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What's Making Us Happy: A guide to your weekend viewing and gaming

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What's Making Us Happy: A guide to your weekend viewing and gaming

Sara Bareilles, left, Paula Pell, Busy Philipps and Renée Elise Goldsberry in Girls5eva Season 3.

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Sara Bareilles, left, Paula Pell, Busy Philipps and Renée Elise Goldsberry in Girls5eva Season 3.

Emily V. Aragones/Netflix

This week, an influential audience was offered up an AI buffet and was not having any; even the most garbage show could have the most moralistic reunion; and we were all reminded that even James Bond has to follow the rules.

Here’s what NPR’s Pop Culture Happy Hour crew was paying attention to — and what you should check out this weekend.

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Love Is Blind, on Netflix

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Love Is Blind is really the first reality show since the early seasons of Real Housewives of New York that I have followed. Once you start watching any reality franchise your entire life becomes that franchise because there’s a season that comes out every quarter. Love Is Blind America is on Season 6. I am in these people’s lives. I am in their experiment drama. Reality TV is difficult for me because I don’t like it when people fight with each other — I’m fine with it in fiction — but when I see people hurting each other’s feelings on TV, I’m like, I don’t want to watch this, this is not a sport, I do not want to cheer these people on. But apparently Love Is Blind is a formula that works for me. — Jordan Crucchiola

Movie Grid

I’m not a gamer, but I do enjoy little website games. There’s this website called moviegrid.io which is a really lovely game. Basically it’s a three-by-three grid and on one side there are actor or director names. And then across the top it might say “$100 million movie” or “Oscar-winning performance.” And you have to wrack your brain to think, for example: OK, what Jake Gyllenhaal movie made over $100 million at the box office? And you try to fill out the whole grid. You get more points for more obscure movies. There’s a TV version and a classic film version. So if you play like Connections and Wordle and stuff like that, this is very much up that alley. — Reanna Cruz

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Girls5Eva, on Netflix

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Girls5Eva Season 3 has just dropped on Netflix. (It moved from Peacock.) This show is still firing on all cylinders. It stars Sara Bareilles, Renée Elise Goldsberry, Busy Philipps and Paula Pell. They play a late ’90s/early aughts girl group who are reunited. The first two seasons were all about them trying to get together and make this whole thing work some 20-odd years later. This season they are all on tour. Each episode finds them in a new part of the country. It’s just delightful. The music is great, the performances are great. Renée Elise Goldsberry continues to be sort of like the Jenna Maroney of Girls5Eva. I love every time she’s on screen. It’s a great binge. — Aisha Harris

More recommendations from the Pop Culture Happy Hour newsletter

by Linda Holmes

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We’re going to talk about the Lindsay Lohan Netflix romcom Irish Wish (as well as a couple other recent genre entries) on Pop Culture Happy Hour pretty soon, but let me just say: If you’re the kind of person who can swallow a silly story if the settings and the leads are appealing, this just might be up your alley.

Maris Kreizman at LitHub takes on the idea of turning the publishing of books over to “freelancers,” which in this case means gig workers. I have to say, as someone who has written books, I think I benefit from the team I work with having stability and institutional knowledge, and even if I got a bigger cut, I don’t think I would price-shop for something like an editor. So consider me Team Maris.

Some of the blogs (yes, blogs) that I have loved over the years are gone, and some have been taken over by evil forces. But some are thriving, and Oscars week is a great week to revisit both Go Fug Yourself and Tom + Lorenzo. Fashion commentary that combines actual knowledge with sharp wit? I am always grateful.

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.

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Apache chef Nephi Craig says cooking Native food saved his life

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Apache chef Nephi Craig says cooking Native food saved his life

Nephi Craig’s mother is White Mountain Apache and his father is Diné Navajo. He grew up on both reservations.

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Ari Carter Craig/Penguin Random House

Nephi Craig, the founder of the Native American Culinary Association, credits eating, cooking and teaching about Indigenous food with saving his life.

Craig became addicted to alcohol and drugs at an early age. After his first DUI, the judge gave him the option of three months’ probation if he agreed to get a job or go to college. That’s when he enrolled in cooking classes at Scottsdale Community College.

Craig says he initially felt like an “oddball” in the classes because he was unfamiliar with terms like “bistro” and “vichyssoise.” But he also credits the classes with igniting his interest in cooking — and teaching him more about Native foods, including the tomato.

