Monthly Archives: May 2023

Drew Barrymore reveals Kate Bosworth sent her flowers after ex Justin Long visited her show – Yahoo Entertainment

Posted: May 18, 2023 at 1:23 am

Drew Barrymore and Kate Bosworth opened up about why it's important to "celebrate our exes" on The Drew Barrymore Show this week.

Ahead of Thursday's episode, the daytime talk show shared a clip revealing that Bosworth was instrumental in getting her fianc, Justin Long, to appear on its season 3 opener last year. Barrymore and Long, who dated on and off between 2007 and 2010, reunited for the episode and discussed their "hedonistic" romance as well as his current relationship with Bosworth.

"Because of your answer, I asked him if we could also be open about your relationship and talk about how we celebrate our exes and because of your upbringing, because of who you are we were able to celebrate your relationship," Barrymore said. "We, as women, have an opportunity. We have a choice of how we can navigate our partners that we're currently with with confidence and blessing and a sharing goodness that makes all women look good and rise."

Barrymore described Bosworth's encouragement as taking "the high road," adding that it made her adore the Blue Crush star even more: "I'm like, 'Justin, move over, it's all about Kate now.'"

Drew Barrymore and Kate Bosworth

The Drew Barrymore Show/Ash Bean Drew Barrymore and Kate Bosworth

When it comes to love, Bosworth argued that the heart has the ability to grow just as much as it can shrink. "I feel like if you really lean into the expansiveness of love, and that includes friendships, it's only for the better," she said. "Any time I've closed my heart down, because of ego or whatever, it hasn't made me feel good and I want to move to the warmth. I want to stay in the warmth."

As if Bosworth's stamp of approval weren't heartwarming enough, Barrymore then explained that she also sent her a beautiful bouquet of flowers after Barrymore taped the show.

"I got home to flowers with a card by her and then immediately took a video of myself receiving the flowers because I wanted to keep the narrative going of how we can champion each other and how this would be the idyllic utopia in which we could live," Barrymore explained to the audience before telling Bosworth, "And that is why you're one of my behavioral heroes."

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"And you're mine," Bosworth replied before the pair hugged.

Barrymore previously shared a glimpse of the floral arrangement Bosworth sent her in a video posted to Instagram last September.

"I just got the most beautiful flowers," Barrymore said in the clip. "I opened the card and it said, 'Dear Drew, congratulations on season 3. May we never outgrow the importance of hedonism. All my love, Kate Bosworth.'"

"Her boyfriend, Justin Long, came on our show The Drew Barrymore Show he and I got to talk all about our life and our pasts," she continued. "Sometimes you wanna know, what is the lesson in all of this? Yes, we should champion our ex. Yes, how great that he would come on and do this with me. How great is she for being so cool and supportive?"

At the time, Barrymore noted that the gift was a testament to the strength of Long and Bosworth's relationship and how cool Bosworth continues to be. "I thank her for that. I just think the world of this woman. She is totally my new hero," she wrote. "I can only wish this: that everybody involved is such an absolute inspiration. This is how we model behavior. Thank you, Kate Bosworth, thank you."

In the post's comments section, Long wrote, "I must've done something right in a past life to keep the company of such kind and loving hedonists. For the record, I had no knowledge of this gesture until I saw this Instagram! But it doesn't surprise me."

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Chris Holmes: I’m overlooked, sure. When I was in W.A.S.P., I was … – Guitar World

Posted: at 1:23 am

Among the many memorable (and in some cases, unintentionally hilarious) depictions of rock n roll hedonism featured in Penelope Spheeris 1988 documentary, The Decline of Western Civilization Part II: The Metal Years, one scene in particular became something of an instant classic.

Its a night time sequence in which an extremely inebriated Chris Holmes, then the wild and wooly lead guitarist for the notorious shock metal band W.A.S.P., lazes about in a chair float in a swimming pool and chugs freely from a bottle of vodka.

Im a full-blown alcoholic, he says matter-of-factly to the off-screen Spheeris. He seems sadly self-aware of his own absurdity, yet oddly defiant as he unconvincingly claims, Im a happy camper.

Throughout the interview, Holmes words become more unintelligible, and his mood grows darker (he states that hes already had something like five pints of booze that day). Finally, he produces a fresh bottle of vodka, unscrews it and power-chugs roughly half of it before pouring whats left over his head. Its as if hes out to prove some sort of point. But what?

Making the scene all the more surreal and tragic is the presence of the guitarists mother, who sits silently by the pool, her face frozen in a mysterious, inscrutable expression.

Its a moment in rock movie infamy that has dogged Holmes over the years. Reflecting on the scene now, the guitarist heaves a sigh and says, People started looking at me like I was a drunk. You go on the internet and thats all you see Im the drunk guy in the pool.

The funny thing is, some people think that scene was faked, which is crazy. I never faked anything in my life. Yeah, I was hammered in the pool, but so what? Thats the way I lived my life at the time. Im a lot different now.

That he is. Sober for the past 26 years, Holmes now leads a quieter and quainter life in Cannes, France, with his French-born wife and manager, Catherine, whom he married in 2012. He quit W.A.S.P. not once, but twice (his final departure was in 2001, and it seems permanent) and has been through several bands before deciding to front his own group, Mean Man, in 2015.

With his deep, gravelly voice, gray mustache and goatee, and a general world-weary countenance, the 64-year-old guitarist could easily be mistaken for a grizzled biker. He insists he feels right at home in France. Things are better for me here, he says. Weve got a dog and a couple of chickens. I never thought I would wind up in this place, but its good.

Musically, Holmes has found a more receptive audience for his brand of high-velocity metal in France. The younger kids here still listen to rock there isnt so much hip-hop, he says. In the South of France, theyre into that, but in most of the country and in Europe, they listen to rock.

He stresses that the idea of returning to the US, and specifically Los Angeles, is unthinkable. L.A. was great when it was great, but now it sucks, he says. The metal scene isnt there anymore. The clubs are mostly gone. Theres no more House of Blues. The Key Club was sold to Beyonc, and I doubt shell have Deep Purple playing there.

I guess big bands like Metallica can still do their thing, but it would be impossible for me to get a band up and running anymore. I know theres still thousands of musicians in L.A., but from where I stand, things just went downhill.

