āEuphoriaā memes are a sensation. Theyāre also crucial to its success
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This is the Los Angeles Times newsletter about all things TV and streaming movies. This week, we catch up with āBel-Airāsā Jabari Banks, prepare for the return of Hollywoodās āReal Husbandsā and more. Scroll down!
Welcome to Screen Gab, the newsletter for everyone who wants a diploma from āEuphoria High.ā
Though its first season made a splash, introducing us to Hunter Schafer, new layers of Zendayaās (now Emmy-winning) talent and a sizable crop of penises, the second season of HBOās gritty teen drama has leveled up in terms of both artistic ambition and social media commentary.
And perhaps more than any other show on TV, the two factors go hand in hand.
Far from working at cross-purposes, the Sunday night meme factory dedicated to āEuphoriaā ā riffing on Cassie (Sydney Sweeney) hiding in the bathtub, Maddy (Alexa Demie) losing patience with her airheaded bestie, and Rue (Zendaya) turning āEuphoriaā-ville into her personal obstacle course ā has become instrumental to its reception. (Itās also spawned a small cottage industry of meme-capping.) Just glance at the tartly funny entries in the phenomenonās most entertaining subgenre, āEuphoria Highā: Down to the sequined, glittered, androgynous, leather-clad last, it deflates the seriesā age-inappropriate raucousness by pushing it to the breaking point. If Cal (Eric Dane), the loathsome father of two somehow-even-worse sons whoāve passed through its halls, can depart in a blaze of glory by urinating on the floor, whoās to say the schoolās principal isnāt a dominatrix?
Unless you have āan intellect for CINEMA,ā after all, stomaching the series may mean bringing it down a peg. Written and directed, auteur-style, by creator Sam Levinson, filmed on Kodak Ektachrome and confronting subject matter (addiction, abuse, homophobia, organized crime) as suited to āThe Godfatherā trilogy as a teen drama, āEuphoriaā takes itself painfully seriously. Like, comically so. Its episode titles allude to Robert Rauschenberg and Henry Miller, for Christās sake!
Still, for all the ambivalence its construction provokes ā i.e., every āEuphoriaā needle drop is perfect and theyāre overused anyway ā Season 2, anchored by Zendaya and Sweeneyās knockout performances, feels like a home run: Part Paul Thomas Anderson, part āGossip Girl,ā charged with manic energy and relayed by megaphone. Itās just that the internet is acknowledging its tawdrier antecedents instead of Levinson himself (who has, surprise, cited āMagnoliaā as a key influence).
In an age where social media is the real-time āwatercooler,ā āEuphoriaā is not alone in igniting conversation; now everything from Super Bowl ads and Olympic figure skating to āThe White Lotusā becomes instant fodder for screenshots, one-liners, takedowns and hot takes. The difference is that āEuphoriaāsā memes have become part of the seriesā text, balancing Levinsonās at time self-parodic instincts where the network will not.
āEuphoriaā needs its memes to thrive. And bā, you better believe Iām not joking. āMatt Brennan
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Kogi BBQ Taco Truck creator Roy Choi has returned with a second season of his entertaining, uplifting, KCET-produced series āBroken Bread,ā which looks at food systems, how they go wrong, and how, mostly at the grass-roots level, they are being made better. Food is by its nature an emotional subject, caught up in family and tradition, engaging the senses so fully that even seeing a picture can make you hungry; itās what keeps us alive and, at its best, makes life lovely. The series, which is available to stream from KCETās website, as well as over the air (check the site for times), and also from Tastemade, is peopled with cooks and activists and cook-activists; it stands with the community against the corporate, biodiversity against monoculture. (I get a little choked up watching it.) And itās one of the best pictures youāll find of the ethnic and cultural variety of Southern California, though it wanders northward now and again and, this season, south to Tijuana. There are visits with Wolfgang Puck and Alice Waters, but also to street vendors, Compton community gardens and a Boyle Heights organic tortilleria. Choi is an informal and interested host, and if I say heās got a little Huell Howser in him, understand that as high praise. āRobert Lloyd
HBOās āSomebody Somewhereā is not about surviving the pandemic except that itās very much about surviving the pandemic. Misfit 40-something Sam (Bridget Everett) has returned to her small, cornfield-bound hometown in Kansas to nurse her dying sister, and now that her sister has gone, Sam is stuck. In the inertia of grief, in toxic family relationships and in small-town Kansas. A burgeoning friendship with a former high school classmate (a miraculous Jeff Hiller), and Samās own ability to spark laughter from the darkest void, help her move slowly forward. Come for Everett, stay for the sweet hilarity of a true ensemble comedy, which has the added benefit of being set on a farm. Who doesnāt love a farm? āMary McNamara
Catch up
Everything you need to know about the film or TV series everyoneās talking about
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I smile every time I think about āReal Husbands of Hollywoodā (BET+), the reality TV parody that has returned with its original crew intact five years after it rode off into reruns ā this after starting its life as a skit on an awards show. Led by Kevin Hart playing a bizarro version of himself (one can only hope), the crew includes Nick Cannon, Boris Kodjoe, Duane Martin, Nelly, J.B. Smoove and Robin Thicke.
Other stars, waxing and waning, had a great time during the seriesā first go-round: Tiffany Haddish, who played the babysitter to Kevinās child, Regina Hall, Nadine Velazquez (āQueensā), Wayne Brady, George Lopez, Russell Simmons, Eva Marcile (āAll the Queenās Menā) and Nia Long. And no one could forget the guest appearances of Terry Crews, who was inextricably tied to Thicke. This outing has just as many guest stars, including Dr. Phil, Dwayne āThe Rockā Johnson, Angela Rye, Mark Cuban and more.
