TV Diary

Tuesday, June 30, 2026

 





I've long been kind of a "Curb Your Enthusiasm" skeptic. I'm a huge "Seinfeld" fan and naturally appreciate Larry David's significant contributions to that show (including the very funny George Steinbrenner bits), but I see him as kind of a boring, limited performer that I don't think needs to be in front of the camera. So my expectations for his new HBO series, sketch comedy about American history, were so low that I might have circled around to being relieved that I found it mildly amusing. That's partly because there's a lot of good supporting talent (Henry Winkler, Alan Tudyk, Chris Parnell, etc.) making the sketches feel like slightly more than window dressing for Larry David playing historical figures. I don't think it's something I'll want to keep watching for long, but the first episode gave me a chuckle here and there. 

A show about a man in his 50s dating his best friend's 26-year-old daughter feels like a thinkpiece powder keg, no matter how much "Alice and Steve" tries to play a lot of as a somewhat straightforward romcom. Even with beloved comedy veteran Jemaine Clement as Steve, who has genuine chemistry with Tali Topol Margalith as Alice's daughter Izzy, it's very easy to imagine that most of the viewing audience just seething with rage like Alice, played by Nicola Walker. The plot and tone is actually pretty similar the 2011 film The Oranges, which wasn't very well received even in a time when age gap discourse wasn't nearly as heated as it is now. I'm not particularly opinionated on this topic so I was able to largely enjoy it as a pleasant, middling comedy, but the finale really built to a very contrived climax, felt like they just kind of gave up on exploring the complexities of the story to force it into a resolution. 

"Wild Cherry" is a British series from "Mood" creator/star Nicole Lecky but it feels like every fifth American prestige TV drama since "Big Little Lies," a story of scandals and secrets among mothers and teenage girls in an affluent community. It's a perfectly good premise for a show and this one seems moderately promising, but it's hard to shake the feeling that I've seen a lot of this kind of thing already. 

Amazon Prime continues to prioritize the YA romance genre way beyond any other streamer, "Off Campus" is definitely their breakout hit this year but "Every Year After" seems to be doing well too and has already been renewed for a second season. Sadie Soverall looks a little like Sadie Sink from "Stranger Things," as if redheads named Sadie are walking off an assembly line somewhere. It's a pretty engaging story and doesn't feel overly formulaic, I particularly liked the first episode directed by Gillian Robespierre of Obvious Child fame. 
This is the first other Britbox show that I've started to get into since we signed up so my wife could watch "The Other Bennet Sister." The main character in "A Woman of Substance" is the richest woman in the world, with her story told across several decades with Jessica Reynolds playing her as a young woman and Brenda Blethyn playing her as an older woman. Interesting plot I don't always like TV that bounces between multiple time periods but I think they do a good job with the storytelling here. 

Given that it seems there's going to be a long, long wait between every season of "Severance," I'm glad that Britt Lower booked a miniseries to occupy her time and stay on TV. Unfortunately, it's one of those Harlan Coben adaptations that Netflix pushes out every few months. This one feels especially old-fashioned and melodramatic, with Sam Worthington as a fugitive who was wrongly convicted of murder and trying to clear his name. 
 
A British miniseries about the harrowing true story of a 2-year-old boy who was the only witness to his mother's murder, hadn't heard about this before so I'm watching it curious how it ends, pretty good so far. 

I spent a chunk of the first season of "Sugar" just trying to figure out whether it was simply a derivative noir detective story or if there was something more high concept. And I found the eventual big reveal of what was really going on to be pretty underwhelming. Now that they've continued with that story in the second season, though, with Colin Farrell as a detective who's learned pretty much everything he knows from old detective movies, I have to admit the show is finally growing on me a little, especially since they added Sasha Calle and Laura Donnelly to the cast. 

I think "The Bear"'s decline has been a little slower and more gradual than other people do, but I think it's pretty undeniable that the fifth and final season is a huge step down from how good the show used to be. Maybe they're self-conscious about criticism of the show, because it feels like an attempt at a course correction -- six tight half-hour episodes building to two longer climactic episodes, all focusing on the day-to-day restaurant operations. The 7th episode even basically reruns of the 7th episode of the first season, with the restaurant accidentally accepting more reservations than they can handle instead of more online orders than they can handle, and it just feels contrived. The most jarring thing, though, is that they completely stopped with the evocative alt-rock needle drops that felt like a key part of the first four seasons, it's all generic instrumental score now. The only thing I liked about this season is that Carmy and Syd's relationship remained platonic, the shippers always seemed way off base about them. 

This Hulu thriller about a Hong Kong yacht feels a little like "The White Lotus" meets Crazy Rich Asians, first episode does a really good job of introducing all the characters and setting the story in motion, pretty promising. 

This Spanish series on Netflix is about more rich people on vacation, less interested in the plot but everybody's ridiculously beautiful and some of the characters are pretty charming. 

People often talk about how a time travel story can really depending on whether you're a minority that was more oppressed in the past. And this Thai series takes that idea in an interesting direction, with a modern day queer pop star who's transported into the body of a closeted 18th century nobleman. 

Another 'timeslip' show, this one from Japan. A CEO is pushed down some stairs and dies, and then is reincarnated as one of his employees 14 years earlier and tries to solve his own murder, just a very convoluted concept and really irritating direction and storytelling. 

This Thai series has a pretty boilerplate legal drama premise -- an unscrupulous defense attorney has to clear the name of someone who's actually innocent for once -- but I feel like the title "The Evil Lawyer" is appropriate for how much fun they're having with the story and the characters. 