Leading up to the Covid pandemic, things appeared to be on the upswing for Holmes. His band was gigging regularly throughout Europe, and he attempted to reset his public image via a documentary film, Mean Man, which detailed his post-W.A.S.P. life.

In early 2022, however, he was diagnosed with throat cancer and was forced to put his career on hold. I dont know if it was surprising, he said. I smoked all my life not just cigarettes, but everything under the sun. I drank for a long time. There was no cancer in my family, so I guess it was self-induced. People might say, Yeah, sure, he partied and drank all the time. He laughs. Put it this way: I had a good time.

After undergoing rigorous treatment, Holmes was recently given the news that his throat was free of cancer and that there was no metastasis. Even so, he doesnt yet feel 100 percent. Im still suffering from the radiation that went through my neck, he says. My saliva is like Super Glue. But Im hoping I can get back to playing shows in a little while. I tried singing the other day, but I didnt have the stamina I need to do a gig. Ill just have to keep at it. I have to sit down and keep singing. Itll come back.

W.A.S.P. were a pretty big band during the '80s, but people dont seem to mention you when they rank notable guitarists from the metal scene. Do you feel unappreciated or overlooked?

Im overlooked, sure. I dont play with W.A.S.P. anymore, so a lot of people forgot about me. That movie, Decline of Western Civilization, didnt help. The other thing is, when I was in W.A.S.P., I was never allowed to do any interviews with guitar magazines. [Rhythm guitarist/frontman] Blackie [Lawless] wouldnt let me. Writers would ask management to talk to me, and they were told I had other obligations shitty things like that. I dont know if that was done to keep me down so Blackie could stay up. Who knows? Shit like that was always going on.

I couldnt read music. Actually, Ill tell you, I have dyslexia. Ive never read an entire book during my whole life

What got you into playing guitar? Who were your big influences?

When I was about 12 or 13, I saw the Jimi Hendrix movie, and that got me into playing the guitar. I thought, 'What a job I wanna do that!' My older brother took me to concerts. I saw Johnny Winter and was blown away. At the time, he played rock. He played good, good, hard rock. Hes mostly known for blues, but what turned me on was when he played rock. Brownsville Station I saw them open for Johnny Winter, and they kicked ass. I saw things like that.

I couldnt read music. Actually, Ill tell you, I have dyslexia. Ive never read an entire book during my whole life. Reading music was impossible. Anything Ive done was by ear. If you do it enough, youll get it.

Before W.A.S.P., you were in a few bands Buster Savage, LAX and Slave. What were they like?

This was back in 74, 75. We played some covers Ziggy Stardust, Black Sabbath, Zeppelin. I enjoyed writing our own music. We played hard stuff. They were good groups. I dont have any tapes of them, but I thought they were good.

What was the guitar scene like in L.A. during the early '80s? Were guys trying to be the hottest and fastest? How did you fit in or didnt you?

I tried to play fast, but I can only play what I play. I just tried to be myself. The scene was flooded with guitarists, and the competition was unbelievable. It was nuts. I was into playing lead, but I was more into tone. I had the opportunity of growing up around Van Halen, and from that I learned a lot about Marshalls and how to dial in the sounds. In those days, we didnt even have preamps.

You were pretty friendly with Eddie Van Halen. The story goes that he used your Ibanez Destroyer on Women and Children First.

He used it on the record, yeah. He gave me the guitar thats on the album cover we switched guitars. He was one of the coolest musicians, an unbelievable player. He had a knack for taking the best from anybody he ever listened to and combined them Billy Gibbons, Eric Clapton, you name them and he made it look so easy. He blew my mind.

When did you start playing Jackson guitars?

Probably about 83. [Rhythm guitarist] Randy [Piper] and Blackie wanted to play B.C. Rich guitars, and I wanted Jacksons. They have a longer scale. Blackie was like, Ill get you a deal. We went out to the Jackson shop in San Dimas, and Grover Jackson told Blackie to get screwed. I was kind of bummed about that.

About four months later, we were about to do this movie called The Dungeonmaster. I called Grover and said, Hey, this is Chris, the guy from W.A.S.P. If I were to use one of your guitars in this movie, could I get one made? And he said, Now youre talking. Youre promoting my product.

He brought a guitar down and watched us do the movie. Then he said to come down to the shop, and he made me a guitar. I never signed a contract, but they treated me well. They made me whatever I wanted, but I never asked for more than I needed.

Musically, what was appealing to you about W.A.S.P.?

I had played in a band with Blackie called Sister, probably around 78 or 79. I left them, but I dont know why probably because of the way I was treated. Then in 82 he called me. He said, Chris, Ive got this band, but its not going to work unless youre in it. I said, If its like Sister, count me out. Im not into that glam shit. But he said, This is right up your alley. You can dress in leather, whatever you want.

I liked W.A.S.P. I didnt look at it like We are Satans people. I looked at it like We are stupid people

I had just gotten out of jail for a DUI and was supposed to go back to work. I had collected unemployment while I was in the clink. I went back to live with my mom, but I knew I couldnt work and do the band at the same time. So I told Blackie, 'Ill do the band as long as I can play the way I play, and nothings going to stop me.' Musically, I put my influence on it.

W.A.S.P. were known for their outrageous stage show. Did you sometimes think the theatrics got in the way of the music?

No. No, no, no. All bands are about theatrics. Look at the record covers they all say something. I liked W.A.S.P. I didnt look at it like We are Satans people. I looked at it like We are stupid people. [Laughs] No, I just looked at it as a group. We had a lot of energy coming off that stage.

Part of Blackies shtick was throwing raw meat out at the crowd. Did any of that meat ever get in your electric guitars?

No, but one time some of it ended up in the back of one of my amps. We went to rehearse about three weeks later. We pulled the amp out of a garage where we stored it, and when we looked in the back of it we saw all of these maggots in the meat. [Laughs]

Whoa, that sounds rugged!

Yeah, it was pretty gross. The meat had gotten all rotten and stuff, so it smelled. One time during a gig, Blackie took the big meat box and threw it to the side of the stage; it bounced off a wall and hit me in the temple knocked me out cold.

Did people in the audience mind getting meat thrown at them?

