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Hip To Be Square: Milwaukee’s Summerfest Is The No-Pretense Music Festival For Everybody

As a kid growing up in Milwaukee, I looked forward to Summerfest with a holiday-like anticipation; as a teen, I grew to mock its supreme un-hipness, even as I still occasionally attended; as an adult living through a time in which music festivals happen on more summer weekends than not, I can only now appreciate quite how unusual my hometown’s version actually is. Summerfest isn’t necessarily better than your Lollapaloozas, Coachellas, or Newport Folks, but it is undeniably broader than those or any other big-name fest. It’s been running so long without a particular musical niche that it’s fallen into that rarest of zones: It’s an all-things-to-all-people gathering. If you can’t find something to like among roughly a thousand bands over ten days, well, you can still go eat some bratwurst, stare wistfully at Lake Michigan, or watch a juggler do his thing.

It’s easier not to be niche-bound when you’re the “World’s Largest Music Festival,” a title that Summerfest could rightfully claim for decades, based on attendance — which peaked in 2001 with just over a million people cumulatively through its gates. That’s quite a few more souls than live in the city of Milwaukee, to give it some perspective. It’s a yearly tourism boon, pushing $186 million into the local economy per annum, according to president and CEO Don Smiley. It’s the single biggest attraction the city can claim as its own — and it does so, loudly and proudly: You can see the smiley Summerfest logo all around town, all year round.

You also can’t miss Summerfest’s highly unusual site: The Henry Maier Festival Park spans 75 acres of absolutely prime real estate, right on Lake Michigan and directly adjacent to downtown Milwaukee. In the 1920s, the strip of land was an airport, and during the Cold War it was a military installation that housed nuclear-capable Nike missiles. Summerfest, which launched in 1968 at various venues around the city, took over the park — a generous word for it at that point, considering there wasn’t much there — in 1970, and slowly but surely built something permanent, both literally and figuratively.

In addition to Summerfest, the Maier Festival Park is also home to Milwaukee’s yearly ethnic festivals, which are generally much smaller affairs but nonetheless charming and fun: German Fest, Festa Italiana, Polish Fest, and others keep the park busy for a few extra summer days in normal years. Weirdly, the park is otherwise locked up tight the rest of the year, visibly lonely from the freeway that runs just above it, its stages and Skyglider quiet and still.

When I started going in the early 1980s, Summerfest still felt a little ramshackle, with only a few permanent structures on the grounds. The stages were typical of what you still see at most fests, erected and removed as needed. They were (and still are) strategically placed throughout the festival so that acts weren’t in sonic competition: If you were busy listening to Weird Al, you wouldn’t necessarily be disturbed by Greg Kihn or REO Speedwagon.

Summerfest

One ridiculously cheap ticket — under $10 per day at the time, still a crazy bargain at $23 — got you general admission access to every stage. Much of the schedule during the daytime back then was taken up by local bands playing to empty bleachers, but the nighttime programming was radically diverse, even then. Looking at the mid-’80s, I’m seeing R.E.M., Huey Lewis, Los Lobos, the Pointer Sisters, Bon Jovi, Eric Clapton, Kool & The Gang. The Replacements and Fishbone had day-ending slots in ‘91, as did Kansas. In 1989, I camped out overnight at the Summerfest box office for tickets to perhaps the coolest triple bill of all time — New Order, Public Image Ltd., and the Sugarcubes — and wound up in the front row.

Then as now, the vibe at Summerfest can be as tough to pin down as the music programming, and while it’d be slightly unfair to compare it to a more urban state fair, that’s also partly true. There’s very little of Coachella’s see-and-be-seen energy, perhaps because the families excited to see Michael “mouth noises guy from the Police Academy movies” Winslow don’t really give a shit about the neon mesh bodysuit-clad Foushee fans or the old metal dudes there for the latest iteration of L.A. Guns. It’s democracy in action, with space for a massive swath of popular and semi-popular music. Smiley tells me that’s all by design: “We purposely construct it for everyone.” He’s equally proud of booking international touring acts like Guns N Roses and Megan Thee Stallion as he is of the brand new Children’s Community Park, which includes sensory rooms, nursing rooms, and playground equipment.