This South Korean action show, where school 'inspectors' are authorized by the government to use physical force to discipline teenagers, I dunno, it's better if you don't think too much about it but even then it's not great.  

A pretty charming Indonesian show on Netflix about two K-pop fans working together at a convenience store. 

I feel like in America, the superhero movie glut got to the point where nobody even has a fresh take on superhero comedies/satires anymore. But this Korean show, where some awkward young social outcasts get superpowers, is pretty good, feels character-driven and not as concerned with dunking on the genre. 

This Netflix docuseries narrated by Martin Sheen feels like a pretty boilerplate attempt to look at early American history, most of the talking heads are academics, but they also have modern day politicians, including Mike Pence, and seeing his ugly fucking face in there trying to be respectable really ruined my mood. 

There are so many true crime miniseries about cults and predators and con men these days, but American Movie director Chris Smith really goes for a stylized mood piece while still looking deeply at the sordid details. It's pretty compelling and refreshing compared to the more dominant artless tabloid style. 

Another true crime doc about people getting pulled into a world of manipulation and exploitation, in this case even more depressing because it's plus-size women who thought they were going into a supportive body-positive community. 

This miniseries from the same team that made "Walking With Dinosaurs" looks at more extinct prehistoric species, including a lot of large mammals, and it's interesting subject matter but I just hate the visual style, everything looks hideous and kind of fails to spark the imagination of what these animals actually would've looked like at the time. 

This is another weird animated Netflix thing about animals from 2020 that my son found on Netflix after he'd watched docs about dogs and cats. But pretty impressive because Jonathan Jones apparently made this in his home studio in a month as a COVID lockdown-era project. 

My son also found this documentary about South African penguins narrated by Patton Oswalt that I missed when it came out a few years ago, really cute stuff. 

My son has always loved "Octonauts" and watched every episode multiple times, he's started watching "The Creature Cases," which feels like an "Octonauts" knockoff, he likes it but I really hate the animation style. 

Another thing my son found on Netflix that's described as a "'Black Mirror' for kids"-style horror anthology. He likes things like The Nightmare Before Christmas so I'm kind of hoping as he gets older I can watch horror movies with him and nurture his love of creepy stuff, so I like that there are gateway shows like this. 

Among Us is so popular with kids that I'm a little baffled why Paramount+ went the 'adult animated sitcom' route with this show, it's definitely not for my son but I don't really feel like it's for me either. 

Monthly Report: June 2026 Singles

Monday, June 29, 2026

 






1. In Color - "Headlights"
The Nashville band In Color makes super sleek alternapop that reminds me of stuff like The 1975, or maybe even Taylor Swift's "Style," partly because their debut single "Headlights" is also about someone driving to a nighttime rendezvous with their headlights off. "Headlights" came out over a year ago and recently creeped into the top 5 on alternative radio, they have some other good songs but this is definitely the one. Here's the 2026 singles Spotify playlist I update every month. 

2. Dexter and the Moonrocks - "Freakin' Out"
This is the third year in a row that Texas quartet Dexter and the Moonrocks have had a big alternative radio hit, but "Freakin' Out" is the huge crossover one that's all over the internet and spending the last few months on the Hot 100. I wouldn't have guessed this would be the one to do that, but it's nice to see a young band that sounds like this (they call themselves "western space grunge") blow up like that. Even my wife, who doesn't listen to much radio anymore and puts a lot of songs on her playlists that she hears on reels and TikToks, knows this one. 

3. Riley Green - "Change My Mind" 
Riley Green's Ella Langley duet "You Look Like You Love Me" was the song that really got me to appreciate his voice, and I think this is my favorite solo single of his to date, love that guitar sound. 

4. Ella Langley - "Be Her" 
"Choosin' Texas" is obviously going to be hard to top, but I've been impressed at how well Langley's follow-up single has done. It's the only other country song to spend 10 weeks in the top 10 of the Hot 100 so far this year, even outperforming her Morgan Wallen duet. It's a little funny to think that Langley's two biggest hits that made her a huge crossover star are both are about envying another woman. 

5. Ella Mai - "100" 
Mustard sampled Gladys Knight & The Pips on this track, but I like how Ella Mai's lyric feels like an extended riff on Teddy Pendergrass's spoken bit at the end of "When Somebody Loves You Back." 

6. Taylor Swift - "I Knew It, I Knew You" 
Taylor Swift has notched a few minor country radio hits since she her "first documented, official pop album" 1989, enough to make it feel like the country establishment hasn't held a grudge but aren't falling over themselves to maintain ties. But her song for Toy Story 5, which has a small bit of harmonica and a sweet little melody that takes me back to some of her early albums, debuted right in the top 10 of the Country Airplay chart, her first song to get there since "Red" 12 years ago. 

7. Ludacris - "Pull Over"
As a middle-aged rap fan, I don't really sit around waiting for the stars of my youth to have comebacks, I know the genre is going to keep moving forward with a new generation of rappers. But I'm happy that some of the early 2000s rappers that helped make southern rap a major commercial force have been doing well lately, T.I. and Juvenile have had some of their biggest hits in ages. And Ludacris took me back a couple decades with this fun recent single produced by one of T.I.'s longtime collaborators, DJ Toomp. 

