Lifestyle
What's Making Us Happy: A guide to your weekend viewing, listening and reading
Dionne Brown as Queenie Jenkins in the show Queenie, based on the novel by Candice Carty-Williams.
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This week, Pat Sajak saw his last spin, we heard about a musical it’s surprising we didn’t already have, and the prequels just would not end.
Here’s what NPR’s Pop Culture Happy Hour crew was paying attention to — and what you should check out this weekend.
Queenie, on Hulu
Queenie | Official Trailer | Hulu
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Queenie is a dramedy based on a novel by Candace Carty-Williams. The series stars Dionne Brown as a mid-20s Londoner having her young adult life crisis – she breaks up with her long-term boyfriend, her career is not going the way she wants it to, she has a very dysfunctional family. The first three episodes felt like a retread – an overly familiar version of like Insecure, or Survival of the Thickest – a young Black woman trying to figure out her life while everything’s going wrong. But by the fourth episode, the show taps into themes that I think are a lot more specific in viewpoint – especially around this idea of confronting the past. Stick with it, because I think it really finds its groove midway through. — Aisha Harris
“Kill The Lights” by Alex Newell with Nile Rodgers
Kill The Lights (with Nile Rodgers) (Audien Remix)
YouTube
My grandmother died last week, so it’s been a difficult time figuring out how to grieve from afar. Most of my family is back in Trinidad, and it’s just me in LA, processing this news on my own. I’m not so good at that, so instead I revisited an old Spotify playlist that I made ages ago that is just a bunch of disco songs from Alex Newell. And yeah, I just danced to it all week. One of the songs that’s really been helping me through is “Kill The Lights.” It’s so bright, even if you’re really, really sad you’re going to tap your feet to it. It just gives me a tiny boost of serotonin. — Cate Young
The Plot, by Jean Hannf Korelitz
Celadon Books
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Celadon Books
While I was on vacation I read a 2021 book called The Plot by Jean Hanff Korelitz. It has a sequel (called The Sequel) coming out in October. In The Plot, Jake is a novelist who has not been able to build much of a literary career for himself. He’s teaching at a writing program and he finds out that a student of his has a great idea for a novel. So Jake takes that idea and turns it into a phenomenally successful novel for himself – and lives in fear of being found out as a fraud. Don’t read anything about The Sequel if you haven’t read The Plot, because that will spoil The Plot. — Linda Holmes
The new teaser for Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery
Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery | Title Announcement | Netflix
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I am not usually a big teaser trailer guy. I am not a fan of the long, slow trickle of promotion. But they did drop a teaser trailer for a 2025 movie that I am so happy about in advance. It is called Wake Up Dead Man – it’s the next Knives Out movie from director Rian Johnson. I’m going to love this movie forever just as I love Knives Out and Glass Onion forever. These mysteries are such a perfect mix of comfort food and comedy and cleverness. And it’s so much fun to have something to completely, unabashedly look forward to. — Stephen Thompson
More recommendations from the Pop Culture Happy Hour newsletter
by Linda Holmes
Whether or not you have ever taken an interest in Netflix’s perplexing Love Is Blind, you may find something fascinating in Kathryn VanArendonk’s reporting in Vulture on the show’s process and its inherent contradictions — and the legal allegations against it.
I did a good amount of reading on vacation, and one of the things I read, at the recommendation of writer Mark Harris, was the novel Everybody Knows. Mark described it as “A HUGELY nasty, dark, and effective showbiz-inflected L.A. noir thriller that knows what it’s talking about.” I entirely agree. I’d also point out it would make a heck of a double-bill with Maureen Ryan’s instant nonfiction classic Burn It Down, which is newly in paperback.
I hope you are reading Maris Kreizman’s work at Lit Hub if you are a books person or even if you’re not; her latest banger is a very smart, simple take on why books should have credits.
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.
Lifestyle
Colbert’s last episodes: What happened on ‘The Late Show’ last night
A marquee for The Late Show with Stephen Colbert at the Ed Sullivan Theater in New York City.
Angela Weiss/AFP via Getty Images
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Angela Weiss/AFP via Getty Images
The Late Show with Stephen Colbert ends its run on Thursday night. Our critic-at-large, Eric Deggans, will be posting his takes on the last episodes right here.
Most TV shows wrapping up after more than 10 years in the game would start off their finale week with an avalanche of clips capturing the most impactful moments from the program’s long run.
But The Late Show with Stephen Colbert is no ordinary program.
So Colbert kicked off the show’s last four episodes Monday, with a “best of the worst of” episode, featuring a bunch of comedy bits so awful they mostly never aired at all. Which was really a sideways strategy for paying tribute to the show’s staff – who packed into the seats at the Ed Sullivan Theater in New York for this cavalcade of awful, shouting out comments on stuff like video clips featuring a fake ad for “erotic body gravy” that Colbert originally declined to air because the good-looking actors featured in it just looked like “soft core gravy porn.”
Words cannot describe how right Colbert was then.