There was nothing they could do. The places were packed, so you basically took your chances. It was intense. I used to tell Blackie, People can tell which way youre gonna throw it. You have to point one way and then throw the meat the other way. Youll be able to nail people. He tried it and said, 'This is way better. People arent expecting it. [Laughs]

You quit W.A.S.P. for a time, then rejoined. Then you quit again andnever went back. Any regrets?

No. The only regret I have is that I wish I would have known how the business works in terms of publishing. I was never told about any of that. When records were done, nobody said, Chris, we have a meeting to split up the publishing.

Randy didnt write, [drummer] Tony [Richards] didnt write, and so the only person they had to keep out of that was me. It wasnt until I got a little older that I found out the stuff that was going on behind my back. Thats the way it is. I cant change the past; I can only worry about the future.

Actually, the other regret I have is that I should have bitched about the second album. When Blackie said, Its gonna be me on the cover, I should have said, Well, if its gonna be you, then I should leave. Because its not a band at that point which it wasnt. But I still stayed like an idiot and did whatever. I didnt even want to play on the third album. I just went in and did my thing, and I was gone. We werent even friends at that point.

Did seeing yourself in that scene in Decline of Western Civilization serve as a wakeup call for you to stop drinking?

I didnt quit because of that. Hell no! [Laughs] I didnt quit drinking till 96. I got a DUI, like, my fifth one. I went to a program, and I listened to what they said. A counselor told me I had to quit drinking, and I said, Youre nuts. Then he said, One year. If you can quit for one year, youll never drink again.

I told him he was crazy, but he said, Think of it this way: You can always go back to it. So I thought, Okay, one year I can do that. After I quit drinking for one year, I saw the incredibly stupid things people do when theyre drunk. It blew my mind.

Theres a lot of stuff I wrote from my heart on those albums, but I didnt get written in for it. Id be screwing myself if I went and played with him

Some years ago, you started fronting your own band. Were you nervousat first being the lead singer?

I dont claim to have the best voice. I dont have the highest range. The first time I ever went out and sang on my own, it was hard. I wasnt very sure about my voice. The second time, I did a show here in France and it was totally different. I felt really confident. I got to the point where I was like, I dont care if people dont like my voice. They can walk out and do whatever they want."

Do you think you play better sober than during your party days?

No. When I was in W.A.S.P., I never drank before I played. I was always sober on stage. Actually, I only drank one time it was at the Troubadour. The show took twice the amount of work, and when I got off the stage I was almost dead. I hit the ground and said, I will never, ever do that again! I would drink at night and get on stage with a hangover oh yeah. But from the time I woke up and during the day of the show, I never drank. Ive heard people say, Man, he had four beers with me before he played. Theyre full of shit.

Lets say you got a phone call from Blackie today, and he says he wantsto do a full reunion of the band from back in the day. Would you do it?

Id say, You have to pay me the publishing for what I wrote. Then Id be more than happy to do it. Other than that, I wont do it. Theres a lot of stuff I wrote from my heart on those albums, but I didnt get written in for it. Id be screwing myself if I went and played with him. Why do it? If somebody beats you up, why would you want to go see them again? Its not worth it.

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Sophie Ellis-Bextor on if she’d ever do Eurovision and her … – NME

Posted: at 1:23 am

Sophie Ellis-Bextor has spoken to NME about the chances of her representing the UK at Eurovision, and what to expect from her psychedelic, proggy new album Hana.

The British pop icon was speaking to NME backstage after her performance at Liverpools Eurovision Village on EuroEve, the night before the Song Contests Grand Final in the city (Friday May 12).

Stepping off stage, she told NME:I really enjoyed myself, the crowd were gorgeous. I was up in Liverpool yesterday so I already had a sense of the atmosphere here and I was really looking forward to tonight.

Ive loved Eurovision since I can remember. I love everything that its about I love the warmth of it. You get the impression that theres a lot of support for one another among the artists, and the whole production of the actual show has been amazing.

And has she ever been tempted or asked to represent the UK at Eurovision herself?

Not really, Ellis-Bextor replied. I think doing it is an amazing opportunity, and that [2023 UK entry] Mae Muller will smash it, but it was never the right thing at the right time and Im a big believer in serendipity like that.

Muller is currently heading towards a UK Top 10 with I Wrote A Song, despite finishing second to last in the competition, and the final was the most-watched in the Song Contests history according to the BBC. Off the back of the success of recent winners Mneskin and last years UK entry Sam Ryder, Ellis-Bextor said that the increased popularity and credibility of Eurovision should come as no surprise.

Eurovision has been running since the mid 50s so there have been a lot of shifts since then, she said. Im sure that back when Cliff Richard and Olivia Newton John did it, it was seen as a really great thing to do.

In the UK, we pride ourselves a lot on our music. Weve created a lot of globally-dominating bands and artists so when things dont go so well for us at Eurovision, I think its quite easy to get snooty about what it represents. We werent able to unlock how to get on the right side of the leaderboard.

She continued: Recent times have seen Eurovision artists release amazing songs outside of it and these amazing careers being launched. Sam Ryders approach to it last year where we always just so positive and upbeat just saw him really seize the opportunity a bit. This is Ukraines Eurovision but held here, so it has other themes going on. Its not just literally about whos got a funny outfit on. Its about linking people together and supporting each other.

For her own performance in the village, Ellis-Bextor performed a run of her own singles alongside a greatest hits of greatest hits from the likes of Madonna, Moloko and Modjo telling NME that her recent live sets have been inspired by the pop hedonism of her popular Kitchen Disco livestreamed performances from lockdown.

Speaking about choosing her setlist, Ellis-Bextor said: What makes a good song? Golly. Im not very good at answering that. All I know is that all my favourite songs work the same magic on me every time I hear them.

No matter what mood Im at the beginning, Im always in a the same certain mood at the end. Thats what makes a good song if it casts the same magic.

Sophie Ellis-Bextor live at Liverpools Eurovision Village on EuroEve. Credit: Mark McNulty

Asked if that hedonistic pop vibe would be inspiring her upcoming seventh album Hana, she replied: Actually, no its quite a different mood now! Its optimistic and its pop-y, but its also quite psychedelic, proggy and synthy. It was a nice place to put other feelings. Its also my third album with Ed Harcourt. Weve plotted a little course, and I feel like Ive got a lot more bold with making my records and making them a little bit out there.