8. MGK f/ Fred Durst - "Fix Ur Face"
Last year Limp Bizkit also made their best single in over 20 years, "Making Love To Morgan Wallen." And while I hate to give Machine Gun Kelly credit for anything, his Durst collab feels like a follow-up to that, I was actually surprised that Wes Borland didn't play on "Fix Ur Face" because it really nails the sound of vintage Bizkit. 

9. Madonna f/ Sabrina Carpenter - "Bring Your Love"
Anytime a young blonde woman ascends to serious pop stardom, the Madonna comparisons inevitably follow. But I feel like Sabrina Carpenter has really reminded me of Madge's classic run pretty strongly in the last couple years, especially the way she both courted and defused controversy over the cover of Man's Best Friend with humor, so I really like hearing them together. I don't think "Bring Your Love" would stand up with the best singles from Confessions On A Dancefloor, or for that matter Short n' Sweet, but it's a pretty catchy little song to set up the release of Confessions II, and I love the sentiment of the lyric. It's the most "Vogue"-sounding song on the charts since...the Lady Gaga song I wrote about last month. 

10. Ariana Grande - "Hate That I Made You Love Me"
There are lines in this song that could be addressed to an ex, but I feel like the ambiguity breaks down pretty quickly and it doesn't feel like anything but a celebrity addressing her fans, detractors, and fans-turned-detractors. In fact it feels pretty dark if you follow any of the increasingly loud discourse about her health and love life. I'm not very parasocial about that stuff, I'm mostly here for the music and continue to enjoy hers, but that context looms over this song in a way that makes it sound almost ominous, I have no idea how differently this song will sound years from now as this saga unfolds. 

The Worst Single of the Month: Yung Miami - "Spend Dat" 
I feel like people really lean into performatively enjoying a catchy song when it's made by someone with very little talent, and people will say I hate fun for not liking "Spend Dat." But man, this song sucks, it's depressing that it's so much bigger than JT's solo stuff. 

Friday, June 26, 2026

 





This week I ranked Dinosaur Jr.'s albums for Spin. I also wrote about U2's "Red Hill Mining Town" for the Deep Cut Friday column, which is one year old this week, and I made a Spotify playlist of all 53 Deep Cut Friday songs so far. 

Deep Album Cuts Vol. 409: Queen Latifah

Thursday, June 25, 2026

 








Queen Latifah is being inducted into Rock and Roll Hall of Fame this year under the Musical Influences category -- Salt-N-Pepa were inducted in the same category last year, while Missy Elliott is so far the only female rapper in the Hall proper. I'm sometimes annoyed at the 'consolation prize' vibe of the side categories, but I think it's good to get some early female rap stars in there, I hope MC Lyte gets in next. 
 
Queen Latifah deep album cuts (Spotify playlist):

1. Queen of Royal Badness
2. Evil That Men Do f/ KRS-One
3. Latifah's Law
4. The Pros f/ Daddy-O
5. A King and Queen Creation f/ The 45 King
6. if You Don't Know
7. Bad As A Mutha
8. Nuff' of the Ruff Stuff
9. One Mo' Time
10. No Work
11. Bring The Flavor
12. Coochie Bang... 
13. Mood Is Right
14. Winki's Theme
15. Jersey
16. Greetings From The Queen
17. Court Is In Session
18. Gone Away
19. Long Ass Week

Tracks 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 from All Hail the Queen (1989)
Tracks 6, 7, 8, and 9 from Nature of a Sista' (1991)
Tracks 10, 11, 12, 13, and 14 from Black Reign (1993)
Track 15 from New Jersey Drive, Vol. 1 (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) (1995)
Track 16 from Queen Latifah and the Original Flavor Unit (1996)
Track 17 from Order in the Court (1998)
Track 18 from Trav'lin' Light (2007)
Track 19 from Persona (2009)

Queen Latifah made her best rap records before hip hop peaked commercially and has arguably had more pop culture impact as an actress, so her catalog really didn't sell as much as you might think, or as much as it should have. Black Reign was her first gold album and its lead single "U.N.I.T.Y." was her only Top 40 hit and won her only Grammy, and those came out after she'd already become a primetime star on "Living Single." Great record, though, I think it's very deservingly her legacy track, I was 11 when it came out and I've always loved it. "Winki's Theme" is a beautiful song in remembrance of Latifah's brother Lancelot H. Owens, who died in a motorcycle crash in 1992, and she was photographed next to his grave on Black Reign's back cover. 

DJ Mark The 45 King, who was in the Flavor Unit with Latifah, was one of the main musical driving forces of her early career. He produced or co-produced a lot of Latifah's debut and of course rapped on "A King and Queen Creation." Some of her very best songs were self-produced, though, including "Jersey" from the New Jersey Drive soundtrack, I love that beat. 6 of Latifah's 7 albums are on streaming services, and the exception is 2004's The Dana Owens Album, which was her pivot to singing standards and her second gold album. She's an excellent singer but none of the songs on it are really deep cuts so I'm okay with not being able to include it. She also sang covers on her next album Trav'lin' Light, including a great rendition of "Gone Away," the Impressions song covered by Roberta Flack that was sampled on T.I.'s "What You Know." 

Deep Album Cuts Vol. 408: Built To Spill

Wednesday, June 24, 2026

 




I started working on this two years ago when I ranked every Built To Spill album for Spin, and I decided to circle back and finish the playlist. 
 