There was more: A Graphics Graveyard bit featuring a never-aired image proclaiming Hillary Clinton the 45th president (they had hoped to use it during live election coverage in 2016 – sad trombone sound here). A middling field piece featuring Colbert and a staffer buddy surprising a perplexed woman living in the apartment where they once stayed in Chicago. And longtime staffer Brian Stack playing Shrieking Joe, a Kid Rock parody so abrasive that ratings took a nosedive whenever he was on – a trend I don’t expect to end with Monday’s episode.
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It all unfolded in a way that left this critic feeling like he crashed the show’s last office party – watching lots of mildly funny material that probably hits a lot harder when you know the office drama behind making it.
As the show counts down its final nights, Colbert has tried hard to deflect anger, sadness or lionizing of his work. So I can see how an episode like this might have felt like a saucy way to redirect the inevitable nostalgia. But Monday’s episode didn’t give fans much to celebrate, beyond the obvious camaraderie the staff enjoys, even now.
In the end, as David Letterman’s former bandleader Paul Shaffer joined Colbert, the band, a bunch of dancers and one of his writers to sing a fish-themed parody of Shaffer’s 1982 disco pop classic “It’s Raining Men” – by the way, it’s not hard at all to believe that Colbert’s writers rejected this bit four times since 2011 – it all felt like a bit of a missed opportunity.
Here’s hoping the next three episodes give fans what they really want – a chance to celebrate the final hours of one of late night’s best satirists.


Lifestyle
‘The closest thing to church’: How Unusual Tuesday became L.A.’s home for misfit artists
It is not just any Tuesday.
It is 9 p.m. on a dreary night in Shadow Hills, just miles away from the lush foothills of the Verdugo Mountains. The delicate pitter-patter of a drum’s cymbal is the only sound to break through the thick brick wall of the obscure performance venue, Sun Space, and reach the wide, desolate Sunland Boulevard.
There is no sign outside, but follow the noise inside to find the Host arrive on stage from a door hidden behind a hypnotic dayglow projector visual. He’s wearing a gold sequin jacket over a fresh-pressed polka-dot shirt, fuchsia bell-bottoms and yellow trucker hat and he has an Appalachian-style beard.
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The Host is just one of a strange cast of characters to escape the loose folds of Noel Rhodes’ mind and make it on-time to the circus. Rhodes, 63, founded Sun Space in 2017 as a performance art venue for wayward artists who don’t properly fit the rigid mold of the Los Angeles club and bar circuit. The space is “not quite open mic,” Rhodes says, but all lovers of experimental ambient music, free-form jazz, observational comedy, paleontology and asteroseismology lectures or just plain old rock ‘n’ roll are welcome on the schedule, nearly every day of the week.
Patrons gather outside Sun Space during a break between performances in the intimate setting for Unusual Tuesday.
(Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)
Tuesdays, however, are somehow more unusual.
The crowd drowns in the second-long tension as they sit below teardrop-shaped papier-mâché stalactite hanging from handmade alien geodes on the ceiling. A 2-foot-tall, human-goat lovechild mask rests on the stage. Demographics for Unusual Tuesday range from late teens to septuagenarians, mingling and meandering as they await the start of the show.
“Let’s all together, as one great rising cluster, try, together, to accomplish one thing,” says the Host.
“Let’s figure out what this whole thing is!”
The house band drums intensify, a violin cries and guitar chords growl.
“It’s Un-usual Tuesday,” the congregation replies in song. “And all of those other days, like Friday and Saturday and Sunday … are just big wastes of ti-ime!”
Chaos breaks loose. Rhodes’ bones transform into wild, loose cartilage. Tonya Lee Jaynes, the drummer, puts her entire life force into the bass and snare. The crowd sings the chorus in dissonant harmony.
On an entirely normal Wednesday walk through a nature preserve north of Los Angeles, Rhodes says the idea for Sun Space and the hallmark Unusual Tuesday came from small fundraiser shows his father put on for their small Pennsylvanian town when Rhodes was a child. Vague memories of “The Little Rascals” and “Monty Python” influenced the sketch-based, psychedelic feel of Unusual Tuesday, with Sun Space serving as an outlet for other misfit artists looking to perform on the other days of the week.
“My goal was just to cover the rent with volunteers and equipment already bought,” Rhodes says. “I knew it would work if we weren’t having to pay our home rent on it, you know, our medical bills … as long as it stayed afloat.”
Despite its obscure location, stuck between a cafe and vacant building, the weekly show began to attract an eccentric crowd of artists and attendees.
“The whole ethos is creativity, expression and most importantly, freedom,” says Eddie Loyola, who has attended Unusual Tuesday near-weekly since 2017. “It’s really unusual. It helps support the idea of ‘come show us what you got’ rather than something that’s just cliquey, like at other venues.”