In the new six-episode limited series āMore Kevin, More Problems,ā Hart has become an actual superstar, but his insecurities (and absurdity) remain. This Kevin lacks self-confidence. He isnāt book or street smart, and his next move is almost always the wrong move. Even though he thinks heās near the top of the world (pro tip: Some of the biggest laughs come from the chyrons), his crew (and his lawyer, played with perfect resignation by Cynthia Kaye McWilliams) brings him down to Earth.
Some of the zingers hit hard enough and with enough truth to make you wince; no part of the husbandsā careers ā or accompanying faux pas ā is off-limits, including acrimonious divorces, enthusiastic fatherhood, too-good-to-be-true looks and lawsuits. They face the jokes head-on in confessionals, which isnāt the only thing in common with the āReal Housewivesā franchise. Contrived outings, partnerships for the sake of hijinks and all sorts of fights ā¦ if you like your celebrities with notes of schadenfreude, this is chefās kiss. āDawn M. Burkes
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Jabari Banks is now seated at the throne of Peacockās new series āBel-Air,ā playing a new version of the āFresh Princeā character made famous by Will Smith. āHeās arguably stepping into some of the biggest shoes ever filled in the history of television, and did it fearlessly since the very first take of our shoot,ā says series creator Morgan Cooper. Banks ā who is actually from West Philadelphia! ā spoke with The Times about auditioning for the lead role and going toe-to-toe with the new Carlton. āAshley Lee
Before āBel-Air,ā were you already a āFresh Princeā fan?
It literally raised me. My family had a six-season boxed set on repeat in my house all the time. We had Will Smith Christmas sweaters!
How did you feel when you learned you got the role?
I was moving at the time of all the auditions for this show, so it was very chaotic. I had to tape three scenes, and each time I was in a different friendās house and on a different white wall. I got a message that the producers wanted to have one more meeting, so I jumped in my friendās closet and got on the call, and thereās Will Smith, saying I got the part. After that, I called my mom, sheās screaming, my dadās crying. And then I went straight to bed. It was too much for me. I remember thinking, āOh my God, why did they pick me? Why did they pick me? Why did they choose me? Why is it me?ā Throughout the audition process, I had to talk to Morgan, who happened to be looking at locations in Philly at the time, and he said later, āThat first day, I knew it was you.ā That was definitely a moment for me where I was like, āWow, I just need to lean into my instincts and just be me, because thatās what they want to see.ā That was huge for me.
What do you hope people see in your take on this character?
I hope people are excited to see a young man being authentically himself, and changing his environment as a result. That was why it was so exciting to watch Will ā he was a āfish out of waterā in the story and in real life. He had never acted before. I feel blessed to be able to show people who I am and this new rendition of Will. Heās a little grittier, heās very prideful, he doesnāt like getting his toes stepped on, and any chance he gets to prove someone wrong, he will do that. He donāt take no sā, and sometimes that gets him into trouble.
Will and Carlton do not get along in the first āBel-Airā episodes. Whatās it like offscreen between you and Olly Sholotan?
Ollyās my brother, heās an amazing human being. When I first got to L.A., he drove me around to different neighborhoods to scope āem out and see where I wanted to live. We hang out all the time, and that comfort we have with each other lets us get to the dark places as scene partners and artists. Itās not easy, what weāre doing. They have two different ideas about how the world works, but they have to figure out how to coexist in the same house and the same school, which is Carltonās world. The stakes are high.
Do you feel any pressure to represent Philadelphia right?
I mean, I got to carry it with pride, thatās how we do it. I donāt feel like Iām a hometown hero yet, but I know Iām getting there, and theyāre already proud.
Whatās next
The TV shows and streaming movies to keep an eye on in the coming week
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Friday, Feb. 11
āeverythingās gonna be all whiteā (Showtime): Renaissance man/polymath Sacha Jenkins makes a docuseries about race in America, dropping in its entirety on VOD.
āInventing Annaā (Netflix): The frustratingly shallow tale of socialite scammer Anna Delvey (a mesmerizingly accented Julia Garner) and the journalist who brought her to the nationās attention (a mesmerizingly grumpy Anna Chlumsky). With Shonda Rhimes in the showrunnerās seat for the first time since she moved to the streamer.
āLove Is Blindā (Netflix): The reality sensation that swept the nation on the eve of the pandemic is back with a new set of singles blind dating all day in futuristic āpodsā in the hopes of landing an incredibly chaotic TV wedding.
āMarry Meā (Netflix): JLo and Maluma. In a rom-com. With Owen Wilson! No further questions.
Sun., Feb. 13
Super Bowl LVI (NBC): You may have heard thereās a little football game happening in L.A. on Sunday. Accompanied by an Olympic pre- and post-game.
Mon., Feb. 14
āState of the Unionā (Sundance): Nick Hornby and Stephen Frearsā short-form experiment returns (on Valentineās Day, fittingly enough) with a new couple (Patricia Clarkson and Brendan Gleeson) drinking coffee before marriage counseling in 10-minute increments.
Wed., Feb. 16
āJeen-Yuhs: A Kanye Trilogyā (Netflix): A three-part, career-spanning Kanye docuseries that you canāt binge. Better be juicy!
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