Built To Spill deep album cuts (Spotify playlist):

1. Built To Spill
2. Reasons
3. Twin Falls
4. Some
5. One Thing (with Caustic Resin)
6. Sick and Wrong
7. Out of Site
8. Made-Up Dreams
9. Sidewalk
10. Else
11. The Plan (live)
12. You Are
13. Traces
14. Just A Habit
15. Pat
16. So
17. Fake Records of Rock & Roll
18. Spiderweb

Track 1 from Ultimate Alternative Wavers (1993)
Tracks 2, 3, and 4 from There's Nothing Wrong With Love (1994)
Track 5 from Built To Spill Caustic Resin EP (1995)
Track 6 from The Normal Years (1996)
Tracks 7 and 8 from Perfect From Now On (1997)
Tracks 9 and 10 from Keep It Like A Secret (1999)
Track 11 from Live (2000)
Track 12 from Ancient Melodies of the Future (2001)
Tracks 13 and 14 from You In Reverse (2006)
Track 15from There Is No Enemy (2009)
Track 16 from Untethered Moon (2015)
Track 17 from Built To Spill Plays The Songs of Daniel Johnston (2020)
Track 18 from When The Wind Forgets Your Name (2022)

Built To Spill's first album was one of the last ones I checked out, so it was funny to realize that they had a song called "Built To Spill" that gave a context to the band's odd name all along. My earliest exposure to the band was seeing the "Untrustable" video on "120 Minutes" and then hearing the Ben Folds Five cover of "Twin Falls," and that's still one of my favorite Built To Spill songs.

My friend Susie put their cover of Heavenly's "By The Way" from the BTS/Marine Research split 7" on a mixtape for me and that was really got me into Built To Spill. I wish that cover was on streaming services so I could include it here, I love it. I think there should be an expanded reissue of The Normal Years or sequel compilation with that and other non-album tracks. That motivated me to pick up a cheap used copy of Keep It Like A Secret and really become a fan, "Else" is one of my favorite songs ever. The one time I saw BTS live they played Perfect From Now On in its entirety, which was pretty cool, but I couldn't help wishing it was Secret they were playing. 

I feel like Built To Spill is one of those bands where I don't think all their albums are solid front-to-back but there's great songs on all of them, so it was fun to cherry pick, although I definitely prefer the era with Scott Plouf, great drummer. I recently tweeted a snarky comment about how Built To Spill should have a platinum album or two like two bands that definitely wouldn't exist without their influence, Modest Mouse and Death Cab For Cutie. Still it's pretty impressive that Built To Spill were on Warner Bros. for something like 19 years without ever having much commercial success, even longer than Sonic Youth's major label tenure (16 years). Flaming Lips have them both beat by far, though, they've been with Warners since 1992. 

Deep Album Cuts Vol. 407: N.E.R.D.

Tuesday, June 23, 2026


 














N.E.R.D. can be hit-and-miss for me, so I really wanted to have a playlist that focused on my favorite songs of their. 
 
N.E.R.D. deep album cuts (Spotify playlist):

1. Am I High f/ Malice
2. Run To The Sun
3. Brain
4. Truth or Dare f/ Kelis and Pusha T
5. Bobby James
6. Loser f/ Clipse
7. Don't Worry About It
8. Fly Or Die
9. Thrasher
10. You Know What
11. Intro/Time For Some Action
12. Kill Joy
13. Help Me
14. God Bless Us All
15. I Wanna Jam
16. Sandy Squirrel
17. Rollinem 7's f/ Andre 3000
18. Kites f/ Kendrick Lamar and M.I.A.
19. ESP

Tracks 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 from In Search Of... (2002)
Track 6 from The Neptunes Present... Clones (2003)
Tracks 7, 8, and 9 from Fly Or Die (2004)
Tracks 10, 11, and 12 from Seeing Sounds (2008)
Tracks 13 and 14 from Nothing (2010)
Track 15 from Nothing (Deluxe Edition) (2010)
Track 16 from Music From The Spongebob Movie Sponge Out Of Water EP (2015)
Tracks 17, 18, and 19 from No_One Ever Really Dies (2017)

N.E.R.D. hasn't released music since 2017 or played a show since 2019, and Chad Hugo and Pharrell Williams reportedly aren't on speaking terms since Chad sued Pharrell over Neptunes-related trademarks in 2024. So sadly, this playlist is probably pretty comprehensive unless there's a reconciliation at some point in the future. But they had a really good, interesting run as a massively successful hip hop production team's weird rock side project, and the band has its own distinct legacy at this point. 

The first N.E.R.D. album In Search Of... was released in its original form in Europe in 2001, with Neptunes-style programmed beats, before they decided to really make it a rock band with the re-recorded version of the album released in America in 2002. I have fond memories of the 2001 mixes, especially of "Run To The Sun," which I downloaded on Napster back in the day and listened to a million times, and I wish that version was commercially available. But I also really like the 2002 mixes, which feature live instrumentation by Spymob, a Minnesota band that was signed to Star Trak. I've said this before, but Spymob's 2004 album Sitting Around Keeping Score is a personal classic to me, and "Am I High" is my favorite N.E.R.D. song partly because of Spymob frontman John Ostby's prominent piano and backing vocals. 

Spymob drummer Eric Fawcett and guitarist Brent Paschke played on Seeing Sounds, but it seems like N.E.R.D. was mostly the product of the original trio, Pharrell and Chad and Shay Haley, for most of the subsequent albums. Nothing is the rare album of its era where I think the deluxe version is essential -- there are 5 good bonus tracks in addition to the original album's 10, including a rare Shay Haley co-writing credit, "I Wanna Jam," and a good song with Fam-Lay. 

