Anime ‘Demon Slayer’ sequel scores shocking $70M weekend
Also, how has it been three decades since ‘Toy Story’ first hit theaters?
The latest 'Star Wars' show left a bunch of threads for future stories. PLUS: 'SNL' returns with its full cast, and Roy Wood Jr. leaves 'The Daily Show.'
Hello! This edition of Popculturology is wrapping up another week. The late-night shows are back (love seeing Seth Meyers and the Late Night crew on TV again) and pretty much everyone made it through the week without getting deposed as speaker of the House.
You’ll notice my thoughts on the season premiere of Loki are missing from today’s newsletter. While it’s great to see Disney+ shows dropping at a reasonable time now, a 9:30 p.m. premiere is a touch too late to turn around for an edition of the newsletter the following morning.
After falling behind on the show, Caitlin and I binged through the final batch of Reservation Dogs episodes this week. What a beautiful show. (That also had Bigfoot and aliens!) I’m glad we got to enjoy it for three seasons and creator Sterlin Harjo was able to end the show on his own terms.
Oh, I watched Shane Gillis’ new Netflix special earlier this week. Beautiful Dogs, the special from the former Saturday Night Live castmember (calling him “former” is generous), left me feeling dumber as a human being. I recommend avoiding it at all costs.
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Ahsoka dropped its series finale (season finale?) on Tuesday. The show, while often uneven, wrapped up several storylines that had been lingering since Star Wars Rebels ended in 2018, bringing characters like Hera Syndulla, Sabine Wren, Ezra Bridger and Thrawn into live action.
Overall, I liked the show. It definitely took some time to get going, especially as it insisted on presenting characters like Ahsoka and Sabine as unexplainably different than how we had always known them. There’s character development — and then there’s just being confusing.
This era of Star Wars storytelling exists in a weird spot. The Ahsoka finale opened a world of possibilities when it comes to this era, but any stories that follow it (Dave Filoni’s film wrapping up The Mandalorian, The Book of Boba Fett and Ahsoka, for example) will still butt up against where we find the Star Wars universe in the sequel trilogy.
It’s a great time to be a Saturday Night Live fan. After wrapping up last season three episodes early, the iconic series announced that it’ll return for its 49th (!!!) season on Oct. 14. (Don’t worry, Deadline reports that SNL has “the full blessing of SAG-AFTRA” when it comes to having its castmembers participate in the show.)
Of the 38 people who have both been part of SNL’s cast and hosted the show, and removing the handful of castmembers who either hosted while they were part of the cast or before they were part of the cast (the early years were messy and the period where Lorne Michaels was gone played by its own rules), only Billy Crystal pulled off the castmember-to-host move quicker, returning just twelve episodes after he left the show.
Davidson squeaks by Kristin Wiig on this list, beating her back to the hosting role by an episode.
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While things are going great for SNL, it’s a tougher environment at The Drew Barrymore Show. After Drew Barrymore bumbled her way through an ill-fated attempt to bring her show back during the dual strike, three of her writers will not be returning.
Chelsea White, Cristina Kinon and Liz Koe have declined offers to remain a part of The Drew Barrymore Show.
Read the article at The Hollywood Reporter.
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While the major late-night shows are up and running after the writers strike ended, The Daily Show is still without a permeant host. After it sounded like either Hasan Minhaj and Kal Penn were close to landing the show’s hosting gig, Comedy Central is reportedly restarting its search for Trevor Noah’s replacement.
One person who won’t be in the running: Roy Wood Jr.
“I can’t come up with [what] Plan B is while still working with Plan A,” Wood told NPR. “The job of correspondent ... it’s not really one where you can juggle multiple things. [And] I think eight years is a good run.”
Comedy Central really fumbled the ball here. Wood is a beloved member of The Daily Show and recently hosted the White House Correspondents Dinner. It seemed like Wood was the no-brainer pick as the next host of The Daily Show.
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Chris Rock will direct his first feature film since 2014’s Top Five when he takes his place behind the camera of an upcoming Martin Luther King Jr. biopic. The film will be based on King: A Life, a biography by Jonathan Eig. Steven Spielberg is set to executive produce.
Read the story at The Hollywood Reporter.
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I haven’t watched the most recent season of Only Murders in the Building yet. With Hulu announcing that the show has been renewed for a fourth season, it looks like I have some catching up to do.
Jason Statham as a beekeeper who also has John Wick powers? There better be a scene where he summons his bees to fight an opponent.
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