Current:Home > StocksWhat's Making Us Happy: A guide to your weekend viewing -Achieve Wealth Network
What's Making Us Happy: A guide to your weekend viewing
View
Date:2025-04-24 08:23:17
This week, we learned about the Met Gala theme, which will mostly be ignored, Jon Stewart came back and Beyoncé got (more) into country.
Here's what NPR's Pop Culture Happy Hour crew was paying attention to — and what you should check out this weekend.
Fargo
The latest season of Fargo just wrapped up last month and I loved it. Season 5 follows Dot, a young mother played by Juno Temple, who, it turns out, escaped years earlier from an abusive cult-like marriage to a brutal man played by Jon Hamm. In the first episode he tracks her down and throughout the season we see her trying to liberate herself from his grasp. She does so with cleverness, fierceness and — at certain points — brute force. It is so fun to cheer for her because she is tiny and smart and kind and clever all at the same time. To see her fight back against Jon Hamm's character — it's just such a rush. I watched the whole thing in three days and I still cannot stop thinking about it. — Kristen Meinzer
Only Connect
Britain has a lot of game shows and they are all amazing in their own way. Only Connect — by far the hardest of all British team shows — just finished its 19th season. It is an impossibly difficult quiz show where you have to find the connections between four seemingly unrelated things. For example: A hammer and a feather, six American flags, Eugene Shoemaker's ashes, and two golf balls. What do they have in common? Those are the things we left on the moon. A quarter of the questions are impossible because they're about something deeply British, like Blue Peter or the highway system. But it's so much fun. And the host, Victoria Coren Mitchell, is very possibly the best presenter we have in television today. If you like the joy of being stumped, go watch some. — Guy Branum
Siren: Survive the Island
Siren: Survive the Island is a Korean competitive reality series on Netflix following six teams of badass women who compete against each other in a high-stakes version of Capture the Flag. They're stranded on this island for seven days and there are cameras everywhere. There are two kinds of competitions: Arena battles they fight against each other to win perks, and base battles where the team hides their flag and then they go out and raid other bases, or defend their own base from somebody else coming in. They make alliances with other teams that have very short lifespans. I love how simple and clear it is. It is just a perfect weekend binge. Ten episodes. You will develop very strong feelings about every player and even stronger feelings about how it ends. — Glen Weldon
The Muppet Show's "Chicken Western" sketch
Lately I've been rewatching The Muppet Show — as one does when you need a pick-me-up — and there's a sketch from a Season 2 episode featuring chickens in a Western: There's a saloon. There's chickens. Gonzo is bartending. There's no human dialogue, but there are a lot of "clucks." A cigarette-smoking bad rooster enters and causes havoc. He harasses a female chicken and then gets into a shootout with the good rooster. Gonzo narrowly escapes getting shot. The sound effects are ace. It just made me burst out laughing uncontrollably. — Aisha Harris
More recommendations from the Pop Culture Happy Hour newsletter
by Linda Holmes
Friend of the show and NPR TV critic Eric Deggans wrote, as he has valiantly done for years, about the Super Bowl ads.
We'll be covering the Oscar-nominated documentaries as the ceremony approaches, but I want to recommend them to you most highly, at least the ones I've seen. 20 Days in Mariupol is on YouTube, Four Daughters is available for rent, and Bobi Wine: The People's President is on Disney+. (I've also seen To Kill a Tiger, which is also very good, but that's not streaming yet.) They are all tough stories, but they are all, in different ways, exceptional pieces of filmmaking and so, so compelling.
Kelly Link's short stories are well-known; her first novel is now out. Called The Book of Love, it's a big fantasy tale about a group of teenagers caught up in a war between life and death, but who still have regular problems like sibling arguments and difficult romances. It's fabulous, even for somebody like me who isn't always a fantasy person.
Another book I recently loved is Tracy Sierra's Nightwatching, a terrifying thriller that starts with the sentence "There was someone in the house," and then does not let up as the narrator hides with her children from an intruder. There are tantalizing questions about the reliability of the narrator, the line between dreams and reality, and what to do with a story that is emotionally gripping but might not be literally true.
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! (3598)
Related
- Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
- University of Michigan graduate instructors end 5-month strike, approve contract
- Tens of thousands expected for March on Washington’s 60th anniversary demonstration
- Montana Indian reservation works to revive bison populations
- Juan Soto praise of Mets' future a tough sight for Yankees, but World Series goal remains
- North Korea says 2nd attempt to put spy satellite into orbit failed
- Longtime 'Price Is Right' host Bob Barker dies at 99
- Adam Sandler's Netflix 'Bat Mitzvah' is the awkward Jewish middle-school movie we needed
- The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
- NASCAR at Daytona summer 2023: Start time, TV, streaming, lineup for Coke Zero Sugar 400
Ranking
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- Fed Chair Jerome Powell warns the fight against inflation is far from over
- With drones and webcams, volunteer hunters join a new search for the mythical Loch Ness Monster
- Russia’s Wagner mercenaries face uncertainty after the presumed death of its leader in a plane crash
- Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
- Transgender woman in New York reaches landmark settlement with county jail after great discrimination
- The National Zoo in Washington D.C. is returning its beloved pandas to China. Here's when and why.
- Kevin Hart Compares His Manhood to a Thumb After F--king Bad Injury
Recommendation
See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
FIFA suspends Spain soccer federation president Luis Rubiales for 90 days after World Cup final kiss
5 things to know about US Open draw: Novak Djokovic, Carlos Alcaraz on collision course
A combat jet has crashed near a Marine Corps air station in San Diego and a search is underway
All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
Talking Tech: Want a piece of $725 million Facebook settlement? How to make a claim
The British Museum says it has recovered some of the stolen 2,000 items
Man dies after NYPD sergeant hurls cooler, knocks him off motorbike; officer suspended