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“[When] I came across this info that [the tomato] was native to the Americas, it just brought this really big smile to my face,” Craig says. “As a Native American in Arizona, you don’t really see yourself represented in really anything, let alone cookbooks and culinary school curriculum. So that was a neat point of validation for me that grew into many other interests.”

Craig eventually landed a job at one of Phoenix’s top fine dining restaurants, a goal he’d been working towards for years. But after a period of sobriety, a relapse ultimately cost him the job. He wound up in jail, where he worked in the kitchen and learned to design meals with whatever food was on hand.

“I was bunched in with the other Native Americans. And in jail, we call ourselves ‘chiefs,’” he says. “Banding together to feed, I think it was 7,800 inmates a day, was really eye-opening. It showed me that I was not above or below any style of cooking.”

Over the years, Craig completed nine rehabs and ran away from five others. Now sober, he works as the nutritional recovery program coordinator at the White Mountain Apache tribe-owned Rainbow Treatment Center in Whiteriver, Ariz., which serves people recovering from substance abuse. In 2021, he opened Café Gozhóó, a restaurant on the reservation that’s a place for the community to eat and talk. His new memoir is Our Knives Will Save Us: Dispatches from a White Mountain Apache Chef.

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Trump relished in being compared to dictators like Hitler and Stalin, journalist says

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Trump relished in being compared to dictators like Hitler and Stalin, journalist says

A gold-colored item embossed with the word “President” sits on the Resolute desk in the Oval Office of the White House on Nov. 10, 2025.

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The New York Times journalist Jonathan Swan has spent the past 11 years covering President Trump through three political campaigns, his first, and now second, term in office and the ongoing war with Iran. Swan says aside from the COVID-19 pandemic, he can’t remember a time where Trump looked “as stuck as he looks right now.”

“It’s pretty clear he realizes that this war [with Iran] has not gone well, has not played out the way that Netanyahu pitched him or that Trump himself thought [it] would play out,” Swan says. “Trump is someone who is naturally given to hubris, but I think we saw a very extreme version of that with this war.”

Swan and his co-author Maggie Haberman spoke with more than 1,000 sources for their new book, Regime Change: Inside the Imperial Presidency of Donald Trump. The book paints a picture of an unrestrained president remaking the American government and its international relations in profound ways.

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Swan notes that the president, who sat for an interview for the book, has been particularly fixated on becoming a “great man of history” during his second term. During one interview, Trump showed Swan and Haberman a document that compared him to notorious historical figures like Mao, Stalin, Hitler, Attila the Hun and Genghis Khan.

“[The list had] nothing to do with morality, all just about pure power projection. And Trump was relishing being in their company,” Swan says. “Maggie and I talked about it afterwards, and it really occurred to us that when you look at it through that lens, his second term makes a lot more sense.”

Swan says the president’s fixation on power is reflected in his decisions to go to war in Iran and implement regime change in Venezuela. But he also sees it manifested in Trump’s White House decor, which leans on what Swan calls the president’s “inner Louis XIV” style.

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Homelessness is more common than you think. : It’s Been a Minute

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Homelessness is more common than you think. : It’s Been a Minute

The real spectrum of housing insecurity

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Annika McFarlane/Getty Images/Getty Images

Who counts as homeless in America?

If you ask the Department of Housing and Urban Development, around 750,000 people are homeless in America. If you ask the Department of Education, that number shoots up into the millions. What does this discrepancy tell us?  And how do our cultural ideas about homelessness shape who we see as homeless, and who gets help? To find out, Brittany talks with Dr. Margot Kushel, Director at the UCSF Benioff Homelessness and Housing Initiative, and Dr. Molly Richard, assistant professor in the Department of Public Health at the University of Rhode Island’s College of Health Sciences.

Want more deep dives on cultural taboos?  Check out these episodes:
The truth about men on the ‘down low’
Why can’t we be normal about polyamory?

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For handpicked podcast recommendations every week, subscribe to NPR’s Pod Club newsletter at npr.org/podclub.

This episode was produced by Corey Antonio Rose. It was edited by Neena Pathak. We had engineering support from Josephine Nyounai. Our Supervising Producer is Cher Vincent. Our Executive Producer is Barton Girdwood. Our VP of Programming is Yolanda Sangweni.

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