For a fledgling artist like Bailey Zabaglio, who most commonly performs electrocrash music at small house shows, Unusual Tuesday can be a time to experiment with other genres outside of their comfort zone. On the last Unusual Tuesday of April, Zabaglio performed soft electric-indie ballads to a roar of applause as the first act of the night.
Musician Bailey Zabaglio performs an original song on an electric guitar during Unusual Tuesday.
(Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)
“The fact that the demographic is so vast and wide and every person you meet is such a f— character, it’s really cool,” Zabaglio says. “It’s so beautiful that everyone agreed to get off the phone, off their couch on a Tuesday in the middle of the week.”
The social media presence of Sun Space is sparse, so Unusual Tuesday attracts most of its attendees by word of mouth. Zabaglio’s brother, Jamie, visited from Washington and performed a witty free-form comedy act only a few slots after his sibling.
“I used to have a variety show in Washington, and this whole trip has been very healing for me,” Jamie says. “I started my own show and I was just doing whatever I could. … I felt like I would never experience something like that again, but I got it again tonight.”
Booking for this specific show is a strange calculus, says Jamie Inman, who does scheduling, sound engineering and other odd jobs for Sun Space, which he now co-owns with Rhodes. Acts are booked two to three weeks in advance and selected from a pool of artists who expressed interest in performing.
“Every single Tuesday is different. Some weeks are singer-songwriter heavy, some weeks are modular synth heavy, some weeks are everything in between,” Inman says. “Sometimes we have expert lecturers come. … We just mishmash everything together until it makes sense. Or if it doesn’t make sense, that’s fine too.”
The only break in the show’s near decade-long history came during the COVID-19 pandemic, when artists all around the city were holed up in their homes with nowhere to play. Rhodes, Inman and Chris Soohoo, Sun Space’s visuals engineer, threw together a Twitch livestream to continue the chaos.
“[Unusual Tuesday online] was nothing like this, but we all learned some new stuff, like, I got into all the visual stuff,” Soohoo says. “Someone said that their first Unusual Tuesday experience was the stream, and now they get to come here in person. … It’s good to know that we did what we could.”
During the online show, Rhodes’ character Austin Drizzles, who performs the crackpot weekly weather report, would field calls from crazed viewers. Now, back on the regular news cycle, Drizzles accepts photo submissions from viewers before the show with added commentary at the end of Unusual Tuesday.
“This was sent in by Rebecca,” Drizzles says of a photo of a squirrel. “That is a cute little wild dog. … The effervescence there. I hope they eat a banana just like they always do.”
Left Unsaid, a jazz breakbeat fusion duo, performed live for the first time at Unusual Tuesday‘s last April show. Lucian Smith and Sander Bryce, who formed the group this year, say performing in L.A. proper to an attentive audience can be a difficult feat, but Unusual Tuesday provides a full venue for nontraditional acts.
A patron watches the Unusual Tuesday show in very low light at Sun Space.
(Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)
“There’s so many venues where people are waiting for you to pull them into it,” Smith says. “But here everyone seems like they’re getting something special, and they’re excited to see what they’re gonna find out. … Coming from having no audience, I loved having this.”
For the faithful observers, many of whom attend weekly, Unusual Tuesday is welcomed as a reprieve from the stress, struggle and day-to-day drag of the working week, says August Kamp, an artist and regular attendee of the weekly sermon.
“I think we’re over-saturated with mundane everything,” she says. “The fact that there is a day of the week where I know I’ll feel extra alive and that it’s a day that is otherwise not allocated for that is really valuable.”
Many interviewees likened Unusual Tuesdays to church, a cult or a religious movement. Rhodes, raised Swedenborgian — a Christian denomination that emphasizes “divine love” based on the writings of theologian Emanuel Swedenborg — does not outright reject the comparison.
“Unusual Tuesday is definitely a church service in that we get together and hypnotize the musicians, get into a rhythm and all that stuff,” Rhodes says. “Get people into us — into a vibe.”
Near midnight, following Austin Drizzles’ weekly forecast, the church once again erupts into the Unusual Tuesday gospel. A rapturous feeling takes over the room, as if all of the disparate identities and backgrounds came together in spiritual tune — the cluster having finally risen. Some mouth the words, but others belt away, letting all the emotion built up over the six other days of the week fall onto Rhodes, who’s not Rhodes then, but simply the Host.
He delivers only one promise, which he no doubt will keep: “I will see you in six days, 22 hours, and however many minutes, for Unusual Tuesday!”
Lifestyle
We make Ken Jennings relive the worst moment of his life : Wait Wait… Don’t Tell Me!
A promo image for Wait Wait…Don’t Tell Me featuring Peter Sagal, Ken Jennings, and Bill Kurtis
Araya Doheny, Timothy Hiatt, and NPR/Getty Images and NPR
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Araya Doheny, Timothy Hiatt, and NPR/Getty Images and NPR
This week, legendary Jeopardy champion and host Ken Jennings joins panelists Tom Bodett, Joyelle Nicole Johnson, and Faith Salie to talk swearing on air and making up little lies to tell Alex Trebek
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