"Help Me" has a co-writing credit by Jimmy Iovine, and I'm curious what that's about. Iovine wasn't too involved in songwriting even when he was a producer and engineer, and Nothing is just one of hundreds if not thousands of albums he oversaw as an executive producer and/or label executive. "Help Me" does have kind of a bombastic classic rock anti-war protest song vibe, though, it does seem kind of like what a Jimmy Iovine-assisted N.E.R.D. song would be like. 

N.E.R.D. really had massive hit songs like the Neptunes produced for other artists or like Pharrell had as a solo artist, but that seems somewhat deliberate, like this was how they were choosing to use some of their goodwill and music industry clout, to make something a little riskier. Still, it surprised me to see that N.E.R.D.'s current 3 songs on Spotify are all album cuts -- "Bobby James," "You Know What," and "Run to the Sun." "Brain," the song that Justin Timberlake and Malice referenced on "Like I Love You," is also in their Spotify top 10. And "God Bless Us All" was featured in Pharrell's Lego biopic Piece By Piece. I got to review No_One Ever Really Dies for Fact, and I liked it alright then, but in retrospect I think it's probably their weakest or second weakest album, it makes me miss the more band-oriented sound of the earlier records. 

Monthly Report: May 2026 Albums

Monday, June 22, 2026


























1. Jobi Riccio - Face the Feeling
I don't get to work concerts at my teleprompting job all the time, but when I do it's often tribute shows (i.e. people can use a lyric monitor onstage when they're doing someone else's songs they don't perform all the time), and last week was an incredible one: Songwriters Celebrate John Prine at Wolf Trap. I'm going to cherish a lot of memories from those two days of rehearsals and performances, meeting Aoife O'Donovan and Margo Price and seeing Emmylou Harris dance around onstage. But one thing that's definitely going to stick with me was hearing Jobi Riccio for the first time when she opened the show with Prine's "Summer's End" and her own "Idaho." She's from Colorado and received the John Prine Songwriters Fellowship Award early in her career, her voice is incredible, and her second album is one of those records where it feels like one life-changing heartbreak looms over every song, even the songs that aren't about that relationship. When I hear "Idaho" I think about Riccio going over the arrangement with Prine's band and how Kenneth Blevins should pick up the beat on the second chorus, and "A Little of the Time" and "Wildfire Season," man, those are some great lyrics. I feel like Yep Roc releases a lot of records by older established artists who already have diehard fans, but I hope they're good at breaking younger artists, because Riccio really really deserves to be heard. Here's the 2026 albums Spotify playlist that I'm constantly updating with new releases. 

2. Eleni Mandell - Tailspin
Los Angeles's Eleni Mandell has been one of my favorite singer-songwriters for a long time, and I thought she reached new heights with her 11th album, 2019's Wake Up Again. In the announcement of he first album in seven years, though, Mandell says "I didn't know if I'd ever make another record," as she'd apparently been raising two kids and working as a high school English teacher. And I'm very grateful that she did make another record. Tailspin is in part an album about divorce and single motherhood, and "Hard To Be Lonely" and "Go Look At The Sky" have a deep sense of loss and longing. But it's got some of the sweetest melodies and most pastoral arrangements in her catalog, and there's a hard won joy and whimsy in songs like "Life Is Sometimes" and "Old Man, Old Dog." 

3. Kacey Musgraves - Middle of Nowhere
Kacey Musgraves followed her Grammy-winning triumph Golden Hour with a fairly large musical pivot on Star-Crossed, and even her next album Deeper Well, while more of an acoustic singer-songwriter record, felt like another evolution in a new direction. They were perfectly good albums, but just about every fan would agree they weren't as good as her 2010s stuff, so I am pretty happy with Middle of Nowhere feeling like classic Kacey, reluctant as I am to drag out a "return to form" narrative. Her hatchet-burying Miranda Lambert duet "Horses and Divorces" and "Rhinestoned" are probably the songs that put the biggest smiles on my face, but the whole thing is excellent. 

4. Ecca Vandal - Looking For People To Unfollow
Historically I haven't discovered a lot of new artists to listen to on YouTube, I just don't trust their algorithm. But I made more of an effort to browse YouTube for new music last year when I wrote a Spin list of the best music videos of 2025, and Ecca Vandal's breakout hit "Cruising To Self Soothe" made my top 10 after I stumbled upon her great videos. Rap-rock is a dicey genre that I don't always have a lot of time for, but Ecca Vandal, an Australian singer/rapper of Sri Lankan descent, combines the genres in a way I like and don't feel like I've heard a hundred times. I prefer the guitar-heavy stuff on the first two-thirds of Looking For People To Unfollow, she has a great scream that reminds me of Joan Jett, but the last few tracks that lean more toward beats and rhymes also sound pretty great. 

5. Columbia Icefield - A Silence Opens
January brought the posthumous release of pedal steel genius Susan Alcorn's collaboration with Nomad War Machine, and soon after, I was delighted to hear from Out Of Your Head Records that they had another album that Susan played on coming out this year. Alcorn was part of the band that played on trumpeter Nate Wooley's 2019 album Columbia Icefield, and he'd reconvened that band to record music composed and/or inspired by late trumpeter Ron Miles. It's sad to think that Wooley made A Silence Opens to pay tribute to one friend, and then lost another friend that worked on the album by the time it was released, but what a beautiful, powerfully emotional record to remember both of them by. 