Im really lucky to be able to go into a studio and say, I had this really weird idea on the way here and then get to flesh it out into a song.

On the over-arching themes of the record, Ellis-Bextor said: I started writing it in 2020 just before the world tilted. I was going on a trip with my mum and my eldest boy to Tokyo, and Id never been. It started off with the idea of somewhere I was visiting and what I thought it would be like. That became a really nice landscape to go to in my mind during the times we couldnt travel anywhere.

I also lost my step-dad not long after that, so there is grief in there but its also about how grief is the other half of love. Its about the legacy of wanting to carry on and live your best life in their name. Its all woven in there. Oh, and theres also a song about aliens.

Does she believe in aliens?

Oh golly, either answer to that question is extraordinary were either alone or were not alone, she replied. The song is this fantasy of aliens who have been watching us for ages and have seen what a state weve gotten ourselves into. They look around and say, We can save some of you, we feel sorry for you so lets start again.

Ellis-Bextor and Mercury-nominated solo star, producer and Libertines collaborator Harcourt have previously worked together on 2014s Wanderlust and 2016s Familia. The singer told NME that she was drawn to working with Harcourt because he was the real deal.

Were quite different on the surface but when were in the studio we think very similarly, she said. Were quite impulsive and excitable, were quite quick workers, but hes also one of the most musically gifted people I know. Hes very generous with his talent and will just interpret things in a very different way.

I love the albums weve made together, and we also laugh a lot. He really is criminally underrated, but he has facilitated and supported a lot of artists.

Sophie Ellis-Bextor releases Hana on June 2, before embarking on a run of festival dates before a headline tour in the winter. Visit here for tickets and more information.

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10 Movies like The Social Network you must watch – Ready Steady Cut

Posted: at 1:23 am

We discuss ten movies like The Social Network you must watch. Add these well-recommended films to your watch list.

The Social Network stars Jesse Eisenberg as a young Mark Zuckerberg, as it shows the audience the story of how Facebook was founded and takes them through the following lawsuits, filed by the Winklevoss twins and another by his friend Eduardo Saverin. Director David Fincher managed to make the concept that sounded boring to some into a critical and audience success.

Of course, many films look at the early days of well-known corporations and companies, and many are similar movies to The Social Network. Here are ten of them that you must watch.

Michael Fassbender stars as the well-known Apple co-founder Steve Jobs in a dramatization of the early years at one of the most well-known companies in the world. Just as The Social Network explores the origins of Facebook, Steve Jobs shows the first years of another tech company.

Moving from Apple to McDonalds, this next film follows Michael Keaton as Ray Croc and shows the story of him founding the iconic fast food chain McDonalds and realizing that hes in the real estate business, not the burger business.

Turning to the rich world of Wall Street, Leonardo DiCaprio stars as the corrupt stockbroker Jordan Belfort as he defrauds investors out of millions at his firm Stratton Oakmont. Full of hedonism, swearing, and excess, Martin Scorsese directs this look into the high life.

Moving back online, Startup.comexplores the troubled Internet revolution, where the ideas, dreams, and hopes of instant get-rich-quick schemes gave way to the harsh truth of reality. Starring Kaleil Isaza Tuzman, this film looks at the failure of the new media company govWorks.com.

If there ever were to be a sequel to The Social Network, it would be The Great Hack. It looks at the Cambridge Analytica scandal through the eyes of several affected people and how their data harvesting became the symbol of the dark side of social media in the wake of the 2016 US presidential election.

Of course, the Cambridge Analytica scandal didnt just affect US politics; it also dramatically affected UK politics. Benedict Cumberbatch stars as Dominic Cummings, the mastermind behind the Leave campaign in the EU referendum, as he turns to Cambridge Analytica to access peoples data and influence the vote.

Sticking with the theme of data, the next film on the list is Snowden. Joseph Gordon-Levitt stars as the titular Edward Snowden as he decides to leave his job at the National Security Agency in the USA. He knows that the data of ordinary American citizens are being tracked by the government, and leaks this classified information, making him a fugitive from the law.

A comedy by director Adam McKay, The Big Short stars Christian Bale as Michael Burry, Ryan Gosling as Jared Vennett, and Steve Carell as Mark Baum as they bet against the housing market just before the financial crash in America. Their greedy scheme works, as they make a fortune during a time of economic instability.

Al Pacino stars as Lowell Bergman as he realizes that the expertise of former Big Tobacco executive Jeffrey Wigand, played by Russell Crowe, is a lie. Bergam persuades Wigand to share his treasure trove of industry secrets as the two contend with both the courts and corporations that stand in their way of telling the truth.

Another story set at the time of the 2008 financial crisis, Margin Call stars Kevin Spacey and Paul Bettany as Sam Rogers and Will Emerson. It takes place over the course of 24 hours and focuses on the actions that a group of Wall Street investors takes during the initial stages of the crash.

Do you have any other recommendations for Movies like The Social Network? Let us know in the comments below.

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The eternal paradox, and ‘Quantum Criminals,’ of Steely Dan – Wisconsin Public Radio

Posted: at 1:23 am

This interview originally appeared in NPR Music's weekly newsletter. Subscribe to the newsletter here.

Steely Dan is a paradox. As writer Alex Pappademas puts it, it's a "cult band whose catalog ... includes at least a dozen enduring radio hits" two guys who continually found a way to "embed blue-ribbon misanthropy in music designed to go down as smooth as creme de menthe." And like many great paradoxes, there's more to learn about the band the longer you spend considering it. This is true even if you only know a few of those enduring hits. You might recognize the chorus of "Dirty Work," for example but did you know that the man singing lead vocals on that track, David Palmer, once played a high school show alongside The Velvet Underground its first under that name? Did you know that "Rikki Don't Lose That Number" was written for the wife of a faculty member at Bard College, where Steely Dan's Walter Becker and Donald Fagen studied? Or that one of MF Doom's earliest solo tracks samples the opening song on Aja?

