friend Jack Dawkins (aka "the Artful Dodger") is a pickpocket. In the novel, he introduces Oliver to the book's antagonist, Fagin. This show takes place about a decade after the novel — Dawkins has left behind his life of crime, and he's in Australia using his nimble fingers for good as a surgeon. Fagin shows up and lures him back into crime. It is a Victorian-era period drama set in Australia, and kind of a romance – it includes scheming, plotting, capers, and a reminder that there was a time when minor surgery was life-threatening. It stars Thomas Brodie-Sangster, David Thewlis and Maia Mitchell – and it's very good.— J.C. Howard
Leo Reich: Literally Who Cares
Leo Reich's standup special came out in December. His standup persona is he's kind of a preening, self-obsessed, young queer man who is convinced of his own trailblazing importance. He's kind of playing up this whole youthful disaffection thing — he's wearing it like a coat. It's a pointed critique of exactly that kind of influencer culture vibe. He's playing dumb very smartly in the way that people like John Early and Kate Berlant and Joel Kim Booster used to — that whole hot idiot vibe. There's also music, so there's just enough Bo Burnham in there kind of peeking around the corner. I'm trying to sum up his vibe by comparing him to other people, because I very much do not want to spoil a single one of his jokes. They are solid, they are extremely well-written, they're well delivered. So I'm looking forward to a lot more from this guy. — Glen Weldon
Jet Lag: The Game
Ordinarily I find YouTuber energy to be Too Much, but I have gotten sucked in to a wonderful series on YouTube and Nebula called Jet Lag: The Game. They basically take a territory of the world and turn it into a board game. Think, like The Amazing Race, with two teams competing against each other to go from one place to another, but with other variations: There is a version where they play Connect 4 by traveling to actual states in the U.S. They play a 72-hour game of tag across Europe. It is sort of a travelogue combined with a strategy game combined with YouTubers capering around doing silly challenges. I'm completely sucked in and really enjoying this. — Stephen Thompson
More recommendations from the Pop Culture Happy Hour newsletter
by Linda Holmes
I greatly enjoyed the novel Interesting Facts About Space by Emily Austin, which came out this week. It's a story about a NASA (or NASA-like) engineer and true-crime obsessive with an entertaining and unusual interior monologue. (If you want more about everything I've been reading, including a bunch of stuff that's coming out this week, I rounded it all up over at my own site.)
The Netflix documentary The Greatest Night in Pop, which looks back on the late-night recording of "We Are The World" in 1985, is a whole lot of fun. Bruce Springsteen is generous and reflective, Huey Lewis explains how he was asked to fill the shoes of Prince, and you find out about at least one singer who may have had a little too much to drink.
Carole V. Bell wrote a piece for NPR looking at a set of new Jane Austen-inspired Hallmark adaptations, including a take on Sense and Sensibility with a mostly Black cast. There are some fascinating notes on the history and production of the film.
Friend of PCHH and NPR's TV critic Eric Deggans wrote up a guide to figuring out which streaming services to subscribe to — a public service!
NPR's Elizabeth Blair wrote about a White House arts summit that's worth keeping an eye on.
Take note that the Grammy Awards are on Sunday night, and Stephen will be up late to help bring you a PCHH episode as well as some written reflections. As they would say on Succession, "We Hear For You."
Beth Novey adapted the Pop Culture Happy Hour segment "What's Making Us Happy" for the Web. If you like these suggestions, consider signing up for our newsletter to get recommendations every week. And listen to Pop Culture Happy Hour on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
veryGood! (6)
Related
- Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
- Kourtney Kardashian's Daughter Penelope Disick Hilariously Roasts Dad Scott Disick's Dating Life
- Simu Liu Reveals His Parents Accidentally Took His Recreational Drugs While House Sitting
- North Carolina Republicans pitch Congress maps that could help them pick up 3 or 4 seats next year
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- New California law will require large corporations to reveal carbon emissions by 2026
- U.S. to create new immigration program for Ecuadorians aimed at discouraging border crossings
- Indicator exploder: jobs and inflation
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Sports parents are out of control and officials don't feel safe. Here's what's at risk
Ranking
- Average rate on 30
- Sen. Bob Menendez’s co-defendants, including his wife, plead not guilty to revised bribery charges
- Some Americans saw big gains in wealth during the pandemic. Here's why.
- Landscapers in North Carolina mistake man's body for Halloween decoration
- SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
- San Francisco police to give update on fatal shooting of driver who crashed into Chinese Consulate
- 'The Voice': Gwen Stefani and John Legend go head-to-head in first battle of Season 24
- Donald Trump told to keep volume down after getting animated at New York civil fraud trial
Recommendation
Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
California tech CEO convicted in COVID-19 and allergy test fraud case sentenced to 8 years in prison
Not just autoworkers: Grad students make up a growing share of UAW members
'Keep it going': Leading ALCS, Rangers get Max Scherzer return for Game 3 vs. Astros
Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
Elephant dies at St. Louis Zoo shortly after her herd became agitated from a dog running loose
Boat maker to expand manufacturing, create nearly 800 jobs
Restaurant chain Sweetgreen using robots to make salads