6. Future Islands - From a Hole in the Floor to the Fountain of Youth
I got to interview Future Islands for the second time about their new B sides collection, and then went to their 20th anniversary show in Baltimore, and it was really incredible to see a band that used to play The Depot headline Pier Six Pavilion. "The Fountain" and "Find Love" from this compilation sounded great live, too. I'm always fascinated by would-be title tracks that were left off albums, and it's kind of shocking that "As Long As You Are" wasn't on 2020's As Long As You Are, that's a fantastic song. 

7. War On Women - Time Under Tension
20 years as an active band is a long time and not a lot of Baltimore bands have gotten there. War On Women might, though, they're already 15 years in. "Messages Unsent" from their 4th full-length is one of my favorite songs they've ever written, and I also like how "Serve" and "Hunger Stones" remind me a bit of Shawna and Brooks's very underrated previous band Avec. 

8. Ashley McBryde - Wild
I love the sound of Ashley McBryde's Jay Joyce-produced album, but I also really enjoy the creative partnership she's forged with John Osborne of Brothers Osborne. Osborne produced her 2022 concept Lindeville, and Wild feels like a chance for him to help her make a record that's really heavy on electric guitar, at times feels more like a southern rock album than a country album, he might play more solos on here than he did on the last Brothers Osborne album. "Behind Bars" is such a good lyric. 

9. Drake - Maid of Honour
There are a lot of ways for an artist to release more than an album's worth of music in a year -- deluxe editions, staggered weekly or monthly releases, B-sides, and so on. I don't think an old-fashioned double album is the best move all the time or even most of the time, and I think what Drake did in May -- a traditional rollout for his highly anticipated Iceman with two surprise albums coming out simultaneously -- was a pretty good way to super serve his fanbase with different kinds of records without it feeling like a retread of 2018's ScorpionIceman is more or less the straight up rap album while the other two go in different danceable/melodic directions. I hate Habibti, it's like a weaker More Life or Views, but I like Maid of Honour, it feels like a worthy continuation of one of Drake's most underrated albums, Honestly, Nevermind, with Gordo co-producing more than half the tracks, a Peggy Gou sample, a lot weird playful uptempo sounds that I haven't heard on a dozen other Drake albums. 

10. Willie Nelson - Dream Chaser
The big news about Willie Nelson's latest album is that it contains a song co-written with Bob Dylan, only the second time they've written a song together ever. Their 1993 duet "Heartland" was good but kind of a by-the-numbers topical song that seemed like it may have originated in their work with Farm Aid. Dream Chaser's "I Can't Read Your Mind" is a nice little melancholy number that feels appropriate coming from two guys who have each recorded multiple Frank Sinatra tribute albums. And other new songs like "Wonder What I'm Gonna Do" and "I Don't Think I've Cried Today" get extra pathos from just how positively ancient the 93-year-old Nelson sounds now. 

The Worst Album of the Month: Fakemink - Terrified.
I don't listen to a lot of UK rap but I respect that they've developed a whole sound and lineage at this point that's pretty distinct from American hip hop. And then I hear something like Fakemink, a 21-year-old from East London who makes derivative Soundcloud rap with a British accent, and I wonder if he could be the Gavin Rossdale of our time, but that's probably too generous. It's so funny to compare Fakemink's pretentious defense of his music to the idiotic sex raps on "Like A Virgin" and "Hard Candy," this guy really thinks he's doing some next level shit.  

Saturday, June 20, 2026

 





I made a list of the 10 best Benny Blanco productions for Complex

Friday, June 19, 2026

 




I wrote about Missy Elliott's "Can't Stop" for Spin's Deep Cut Friday column this week. 

My Top 50 Movies of 2012

Thursday, June 18, 2026


 


























1. Compliance (Craig Zobel)
2. Looper (Rian Johnson)
3. Byzantium (Neil Jordan)
4. Hello I Must Be Going (Todd Louiso)
5. The Master (Paul Thomas Anderson)
6. Bachelorette (Leslye Headland)
7. Django Unchained (Quentin Tarantino)
8. Lincoln (Steven Spielberg)

9. 21 Jump Street (Phil Lord and Christopher Miller)
10. Argo (Ben Affleck)
11. For A Good Time, Call... (Jamie Travis)
12. The Avengers (Joss Whedon)
13. Moonrise Kingdom (Wes Anderson)
14. Brave (Mark Andrews, Brenda Chapman, and Steve Purcell)
15. Ruby Sparks (Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris)
16. Magic Mike (Steven Soderbergh)
17. Skyfall (Sam Mendes)
18. Hyde Park On Hudson (Roger Michell)
19. Seeking A Friend For The End of the World (Lorene Scafaria)
20. The Hunger Games (Gary Ross)
21. Pitch Perfect (Jason Moore)
22. The Bay (Barry Levinson)
23. Wreck-It Ralph (Rich Moore)
24. Ginger & Rosa (Sally Potter)
25. Killing Them Softly (Andrew Dominik)
26. The Dark Knight Rises (Christopher Nolan)
27. Les Miserables (Tom Hooper)
28. Zero Dark Thirty (Kathryn Bigelow)
29. Silver Linings Playbook (David O. Russell)
30. Promised Land (Gus Van Sant)
31. Save the Date (Michael Mohan)
32. The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey (Peter Jackson)
33. Spring Breakers (Harmony Korine)
34. The Five-Year Engagement (Nicholas Stoller)
35. Cloud Atlas (Tom Tykwer, Lana Wachowski, and Lilly Wachowski)
36. The Amazing Spider-Man (Marc Webb)
37. Think Like A Man (Tim Story)
38. Free Samples (Jay Gammill)
39. Chernobyl Diaries (Bradley Parker)
40. This Is 40 (Judd Apatow)
41. Vamps (Amy Heckerling)
42. Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter (Timur Bekmambetov)
43. Mirror Mirror (Tarsem Singh)
44. Your Sister’s Sister (Lynn Shelton)
45. The Campaign (Jay Roach)
46. Seven Psychopaths (Martin McDonagh)
47. One For The Money (Julie Anne Robinson)
48. Prometheus (Ridley Scott)
49. Celeste & Jesse Forever (Lee Toland Krieger)
50. Greetings From Tim Buckley (Daniel Algrant)

Compliance got some festival buzz but I think is really underrated as one of the best films of the decade, an absolute feel-bad masterpiece with Ann Dowd and Bill Camp's finest performances.  