In the new book Quantum Criminals, Pappademas and artist Joan LeMay give a roadmap to the Steely Dan extended universe through the lens of the characters at the heart of the band's songs. Alongside Pappademas' explorations, LeMay's paintings render touching portraits of Steely Dan's influences and inheritors, and speculative illustrations of the personalities who populate its world. Their book uncovers the vast constellation of lyrical references, artistic influences and social and political contexts surrounding the band and its music. In this interview, Pappademas and LeMay answered a few questions about their personal histories with Steely Dan and how Quantum Criminals came to be.

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Marissa Lorusso: In one of the book's opening chapters, Alex details his evolving relationship with Steely Dan's music, from mild distaste to somewhat ironic engagement to sincere appreciation a path he says has been followed by many Millennial and Gen Z fans. Joan, what's the story of your relationship with Steely Dan did your fandom follow a similar road?

Joan LeMay: Listening to Steely Dan is, honest to God, my first musical memory. Growing up, my parents had a very limited record collection a stack about five inches wide or so. In it was the entire Steely Dan discography (later to include [Donald Fagen's solo debut] The Nightfly; no other Fagen solo records nor any Becker records made the cut), plus lots of Linda Ronstadt, a couple of James Taylor records, The Best of the Doobie Brothers Vol. II, Carole King's Tapestry and Jethro Tull's Thick as a Brick. At 2 years old, I was what one would call a tall baby. I would reach for things. And I'd get 'em, too. I clearly remember the day I was able to reach the turntable, my tiny arms at full stretch above my head, and heft an LP upon it until the peg snapped into the hole. That LP was Can't Buy A Thrill. I liked it the most out of all of my parents' records because of the colors on the cover. I plopped down on our diarrhea-brown shag carpet and was pleased. It seems unlikely that I would remember this so clearly, but I was reading the newspaper at that age I peaked early.

How did you decide to approach a book about Steely Dan this way? Why tell the story of the band through the lens of these characters and what inspired both of you to approach this project as an illustrated/written collaboration?

LeMay: In 2020, I got back into the practice of making fanzines. I made two issues of a zine called Mug Club I asked people in the arts to send me a photo of their favorite mug and tell me a story about it, and I'd paint the mug. The paintings and stories were a way to explode the banal/micro into the sublime/macro and serve as a connective creative project in the midst of lockdown. After those, I started making a fanzine called Danzine wherein I planned to paint all 240-something characters in the Steely Dan universe. I got as far as drawing the cover, making a character spreadsheet, doing a few sketches and posting about it on Instagram, partially as a way to keep myself accountable for making the thing.

Esteemed writer/director Jessica Hopper, one of the editors of the University of Texas Press American Music Series and this book's doula, texted me and said "Joanie? That's not a fanzine. That's a book." Before I posted my thing, she had been talking with Alex about what kind of book he might like to write for the press and he'd responded by pitching a book that was "Bluets, but Steely Dan" ... and she put us together.

Alex Pappademas: Bluets is a collection of short pieces by the incredible poet and nonfiction writer Maggie Nelson that walk the line between autobiography and criticism and prose poetry. I had been reading a lot of Nelson and other nonfiction writers who work in a really pared-down, aphoristic mode and when Jessica and I started talking about me doing a Steely Dan book for UT, I said I wanted to do something really piece-y and fragmentary like that. I don't know that there was any specific Steely Dan-related reason I wanted to do it that way; I just liked the idea of writing these micro-essays where each one would be its own thought about Steely Dan and their music and their place in pop culture/American culture, and themes would build and accumulate the way they do in Nelson's work, or Jenny Offill's or some of David Shields's stuff. By the time Jessica roped Joan into this project, I had an outline for what would have been a Bluets version of this book, but a lot of it was pretty sketchy like, "Chevy Chase" would be a line item on the outline, or "Dan and Race" or "Perfectionism." I mulched on this for just over a year, on and off, before Joan even engaged. And then we didn't get to the proposal until September 2020 deep COVID times. Book was done almost exactly one year from that date, but I'd say most of the writing took about seven months.

Once we merged the idea for Bluets-but-Steely Dan with Joan's idea to paint all the characters, it necessitated a change in my approach; instead of making a deck of cards and trying to assemble them into a narrative it was about seeing how much you could hang on the idea of an individual Steely Dan character and how to use those characters to frame stories that illuminated Steely Dan's legacy in some interesting way.

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The chapters in this book give such deep studies of the personalities who populate Steely Dan's songs (and, by extension, of the musicians who brought them to life). Did your relationship with any of these songs change while writing about them, illustrating them, or otherwise getting inside the heads of these characters? Did you learn anything about the songs that genuinely surprised you while working on this project?

LeMay: I learned so much. On our weekly calls, Alex always excitedly ushered me into the entrance of several wormholes he'd been traversing, and it was a constant delight. Thinking deeply about what these characters were wearing, what they might've been doing in the narrative beyond the narrative, thinking about their environment, how they held their faces, how they held their bodies it was an immersive way to listen. I'd had ideas in my head about so many of the characters because I tend to think visually, but there were lots of fantastic surprises, like when we dug into Cathy Berberian, for instance. I'd never looked up what she looked like before.

Pappademas: I think what surprised me the most as I dug deeper into these songs was how much empathy Donald and Walter seemed to have for their characters. It's not something they're usually given credit for the idea people have about them is that they're always snickering amongst themselves, making fun of the people they write about, but I think that's actually more true of somebody like Randy Newman than it is of Becker/Fagen. I think there's always a real sense of humanity's plight underneath whatever coldness or archness is more easily detectable in their work on first blush even when the people they're writing about are doomed or deluded or depraved, you don't get the sense that they're judging these characters, most of the time. There's an attention paid to the human longing that motivates people to these weird actions and they don't judge the longing, of, say, the guy who's hung up on a sex worker in "Pearl of the Quarter" whereas Frank Zappa, given the same storyline, would absolutely write about what a moron that guy is.

Steely Dan's lyrics are famously somewhat cryptic, and Walter Becker and Donald Fagen were quite averse to having their lyrics read as straightforward personal narratives. It's clear that so much research went into illuminating these songs, but there's also a healthy dose of creative speculation, too, both in how the subjects of the songs are described and how they're depicted.

