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The Friday Article Roundup

Make Friends with The FAR

Hey Buddy! Come share this week's links to pop culture writing around the Internet.

Here are articles, some are silver, the others gold:

  • New Comedy
  • Legendary Actress
  • Representation on Screen
  • Cocaine!

Thanks to good friends Tristan and Captain Nath for leaving a couple articles around where I could find them. Send articles throughout the next week to ploughmanplods [at] gmail, post articles from the past week in the comments for discussion and Have a Happy Friday!


At Paste, Garrett Martin reviews Friendship and how its furtherance of the Tim Robinson character familiar from sketch:

[The movie’s] length lets Robinson take that persona to new, even more uncomfortable depths, but also contrasts it for the first time with a fully developed foil. Paul Ruddโ€™s weatherman riffs a bit on the actorโ€™s public persona as a deeply likable, always friendly charmer, but it also comments on a type of modern man as awkward in its own way as Robinsonโ€™s soulless, stagnant middle manager. As played by Rudd, Austin isnโ€™t as effortlessly cool as he wants to appear, or as Craig thinks he is. Heโ€™s holding on desperately to his youth, not just with the cosmetic enhancements that become a running joke, but through the punk bar band he plays in, the impromptu boxing matches he throws with his friends, and the carefully calculated bits of ephemera he decorates his house with. Craig canโ€™t see that Austin is a facade, a construct of confidence more than character, but Friendshipย makes it clear. Austin starts as the easygoing, always cool opposite of Craig, but his own inner awkwardness and insecurities gradually come to the fore, which makesย Friendshipย a richer, more insightful film.

The Guardian‘s Rachel Keenan celebrates King Tut’s, the small Glasgow venue that’s broken tons of big acts over the past 35 years:

[The owner] remembers that fabled Oasis night, when the band drove from Manchester to try their luck and play an already-filled support slot. From the bouncer almost not letting them in, to venue staff refusing to let them perform, each story is different. Clumpas sets the record straight: โ€œIt was another support band who said they canโ€™t play, not us,โ€ he says. โ€œThey went, โ€˜Fuck off, itโ€™s too small a stage.โ€™ You canโ€™t put three drumkits on the stage the size of King Tutโ€™s.โ€ But Oasis did manage to perform, and the rest is history.

Oliver Wang interviews legendary Chinese American actress Lisa Lu about her 65-year film career for the LA Review of Books:

Why was it important for you to land roles in Hong Kong, China, Taiwan, and so on?

I am Chinese, so working in Hollywood is me working in a different country. I was so happy to return to my own ancestral land, and my Chinese is perfect and very, very typically Mandarin. I enjoy performing in my own country, my own language.

That makes sense, but Iโ€™m wondering then, do you identify more as a Chinese or Chinese American actress?

I donโ€™t know the difference. No matter where I am, in China or in America, Iโ€™m just an actress. I mean, every role I played, in a play, in a movie, or in a television show, I tried to play the person from the characterโ€™s background. Where the character is from makes a difference, not where I am.

For The Pudding, Dorothy Lu and Anni Li share the illustrated results of an extensive project to gauge the accuracy of Asian American casting:

This project was prompted by the disheartening experiences weโ€™ve had watching miscast characters in popular media, so we came into this project expecting more miscastings than not. When our analysis found that most films were accurately cast, it was unexpected and empowering! […] Whether itโ€™s seeing my (Dorothy) familyโ€™s breakfast traditions reflected inย Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings (2021)ย or watchingย Didi (2024)ย and commiserating with friends about growing up in immigrant households, these movies have made us feel seen. Itโ€™s the subtleties of everyday interactions that resonate with us, not the flashy shows of โ€œrepresentation.โ€

Perhaps you will be shocked by Barry Diller’s revelation that Popeye was “the most coked-up film set” he’d ever visited as head of Paramount Pictures, reported here in Variety:

โ€œYou couldnโ€™t escape it,โ€ Diller said about the drug use on the movieโ€™s set. โ€œThey were actually shipping in film cans at the time. Film cans would be sent back to L.A. for daily processing film. This was shot in Malta.ย And we found out that the film cans were actually being used to ship cocaine back and forth to this set. Everyone was stoned.โ€