Previously: 
My Top 50 Movies of 2013
My Top 50 Movies of 2014
My Top 50 Movies of 2015
My Top 50 Movies of 2016
My Top 50 Movies of 2017
My Top 50 Movies of 2018
My Top 50 Movies of 2019
My Top 50 Movies of 2020
My Top 50 Movies of 2021
My Top 50 Movies of 2022
My Top 50 Movies of 2023
My Top 50 Movies of 2024

My Top 50 Movies of 2013

Wednesday, June 17, 2026

 





1. Oculus (Mike Flanagan)
2. The Wolf of Wall Street (Martin Scorsese)
3. Inside Llewyn Davis (Ethan Coen and Joel Coen)
4. Enough Said (Nicole Holofcener)
5. A Promise (Patrice Leconte)
6. Snowpiercer (Bong Joon Ho)
7. Pain and Gain (Michael Bay)
8. Fruitvale Station (Ryan Coogler)
9. Nebraska (Alexander Payne)
10. Frozen (Chris Buck and Jennifer Lee)
11. Evil Dead (Fede Alvarez)
12. In A World... (Lake Bell)
13. Gravity (Alfonso Cuaron) 
14. Another Me (Isabel Coixet)
15. 12 Years A Slave (Steve McQueen)
16. The Great Gatsby (Baz Luhrmann)
17. Under The Skin (Jonathan Glazer)
18. Belle (Amma Asante)
19. Her (Spike Jonze)
20. August: Osage County (John Wells)
21. Mama (Andy Muschietti)
22. Side Effects (Steven Soderbergh)
23. The World’s End (Edgar Wright)
24. Dallas Buyers Club (Jean-Marc Vallee)
25. Pacific Rim (Guillermo del Toro)
26. Horns (Alexandre Aja)
27. Iron Man 3 (Shane Black)
28. Lucky Them (Megan Griffiths)
29. Monsters University (Dan Scanlon)
30. The Way Way Back (Nat Faxon and Jim Rash)
31. Austenland (Jerusha Hess)
32. We’re The Millers (Rawson Marshall Thurber)
33. The Conjuring (James Wan)
34. Adult World (Scott Coffey)
35. The To-Do List (Maggie Carey)
36. Warm Bodies (Jonathan Levine)
37. World War Z (Marc Forster)
38. Some Girl(s) (Daisy von Scherler Mayer)
39. Hateship Loveship (Liza Johnson)
40. Now You See Me (Louis Leterrier)
41. The Heat (Paul Feig)
42. Afternoon Delight (Joey Soloway)
43. The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug (Peter Jackson)
44. Despicable Me 2 (Pierre Coffin and Chris Renaud)
45. Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues (Adam McKay)
46. The Hunger Games: Catching Fire (Francis Lawrence)
47. Don Jon (Joseph Gordon-Levitt)
48. Ender's Game (Gavin Hood)
49. The Counselor (Ridley Scott)
50. American Hustle (David O. Russell)

I don't feel nearly as strongly about 2013 as I did about the 2014 list I posted yesterday, but there was some good stuff. Wolf of Wall Street is my favorite DiCaprio performance, Pain and Gain is my favorite Michael Bay movie, etc. 

Previously: 
My Top 50 Movies of 2014
My Top 50 Movies of 2015
My Top 50 Movies of 2016
My Top 50 Movies of 2017
My Top 50 Movies of 2018
My Top 50 Movies of 2019
My Top 50 Movies of 2020
My Top 50 Movies of 2021
My Top 50 Movies of 2022
My Top 50 Movies of 2023
My Top 50 Movies of 2024