LeMay: The only characters I painted that weren't 100% creative speculation (and really, less speculation and more my personal interpretation) were those having to do with actual, living people, like Cathy Berberian, Jill St. John and G. Gordon Liddy. I had a folder on my computer called "DAN CASTING GALLERY" full of images of people in my life, found photos, '60s and '70s fashion catalogs, advertisements and sewing pattern packaging. I painted from a melange of those images mixed with things that had been in my head forever, as well as from a ton of photos of my own body posing in different ways for reference. The most important thing to me was getting the humanity the profoundly flawed humanity of these characters right.

Pappademas: And it works I try to get across that humanity in the text, but having Joan populate this world with real human faces made the finished product into something greater than I could have gotten to on my own.

Anyway, my answer to the question above is that when I'm writing criticism, for sure, but also when I'm writing reported pieces, I feel like there's always an element of creative speculation in what I do. It's just more or less constrained by facts depending on what kind of piece it is. Even if you've sat in a room with somebody for hours you're ultimately imagining their inner life based on what they've told you, and sometimes on what they haven't told you. In terms of Quantum Criminals, yeah, Steely Dan definitely tried to discourage any attempt to read these lyrics autobiographically and the fact that all their lyrics were composed by (or at least credited to) two writers was their first line of defense against that kind of reading, because even when they're writing in the first person you're conscious that the "I" in every Dan song is to whatever degree a fictional character and therefore a distancing device. But I think it's human nature or at least it's my human nature to intuit the opposite and look for places where the art seems to correspond to what we know to be the contours of an artist's life. Because the other thing about Steely Dan is they liked to obfuscate; the fact that they rarely owned up to their music having an autobiographical component (with certain exceptions, notably "Deacon Blues," which they admitted was pretty personal) doesn't mean it wasn't autobiographical. And at times as with "Gaucho," a song about a duo torn apart by a third party who might be the personification of drugs or other forms of hedonism, recorded for the album Donald made mostly without Walter because Walter's addiction issues had pulled him away from the band the correspondences became too tempting to not explore. Which is what happens when you write cryptically; it's human nature to decrypt.

I don't know; I guess I'm doing the same thing Taylor Swift's fans do when they decide that some opaque lyric is an Easter egg about this or that relationship of hers, or what A.J. Weberman was doing when he decided "The sun isn't yellow, it's chicken" was Bob Dylan confessing to faking his own death, or what the people who think The Shining was Stanley Kubrick exorcizing his guilt over faking the moon landing. The difference is that I think I'm right and I think those other people are all nuts, because I'm in my bubble and can't imagine the view from theirs.

Finally, what do you hope readers be they longtime devotees, newly converted fans or Steely Dan skeptics take away from Quantum Criminals?

LeMay: I think that in a lot of ways, this book can be read as something that's about the ridiculous cacophony of what it is to be a person in the world, striving to do something you're happy with. In a lot of other ways, it is a real invitation to truly dive into what you love with reckless abandon to dream about it hard, to see and hear and appreciate the small details and the big ways you feel as a result of giving yourself the gift of paying attention. I hope that readers come away from the book thinking about all the ways they have yet to enjoy not just Steely Dan, but anything that moves them.

Pappademas: I hope people come away from this book thinking about how, even though perfectionism can undo you as an artist and any book about how to make your art will tell you that over and over, there's still something noble and useful about aspiring to perfection that there's magic in the falling-short but also in the reaching-for. I also hope these stories inspire young people to say no to drugs.

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Five Classic SF Novels Featuring Advanced Body Modifications – tor.com

Posted: at 1:23 am

Who among us has not sometimes mused about how convenient it would be to upgrade or alter our bodies? Unsurprisingly, SF authors have also thought along those lines. In particular, the mid-to-late 1970s saw what seemed like a flurry of SF books exploring the possibilities of advanced body modification.

I have no idea if this was actually a trend or simply accidental clustering. Thematically consistent with the other self-improvement efforts of the so-called Me Generation, it certainly seemed like a trend at the time. Take, for example, this cluster of books encountered in the mid-1970s

In the very distant future, the city of Cinnabar may be found between the desert and the ocean. Cinnabar may be the last city left on the world. Certainly, visitors from outside are not expected. This would be a sad, forlorn realityif the sybarites of Cinnabar were at all inclined to consider the state of their world.

Cinnabars people have access to sophisticated technology that is the stuff of science fiction to us. Therefore, many facets of self (body and mind) that we can currently change only with great effort (or cannot change at all) are a matter of fashion in Cinnabar. It would be wonderful if this meant a golden age of self-realization. What these people actually do with their potentially liberating technology: create stark class differences, abuse others, and embrace joyless decadence.

Miraculous technology is wasted on some people, as the people of Cinnabar amply demonstrate.

Cinnabar was inspired in part by Ballards Vermilion Sands. It seemed to me that Ballards characters seem to have more fun (in a repressed British way).

The domed cities of Four BEE, Four BAA, and Four BOO are oases in a world desert (just as Cinnabar is isolated in an arid world). No oceans. Each city is self-sufficient and, aside from sporadic contact with the other cities, inwardly focused.

Young peoplethe Jangare encouraged to embrace hedonism, enabled by the fact that physical form is a matter of personal taste. Even death is no major inconvenience, for life sparks are easily transferred from corpses to new incarnations. For people willing to settle for mindless pleasure, it is utopia. People who, like the narrator, seek a more meaningful existence will soon discover the limits of what is permitted.

Social convention is a powerful force in the domed cities; of the many pleasures one might enjoy, only a few are actually chosen. Assignations are always preceded by short and meaningless marriages. Couplings are expected to join one male body to one female body (to the extent that choices in bodily form can be described that way). This seems like an odd way to run a free love dys/utopia.

Terrestrial Armageddon appears inevitable. For humanity and its creations to survive, Martian colonies are required. This would be no problem if Mars were the habitable Mars of old-timey SF. Mars being the nearly airless, radiation-soaked deathtrap that it actually is, to dispatch conventional humans there would be to doom them.

Enter Roger Torraway, the lucky individual who has been voluntold to test exciting new advances in cyborg technology. Accepting his new, heavily modified form will be a challenge. Once on Mars, Roger and all those dependent on his success will come to appreciate the utility of his transformation.

There are many SF stories in which the world faces some anthropogenic doom that everyone agrees is undesirable and nobody seems to be able to do anything about. Where do SF authors get their wild ideas? In this case, there are other factors influencing human behavior, factors whose natures and extent is not made clear until the conclusion of the novel. The characters will never know that they are not entirely responsible for their choices.