As years passed and Summerfest grew, the park that contains it became more like a small city of its own. In 1987, they added a 23,000-seat amphitheater to draw even bigger bands — though tickets for those shows cost extra. Just last year — when Summerfest was canceled, rescheduled, then canceled and rescheduled again due to COVID — they completely rebuilt that amphitheater to better accommodate the kind of massive stage shows that have become the norm in more recent years. Other permanent stages, food service buildings, and offices are now in use, including the new-ish 10,000-capacity, separately ticketed BMO Harris Pavilion. All of the stages have delightfully corporate names, naturally, and Smiley proudly notes that Summerfest — which is a 501(c)(3) non-profit — has lots of corporate sponsors but much lower ticket prices, a fact that Milwaukeeans find a perfectly acceptable trade-off.

Which brings us to the uncertainty of 2021. With the early part of the year still so COVD-uncertain, Summerfest moved away from its usual June-into-July dates and will now take place over the first three weekends in September. The artists are, as usual, all over the map in the best ways: Green Day, Chance the Rapper, Chris Stapleton, Run the Jewels, Dave Chappelle, Miley Cyrus, Diplo, Pixies, 311. Thurston Moore is on the schedule right there next to the Steve Meisner Polka Band. At one end of the grounds you can see a David Bowie tribute band, and the other a ventriloquist act called Red Hot Chili Puppets that, sadly, has nothing to do with the band (beyond the name, anyway). As of this writing, the reserved seats for REO Speedwagon are sold out, but plenty remain for Joan Jett.

The delightful whiplash goes on and on, and it’s a big part of the Summerfest draw. The whole thing is unpretentious in the same way its home city is: People are there for a good time, and whether that involves waiting all day to be up in front for Coheed & Cambria or happening upon a juggling demonstration while munching on some ribs doesn’t much matter.

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A Weird New Animated Adult Swim Series Featuring Tim Robinson And Maria Bamford? Yeah, That’ll Work

Tim Robinson and Maria Bamford are the comedy geniuses behind two of the funniest Netflix shows ever in I Think You Should Leave and Lady Dynamite. There will hopefully be a third season of ITYSL (Lady Dynamite was sadly canceled after season two), but until then, you can get your Robinson and Bamford fix in Teenage Euthanasia.

Created by Alissa Nutting and Alyson Levy, the Adult Swim animated series “centers around the owners of Tender Endings funeral home, the Fantasy Family: Grandma Baba, her adult children Uncle Pete and Trophy, and Trophy’s teenage daughter, Euthanasia (‘Annie’), a name accidentally given to her during the time of Trophy’s own unbearable suffering,” according to the plot synopsis. Here’s more:

Back when Trophy was a teen herself; she ran away from home after giving birth to Annie, leaving her newborn to be raised by Baba and Uncle Pete. Now, 15 years later, Trophy returns to Tender Endings… as a corpse, for burial. When a bolt of lightning strikes Baba’s homemade embalming fluid and one of Annie’s tears, Trophy comes back from the dead. As a resurrected woman, Trophy has a variety of quasi-useful death powers. But more importantly, she has a second chance at unplanned parenthood.

Bamford voices Trophy, Robinson is Uncle Pete, and Joe Pera Talks with You‘s Jo Firestone and Bebe Neuwirth round out the cast as “Annie” and Baba.

Teenage Euthanasia has Maria Bamford, Tim Robinson, and a pill-popping corpse from Florida — what more could you want? The series premieres on September 19.

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The First Reviews For ‘Shang-Chi’ Are In And Critics Are Boldly Calling It The Best Action Movie In The MCU

The first reviews for Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings are in, and the consensus is clear: The first Phase 4 entry might just have the best action sequences of the entire Marvel Cinematic Universe. Starring Simu Liu as the classic Marvel Comics hero and directed by Destin Daniel Cretton, Shang-Chi is Marvel’s first foray into the martial arts genre, and judging by the reviews pouring in, they nailed it.

Here’s a spoiler-free taste at what critics are saying, and definitely give a click or two to the full reviews if you want to read more about the first proper entry in Marvel’s next film slate after wrapping up the epic Infinity Saga.

Mike Ryan, Uproxx:

… Simu Liu, who, let’s say, over the past year has expressed confidence on social media about his performance (a confidence, I should add, I’m quite envious of), well he backs it up in the final product. He has both a swagger of a screen presence and pulls off some nifty stunt work that makes the action in Shang-Chi the best I’ve seen in an MCU movie. In that there is actual action going on in this movie, as opposed to just CGI action.

Angie Han, The Hollywood Reporter:

Shang-Chi, directed by Destin Daniel Cretton, attempts to shake up the Marvel formula by infusing it with martial-arts action and fairy-tale fantasy and grounding it in Chinese and Asian American culture. And while its disparate elements don’t meld together as smoothly as they should, they do, in the end, add up to a superhero movie fresh and fun enough to feel worth a spin.