My Top 50 Movies of 2014

Tuesday, June 16, 2026
































1. Gone Girl (David Fincher)
2. Ex Machina (Alex Garland)
3. It Follows (David Robert Mitchell)
4. Edge of Tomorrow (Doug Liman)
5. Obvious Child (Gillian Robespierre)
6. The Skeleton Twins (Craig Johnson)
7. Whiplash (Damien Chazelle)
8. Maps To The Stars (David Cronenberg)
9. John Wick (Chad Stahelski)
10. The Babadook (Jennifer Kent)
11. What We Do In The Shadows (Jemaine Clement and Taika Waititi)
12. They Came Together (David Wain)
13. Still Alice (Richard Glatzer and Wash Westmoreland)
14. Beyond The Lights (Gina Prince-Bythewood)
15. Dear White People (Justin Simien)
16. Birdman: Or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance) (Alejandro Inarritu)
17. Appropriate Behavior (Desiree Akhavan)
18. Selma (Ava DuVernay)
19. Inherent Vice (Paul Thomas Anderson)
20. Bang Bang Baby (Jeffrey St. Jules)
21. A Million Ways To Die In The West (Seth MacFarlane)
22. Interstellar (Christopher Nolan)
23. The Grand Budapest Hotel (Wes Anderson)
24. Boyhood (Richard Linklater)
25. Nightcrawler (Dan Gilroy)
26. Guardians of the Galaxy (James Gunn)
27. Kingsman: The Secret Service (Matthew Vaughn)
28. The Duke of Burgundy (Peter Strickland)
29. Black Mountain Side (Nick Szostakiwskyj)
30. Match (Stephen Belber)
31. Big Eyes (Tim Burton)
32. About Last Night (Steve Pink)
33. Top Five (Chris Rock)
34. The Equalizer (Antoine Fuqua)
35. Frank (Lenny Abrahamson)
36. Ouija (Stiles White)
37. Big Hero 6 (Don Hall and Chris Williams)
38. A Little Chaos (Alan Rickman)
39. 22 Jump Street (Phil Lord and Christopher Miller)
40. The Amazing Spider-Man 2 (Marc Webb)
41. Veronica Mars (Rob Thomas)
42. East Side Sushi (Anthony Lucero)
43. Pulp: A Film About Life, Death & Supermarkets (Florian Habicht)
44. Let’s Be Cops (Luke Greenfield)
45. God’s Pocket (John Slattery)
46. The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies (Peter Jackson)
47. Chef (Jon Favreau)
48. The Hunger Games: Mockingjay - Part 1 (Francis Lawrence)
49. Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (Matt Reeves)
50. Wild (Jean-Marc Vallee)

I think this was a really good year for film, maybe the best of the last dozen I've made lists for? Just a lot of good stuff, personal bests by some excellent directors and actors, first installments in franchises, even surprising stuff like by far my favorite thing Seth MacFarlane has made, A Million Ways To Die in the West. I'm cynical about "Saturday Night Live" alumni doing drama or dramedy, but I think Obvious Child and The Skeleton Twins are high watermarks for that microgenre. 

Previously: 
My Top 50 Movies of 2015
My Top 50 Movies of 2016
My Top 50 Movies of 2017
My Top 50 Movies of 2018
My Top 50 Movies of 2019
My Top 50 Movies of 2020
My Top 50 Movies of 2021
My Top 50 Movies of 2022
My Top 50 Movies of 2023
My Top 50 Movies of 2024

My Top 50 Movies of 2015

Monday, June 15, 2026
































1. Youth (Paolo Sorrentino)
2. Green Room (Jeremy Saulnier)
3. Crimson Peak (Guillermo del Toro)
4. The Witch (Roberg Eggers)
5. Capsule (Andrew Martin)
6. The Martian (Ridley Scott)
7. Sicario (Denis Villenueve)
8. Room (Lenny Abrahamson)
9. Creed (Ryan Coogler)
10. Spy (Paul Feig)
11. Spectre (Sam Mendes)
12. Carol (Todd Haynes)
13. Mad Max: Fury Road (George Miller)
14. Spotlight (Tom McCarthy)
15. Men & Chicken (Anders Thomas Jensen)
16. Tangerine (Sean Baker)
17. Inside Out (Ronnie Del Carmen and Pete Docter)
18. Ricki And The Flash (Jonathan Demme)
19. Star Wars: The Force Awakens (J.J. Abrams)
20. Louder Than Bombs (Joachim Trier)
21. Nightlight (Scott Beck and Bryan Woods)
22. Sleeping With Other People (Leslye Headland)
23. Jane Wants A Boyfriend (William Sullivan)
24. The Man From U.N.C.L.E. (Guy Ritchie)
25. The Hateful Eight (Quentin Tarantino)
26. Shaun The Sheep Movie (Mark Burton and Richard Starzak)
27. Ant-Man (Peyton Reed)
28. The Final Girls (Todd Strauss-Schulson)
29. Miss You Already (Catherine Hardwicke)
30. Hardcore Henry (Ilya Naishuller)
31. The Bronze (Bryan Buckley)
32. Song One (Kate Barker-Froyland)
33. The Intern (Nancy Meyers)
34. Z For Zachariah (Craig Zobel)
35. The Program (Stephen Frears)
36. Straight Outta Compton (F. Gary Gray)
37. The End Of The Tour (James Ponsoldt)
38. Steve Jobs (Danny Boyle)
39. Joy (David O. Russell)
40. Trainwreck (Judd Apatow)
41. Minions (Kyle Balda and Pierre Coffin)
42. The Lobster (Yorgos Lanthimos)
43. Pitch Perfect 2 (Elizabeth Banks)
44. The Salvation (Kristian Levring)
45. Chappie (Neill Blomkamp)
46. The DUFF (Ari Sandel)
47. Self/less (Tarsem Singh)
48. The Big Short (Adam McKay)
49. Jupiter Ascending (Lana Wachowski and Lilly Wachowski)
50. Love, The Coopers (Jessie Nelson)

I would love to tell Guy Ritchie that there was one year he was a slightly better filmmaker than Quentin Tarantino, like good for him, honestly. I think the movie here that I've seen the most times is The Martian, my wife absolutely loves that one. 

Previously: 
My Top 50 Movies of 2016
My Top 50 Movies of 2017
My Top 50 Movies of 2018
My Top 50 Movies of 2019
My Top 50 Movies of 2020
My Top 50 Movies of 2021
My Top 50 Movies of 2022
My Top 50 Movies of 2023
My Top 50 Movies of 2024