Centuries after the alien Invaders conquered the Earth, human civilization is thrivingin space. With the notable exceptions of Jupiter and Earth (both controlled by the Invaders), the Solar System is a human domain.

This is possible because the technology exists to reshape bodies at will, whether on a merely cosmetic scale or with more dramatic alternations that turn even Venus surface into a shirt-sleeve environment for humans. Many of the tools needed to prevail in the post-Invader reality were retrieved from the so-called Ophiuchi Hotline, an alien communications network into which humans have been tapping. Unbeknownst to humans, there is a charge for the information and that bill has come due.

General Coordination struggles to keep overcrowded, resource-strapped Earth functioning. Their task is complicated by the ubiquity of Form Change, an advanced biofeedback technology that allows people to reshape their bodies as they see fit. Some forms place more demands on infrastructure than others, thus a need to steer the masses away from (for example) changes that would greatly increase lifespan and thus accelerate population growth.

Behrooz Wolf and his partner John Larsen investigate Form Change abuse. Their final three cases illustrate just how powerful Form Change can be in the hands of a sufficiently unscrupulous researcher, while illuminating certain aspects of Solar history heretofore underappreciated by humanity. Long ago, aliens called the Solar System home and while they are long dead, their relics are still quite puissant.

Biofeedback was a big deal back in the disco era. In fact, this Sheffield novel is rich in dubious obsessions briefly fashionable at the time, of Ovenden and Van Flandern. Sheffield was known as a hard SF author; his fans might be interested to discover this side of his work.

***

There are, no doubt, other disco-era works along these lines that I could have mentioned. Hansens War Games, for example, was only omitted because, being published in 1981, it seemed a bit too late for my purposes. Feel free to mention other example in comments, which are, as ever, below.

In the words of fanfiction author Musty181, four-time Hugo finalist, prolific book reviewer, and perennialDarwin Award nomineeJames Davis Nicoll looks like a default mii with glasses. His work has appeared in Interzone, Publishers Weekly and Romantic Times as well as on his own websites,JamesNicollReviews(where he is assisted by editor Karen Lofstrom and web person Adrienne L. Travis) and the2021, 2022, and 2023 Aurora AwardfinalistYoung People Read Old SFF(where he is assisted by web person Adrienne L. Travis). His Patreoncan be found here.

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From queer Westerns to Wes Anderson Here are HUNGER’s most … – Hunger TV

Posted: at 1:23 am

How to Have Sex

In this British title, a group of besties expect to have the time of their lives on the party town of Malia in Crete, Greece. Unfortunately for the trio of long term friends, they were born into a movie that looks to examine that world of hedonism a little more closely. Their whirlwind, out of control drinking tests their lives, friendships and even their own self-identities. Directed by Molly Manning Walker in what will be her debut feature, How to Have Sex looks to be a direct representation of those anxiety ridden days after one too many where every decision throughout your life seems like it was the wrong one.

May December

May December stars Natalie Portman and Julianne Moore in this drama about the ripple effect of a tabloid romance that once gripped the nation. Now, 20 years after the romance sparked, Hollywood star Gracie Atherton-Yu (Moore) and her husband Joe (Charles Melton) are preparing for their twins to graduate high school. Meanwhile, a less-veteran Hollywood actress, Elizabeth (Portman), comes to their Southern home to better understand Gracie before playing her in a film. However, the womens identities become oddly entangled as family dynamics begin to rip apart.

Firebrand

Brazilian filmmaker Karim Ainouzs first English-language film stars Oscar winner Alicia Vikander (The Danish Girl) as Catherine Parr, the sixth and last wife of Henry VIII (Jude Law). Based on the 2013 novel The Queens Gambit by Elizabeth Fremantle, this feminist psychological thriller follows Parr, who is romantically entangled with Thomas Seymour (Sam Riley) when she catches the eye of the king, still desperately seeking a male heir. But, after she marries him, Parr helps to make Princesses Mary and Elizabeth eligible to inherit the throne.

Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny

Harrison Fords final turn as the whip-toting archaeologist Indiana Jones is among the most highly anticipated of the film festival. In the world premiere of Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny, the 80-year-old action hero will be reunited with his trusty leather jacket and fedora for a fifth and final time. His co-stars include Fleabags Phoebe Waller-Bridge, who was born four years after the first in the franchise, Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981). Dial of Destiny is also the first Indiana Jones film not to be directed by Steven Spielberg though he does have an executive producer credit.

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Building better cognitive health supplements with smart formulations – Natural Products Insider

Posted: at 1:22 am

For years, the cognitive health pillar of the dietary supplement industry was focused on helping seniors stay sharp. In the last decade, though, there has been a remarkable shift in our understandingand appreciationof the breadth and depth of cognitive health. Indeed, healthy fats like omegas, phospholipids and choline can combat age-related cognitive decline. But brain performance is increasingly desired across consumer generations, as gamers, knowledge workers and other early adopters fuel momentum in a category that now includes nootropics, adaptogens and probiotic ingredients.

Dietary docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) in combination with eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) is positively connected to cognitive health, and studies also show a positive correlation between omega-3 and mood disorders such as depression. To function their best, brain cell membranes need adequate levels of phospholipids, a combination of lipids (fats) and the mineral phosphorus that line cell membranes and help determine what is allowed in and out of the cell.

Formulas that feature EPA, DHA and phospholipids such as citicholine and phosphatidylserine (PS) could help consumers preserve brain function, especially if they are not minding their omega ratios.

Read about all the mind-sharpening ingredients making waves in the cognitive health segment in this downloadable digital magazine. The articles include:

Content Director Todd Runestad details the noteworthy shift in our understanding of all the connections that contribute to cognitive health, and the supplements that can support it.

Despite an abundance of better-for-you packaged foods and beverages in the U.S. market, many consumers still experience a significant imbalance in beneficial fatty acids, writes Lisa Schofield. DHA, in particular, is especially critical in brain development and is why pregnant women are recommended to consume omega-3 through their diet or by taking supplements.

The time for adaptogens is coming, submits Pete Croatto, as plants and mushrooms that can help the body respond to stress, anxiety and fatigue are increasingly positioned as mood enhancers.

