Current:Home > InvestWhat's Making Us Happy: A guide to your weekend viewing, reading, and listening -Wealth Legacy Solutions
What's Making Us Happy: A guide to your weekend viewing, reading, and listening
Surpassing View
Date:2025-03-11 10:04:13
This week, Hasan Minhaj elaborated, friendships were in demand, and the actors' strike carried on.
Here's what the NPR's Pop Culture Happy Hour crew was paying attention to — and what you should check out this weekend.
Sampha's new album Lahai
Sampha is well known as a guest on a lot of other people's records — you can hear him on Kendrick Lamar's and Alicia Keys' records. But he just released his own second album called Lahai. It is absolutely gorgeous — it's a very soothing, comfortable, genre-straddling sound that encompasses soul, pop and hip-hop in beautiful ways. He has a gorgeous voice and there's this kind of futuristic quality to the sound and to his voice that radiates through. (You can watch his Tiny Desk concert here.) I've been listening to this record pretty constantly for a couple of weeks now, and I absolutely love it. — Stephen Thompson
Tori and Lokita
Tori and Lokita is a film directed by the Dardenne brothers — you may remember them from Two Days, One Night — and this movie won a special prize at Cannes. And it's about two adolescent African immigrants who came to Belgium together. They're pretending to be brother and sister and they forge a strong bond. It's very intense, occasionally thrilling, and really moving. Lokita is trying to obtain a work visa but is having trouble, and meanwhile, both kids are making money by running drugs for a restaurant owner.
Like a lot of immigrant stories, a lot of bad things happen to both of these characters, and people take advantage of them. But, in the end, I think this movie really insists on their humanity and is very intentional in not exploiting these characters, even though within the narrative of the film they are being exploited. And it stars Joely Mbundu and Pablo Schils who are fantastic. It's streaming on Criterion Channel and also available for rent. — Aisha Harris
Rewatching Doctor Who with the subtitles on
Doctor Who is returning soon with Ncuti Gatwa with taking over as the Doctor. But before that happens, David Tennant is making history by returning for three specials, which will air sometime in November. So to prep for that I am rewatching the show, and am midway through Tennant's first season. It's even better than I remember, and that is true in no small part because this time I'm watching it with the subtitles on. I'm not just doing that because I'm older — I'm doing that because I am older and wiser. Doctor Who has always had sound mix problems and Tennant's Doctor tends to toss out jokes under his breath, and there are reams of jokes I didn't get the first time through. — Glen Weldon
Phillies post-season baseball
My Philadelphia Phillies are the team of destiny in my heart. They are a very fun team. I drift in and out of watching baseball because it's too stressful for me — the Phillies gave me multiple panic attacks of the sports variety in this postseason. But I really enjoyed the experience of watching my team do well. Even though they will not be going to the World Series, I greatly appreciated them this season. I recommend to everyone a piece that ran in Defector by the great and good Kelsey McKinney, which is called "Is The Phillies' Good Luck Charm A Dedication To Himbo Culture And Showing Clavicle?" which is a deep dive into the decision of some of the players to wear their shirts, open a couple buttons. — Linda Holmes
More recommendations from the Pop Culture Happy Hour newsletter
by Linda Holmes
Matt Singer's new book Opposable Thumbs: How Siskel and Ebert Changed Movies Forever is a delight, a labor of love that traces one of the most significant forces in film criticism in the 20th century. For those of us who grew up learning about movies from these guys on this show, it's a necessary and lovely read.
This week, I caught up with a complicated, thoughtful story from Lila Shapiro that Vulture ran in September about the lawsuit filed by the two then-teenage stars of Franco Zeffirelli's Romeo and Juliet. It raises a host of questions and is well worth a read.
I was very curious about Pain Hustlers, yet another based-on-a-true-story film about the evils of the pharmaceutical industry. It stars Emily Blunt as a single mom who gets a job as a rep for a new pain med and Chris Evans as her dirtbag boss. The reviews have been, at best, mixed. I think Blunt and Evans are both good — this is the most convincing dirtbag turn of his career, I'd say — although the story ends up retracing a lot of now-familiar ground. It's now on Netflix.
They're just beginning a limited rollout of the Alexander Payne film The Holdovers, which we'll be covering on an upcoming episode of PCHH. (It opens wide on November 10.) Mild spoiler alert for that episode? I really liked it.
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! (448)
Related
- Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
- DeSantis greets nearly 300 Americans evacuated from Israel at Tampa airport
- A Baltimore priest has been dismissed over 2018 sexual harassment settlement
- 'I was in tears': Kentucky woman will give to local church after winning $2 million from Powerball
- Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
- Premium for presidential property among ideas floated to inflate Trump's worth, court hears
- Albanian novelist Ismail Kadare awarded French Legion of Honor title by Macron
- If you hope to retire in the next couple of years, here's what you should be doing now
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Katy Perry Weighs In on Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce’s Hard Launch
Ranking
- Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game
- Can Taylor Swift's Eras Tour concert film save movie theaters?
- Poles vote in a high-stakes election that will determine whether right-wing party stays in power
- Advocates say excited delirium provides cover for police violence. They want it banned
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Dollar General fired store cashier because she was pregnant, regulators say
- Olympic committee president Thomas Bach says term limits at the IOC ‘are necessary’
- From opera to breakdancing and back again: Jakub Józef Orliński fuses two worlds
Recommendation
Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
Watchdog Finds a US Chemical Plant Isn’t Reporting Emissions of Climate Super-Pollutants and Ozone-Depleting Substances to Federal Regulators
Horoscopes Today, October 15, 2023
Surfer suffers leg injury in possible shark attack at beach near San Francisco, police say
The Grammy nominee you need to hear: Esperanza Spalding
Albanian novelist Ismail Kadare awarded French Legion of Honor title by Macron
It Only Takes One Time to Find Out What the Stars of Little Giants Are Up to Now
Norway’s prime minister shuffles Cabinet after last month’s local election loss