🚀 Explore this insightful post from Culture | The Guardian 📖 📂 **Category**: Television,Television & radio,Culture,Matt Berry,Mackenzie Crook,Michael Palin,Brian Cox,Friends,Richard Osman ✅ **What You’ll Learn**: Toast of LondonI truly believe that Toast of London is Matt Berry's best work. He's hilarious. The plots are silly and the cameos are often left field but they work well and have a lot of great gags that don't make sense. It's a prime example of a sitcom with an unlikable protagonist that you can't help but root for anyway. I must have watched it from start to finish at least 15 times. Every…
🔥 Discover this insightful post from Culture | The Guardian 📖 📂 **Category**: Theatre,Stage,Culture,Musicals 💡 **What You’ll Learn**: TThe title of this semi-autobiographical musical is also a major spoiler. Broadway star Levi Criss plays a version of himself, as he battles his demons and confronts his past, concluding that despite often feeling flawed, he is actually - oh, you guessed it.This Levi stumbles off stage, inked and emotional, after being dumped by text message during a rehearsal. After 11 months of sobriety, he turns to crystal meth — but his kind-eyed sponsor Ben (Yifthah “Evie” Mizrahi) urges him to confront…
💥 Check out this insightful post from Culture | The Guardian 📖 📂 **Category**: UK news,US news,Television,Theatre,Awards and prizes,Golden Globes,Television industry,Film,Culture ✅ **What You’ll Learn**: MondayThe truest thing ever said about the Golden Globes was said by Tina Fey when she hosted the awards ceremony in 2019 and described the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, a hacker group, as operating out of “the back cabin of a French McDonald’s.” The HFPA disbanded in 2023 after allegations of racism, but 95 former members retained voting rights and the show continued on Monday.And what a year it was for the second Penske Media…
🚀 Explore this insightful post from Culture | The Guardian 📖 📂 **Category**: Art and design,Culture,Painting,Photography,Art,Exhibitions ✅ **What You’ll Learn**: Exhibition of the weekCrossing into darknessTracey Emin curates an exhibition on the thresholds of despair and the power of melancholy featuring Goya, Munch, Bourgeois, Baselitz and other visionary artists. Carl Friedman Gallery, Margate, opens on Sundayalso appearMing WongThe National Gallery's artist-in-residence responds to the proverbial paintings of Saint Sebastian. The National Gallery, London, until 5 AprilsouvenirArtists Ian Forsyth and Jane Pollard curated this tribute to lost London in the late 1970s and early 1980s, with Michael Bracewell, Sal Bateman and…
✨ Check out this awesome post from Culture | The Guardian 📖 📂 **Category**: Books,Fiction,Culture,Thrillers,Crime fiction 📌 **What You’ll Learn**: The Cut Up by Louise Welsh (Canongate, £20)This welcome third journey for gay auctioneer Rilke begins with the discovery of a dead body. Loathed jeweler Rodney Manderson was murdered outside the Bowery auction rooms, stabbed in the eye with a Victorian hatpin which his boss, Rose Bowery, waved before the nation at the Bargain Hunt. As she discusses the virtues of the pin as a lethal weapon as well as its uses in the new millennium, the fiercely loyal Rilke…
🔥 Discover this trending post from Culture | The Guardian 📖 📂 **Category**: Television,Drama,Television & radio,Culture 💡 **What You’ll Learn**: SOvie Turner has a silly comedic vibe in real life – a smart pantsuit, an arched but friendly expression, perfect hair, and she looks ready for some funny people and a sunset drink. She seems very comfortable in her own skin, which is unusual anyway when you're not 30, but especially inappropriate given her varied on-screen personas: first, in Game of Thrones. Cast as 13-year-old Sansa Stark, who was 14 when she started filming, she embodied an anxious aristocratic self-possession…
✨ Explore this trending post from Culture | The Guardian 📖 📂 **Category**: Jair Bolsonaro,Brazil,Books,World news,Americas,Culture,Literacy 📌 **What You’ll Learn**: Jair Bolsonaro's lawyers appear to have been reading the country's penal code and found a way to help their client reduce the 27-year prison sentence he received last year for plotting a coup: by reading books.There's just one problem: the former far-right Brazilian president has never been known to be a bookworm. “Sorry, I don’t have time to read,” Bolsonaro once declared. “It's been three years since I've read a book.”Brazilian law contains a literary device through which prisoners who…
✨ Discover this awesome post from Culture | The Guardian 📖 📂 **Category**: Film,The Batman,Batman,Robert Pattinson,Sebastian Stan,Superhero movies,Culture,Aaron Eckhart 📌 **What You’ll Learn**: TThe arrival in Gotham City of Harvey Dent, also known as Two-Face, is rarely without consequence in the Batman sagas. Tommy Lee Jones's loud, neon-soaked iteration of Batman Forever turned the character into a breakaway identity slot machine, pulling its own lever endlessly, while Billy Dee Williams' performance in 1989's Batman was a promise of future devastation. In Christopher Nolan's The Dark Knight, the downfall of public defender Aaron Eckhart is a signal of the dangers of…
🔥 Explore this must-read post from Culture | The Guardian 📖 📂 **Category**: Film,Awards and prizes,Culture,Stellan Skarsgård,Oscars ✅ **What You’ll Learn**: TThe European Film Awards have long styled themselves as "Europe's answer to the Oscars", even if they have little influence when it comes to boosting commercial successes at the box office. But with American studios increasingly prioritizing series films over serious drama, and European films competing for major awards outside the “Best International Feature” silo, EFAs are feeling emboldened to become major makers of adult cinema.This year, the European Film Academy for the first time moved its annual ceremony…
🚀 Read this must-read post from Culture | The Guardian 📖 📂 **Category**: Theatre,Stage,LGBTQ+ rights,BBC,UK news,Culture,Media 📌 **What You’ll Learn**: The barrister Lord Hailsham told the BBC in 1954: “All the homosexuals I have known have been very anxious, like alcoholics, to spread the disease from which they suffer.”Other contributors to the BBC's first ever program on male homosexuality largely agreed. One Church of England moralist warned any “pervert” who might have been listening to “temporary attachments, disillusionment, and loneliness in his old age.”Educationalist John Wolfenden recommended a "healthy and normal" home life as "the best kind of prevention against…