Professionals and adult students face high-pressure, brain-draining tasks as part of their daily responsibilities, explains Rachel Adams, and they are increasingly turning to natural ingredients that can provide the mental energy they need to focus and stay alert.

Research and development of functional bioactives has caught up with new market demand. Scientific studies have validated many of the natural ingredients helping to redefine the cognitive health category. Todd Runestad culls a list of some notable superstar ingredients, which include VitaCholine from Balchem, Adonat Premium SAMe from Gnosis by Lesaffre, and Cognizin Citicoline from Kyowa Hakko.

Some of the worlds leading and most innovative brands have launched new stress and sleep products in the past two years, writes Matev Ambroi, as the segment gradually evolves from commodity-driven to a more advanced, added-value, clinically supported one.

Formulation expert Blake Ebersole offers up a sampling from the extensive list of well-designed clinical trials that have been performed on brain botanicals, pushing the cognitive category into new territory. Ingredients in focus include lemon balm, sesame oil cake extract, mulberry milk, spermidine, and many others.

Improving the gut bacteria composition through probiotic supplementation can improve mood, anxiety and cognition, as well as reduce neuroinflammation. Ralf Jger shares some compelling new research that further proves the point.

Examples of cognitive health takeaways for your business include:

Registering as a member of Natural Products INSIDER Digital will give you free access to premium content including digital magazines, webinars, whitepapers and more.

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Podiatry Treatment Market: Forthcoming Developments and … – Cottonwood Holladay Journal

Posted: at 1:22 am

The globalPodiatry Treatment Marketis expected to register a revenue CAGR of 4.9% during the forecast period, from a valuation of USD 4.3 billion in 2022 to USD 6.9 billion in 2032. The growth is being driven by several factors, such as an increasing prevalence of diabetes, a rise in foot and ankle injuries, and an increase in the elderly population worldwide. Moreover, the growing demand for Podiatry Treatment is being fueled by a growing awareness of the value of preserving foot health and hygiene.

The market is expanding as more hospitals and podiatrist clinics are being established across the world, and there is greater accessibility to cutting-edge technology and novel treatments such as laser therapy and regenerative medicine. Additionally, the rising use of telemedicine is also influencing the Podiatry Treatment market. Governments are implementing regulations to ensure that podiatric services meet high standards and adhere to strict guidelines.

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However, several factors, such as a shortage of qualified podiatrists, high cost of care, and insufficient insurance coverage for podiatry treatments, are restraining the revenue growth of the market. Moreover, availability of less-priced Podiatry Treatment in some areas is expected to have a negative effect on the markets revenue growth over the forecast period.

Key players in the Podiatry Treatment Market:

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The global Podiatry Treatment market is segmented into preventive, diabetic foot care, surgical, sports injury, and others, based on service type. The preventive segment is expected to account for the largest revenue share in the market during the forecast period.

The diabetic foot care segment is also expected to account for a significantly large revenue share, as diabetes is becoming more prevalent across the globe.

The surgical segment is expected to register a rapid revenue growth rate during the forecast period due to rising demand for minimally invasive surgical procedures in podiatry. The sports injury segment is expected to register a moderately fast revenue growth rate during the forecast period.

Based on the end-user, the market is segmented into hospitals, clinics, and others. The clinics segment is expected to account for the largest revenue share during the forecast period, while the hospitals segment is expected to register the highest revenue growth rate during the forecast period. The others section, which includes ambulatory surgical facilities and home healthcare settings, is expected to register steady revenue growth.

In conclusion, the Podiatry Treatment market is expanding rapidly, driven by an increase in the need for Podiatry Treatment due to the prevalence of chronic diseases and foot-related issues, and the growing elderly population. The market is also influenced by the increasing use of telemedicine and the availability of cutting-edge technology and novel treatments.

However, several factors are restraining the revenue growth of the market, such as a shortage of qualified podiatrists, high cost of care, and insufficient insurance coverage. The preventive segment is expected to account for the largest revenue share during the forecast period, followed by the diabetic foot care and surgical segments. The clinics segment is expected to account for the largest revenue share among end-users, while the hospitals segment is expected to register the highest revenue growth rate.

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That movie where Russell Crowe plays an exorcist might have … – PC Gamer

Posted: at 1:22 am

The Pope's Exorcist starring Russell Crowe is another one of those ambient movies for me, something whose ads I'll see on Instagram in between lifting videos, ads for nootropics, pictures of modded Game Boys, and ads for meal prep services. Seriously, like a lot of the stuff on streaming these days, it looks like a fake movie from the Simpsons or 30 Rock, though it does look like they've got a Dragon Age fan or two on the crew.

I first noticed the swap by way of Kelgrid (opens in new tab) and Fleur Bleue (opens in new tab) on Twitter, though WhyNow Gaming (opens in new tab) points out that xMoonxCakex (opens in new tab) on the Dragon Age subreddit clocked this even earlier. It looks like, in the course of his regular exorcising, Russell Crowe exercises his right to check out a spooky crypt tied to the Spanish Inquisition. You can tell it's the Spanish Inquisition because that's their symbol chiselled on the wall, only they actually put the symbol of the Dragon Age Inquisition up there.

Although the names may sound the same, the Dragon Age Inquisition was an (arguably) heroic organization that saved Thedas from the predations of the evil Corypheus, a primeval Tevinter magister who attempted to seize the throne of God. The Spanish Inquisition was an outgrowth of a long-standing Papal institution that was hijacked by the famous monarchs, Ferdinand and Isabella, to ethnically cleanse their newly reconquista-d nation and consolidate their power. It mostly persecuted Spain's remaining Jews and Muslims while torturing people who understood that cleanliness helps prevent the spread of disease (we called them witches back then).

Kotaku theorizes that this was a result of someone Googling "Inquisition symbol" and Dragon Age's distinctive sword-and-eye being the first result, and honestly? That's pretty plausible, just look at a screenshot of the results (from incognito mode no less!) down below. Aside from the cheeky Warhammer 40K one, it's "oops, all Dragon Age." But I want to give the film's production more credit. Surely some nerdy set designer slipped this in deliberately? Whatever the case, the lines between reality and fiction continue to blur, with portions of real-life European history infected and replaced with one of Canada's greatest cultural exports.

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