Peter Debruge, Variety:

The real star here is Marvel, of course. Good on it for leveraging its popularity to help launch some fresh Asian talent (including indie director Destin Daniel Cretton). To mitigate the risk, Marvel tapped Asian action icons Michelle Yeoh and Tony Leung to play Shang-Chi’s aunt and dad, respectively, and paired [Simu] Liu with bigger name Awkwafina as wisecracking bestie Katy. If the film’s a hit, it’ll send an even louder message to Hollywood than the success of “Crazy Rich Asians” did.

Nancy Wang Yuen, Gizmodo:

Shang-Chi—as the first Asian American superhero to headline a film in the Marvel Cinematic Universe—is a necessary and worthy addition to the pantheon and Hollywood as a whole. He brings unmatched fighting skills and never takes himself too seriously—earning him the right to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with the full roster of MCU superheroes. Not to mention how thrilling it is to see a new group of badass Asian women ready to shake up the movie-verse.

Pete Hammond, Deadline:

Captain America, Iron Man, Black Panther and all those other Avengers might as well move over and make room for Shang-Chi, as the MCU has a new franchise and a welcome new direction post-Endgame. This thoroughly engaging reimagination of the Marvel comic book that debuted in the ’70s has been retrofitted for its movie debut, and the results are encouraging to say the least.

Kate Erbland, IndieWire:

Bolstered by the awe-inspiring fight choreography of recently deceased second unit director and bonafide stunt action badass Brad Allan (the film is dedicated to Allan, who passed away earlier this month), “Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings” doesn’t just boast the best action of the MCU, it manages to do it with two (two!) eye-popping action sequences that unspool before the film’s first act is over.

Joshua Rivera, Polygon:

In its first half, it’s a remarkably well-paced action film, and a serviceable family drama with comedy elements. In its second, it’s a surprising but languid fantasy film where, as with Black Widow before it, the expectations of a Marvel finale clash with the rest of the story. That said, as the first MCU film set firmly post-Endgame since 2019’s Spider-Man: Far From Home (a Sony production), Shang-Chi is refreshing in how little it’s concerned with big-picture universe-building details. Instead, the movie focuses on an extremely personal story that also implies exciting things about the future of Marvel movies.

Joan E. Solsman, CNET:

Marvel’s Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings is a globe-trotting martial arts romp. Like Black Panther before it, Shang-Chi lays its groundwork in the best elements of a Marvel movie and then transcends them with specificity all its own. Playfully blending genres and balancing action with jokes and story, it’s best kind of summer popcorn flick.

Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings arrives in theaters on September 3.

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The Backlog: The Best Sports Games Ever

August is, somehow, almost over, and, as hard as it is to believe, we’re quickly approaching the end of summer and the beginning of fall. Don’t fret though, because that means we’re also entering the beginning of the meat of the sports season. Football will be kicking off soon, baseball pennant races are about to take off, the WNBA playoffs arrive shortly, and the start of the NHL and NBA seasons won’t be too long after. Alongside all of these will be sports games for fans to get excited about, argue over, and enjoy — at least sort of.

While in some ways this is a golden era of sports games, especially with current graphics, they’ve also never been more frustrating. Many of our favorite sports franchises are plagued by microtransactions, glitches, or don’t even exist anymore. It’s enough to make some people throw their hands in the air and just go play the old games again. For those who want to do that, this is the list for them. Let’s go back in time and talk about the best sports games ever.

NCAA Football 14 – PlayStation 3, Xbox 360

For some fans of the NCAA franchise, they prefer NCAA 04 or 05. While those games are excellent and don’t get hampered by a lot of the extra fluff of 14, there are two key aspects of 14 that make it a superior game. For starters, the servers on 14 are still running which means players can continue to update their own rosters to at least semi-modernize the game. A dedicated community on the Operation Sports forums has been doing this for years and it’s helped keep the shelf life on 14 fresh. This ability to customize the experience allows players to do a lot with 14, whether it’s to follow along with modern re-alignment or create fun what-if scenarios.

The other aspect of 14 that puts it above previous iterations is the playbooks. Going back to the older games can be rough because the playbooks and AI are designed to follow the trends of the time when running the ball and playing conservatively was the norm. You could absolutely spread the defense out and throw the ball, but it could get a little clunky sometimes with wide receivers dropping passes and playbooks not designed to move fast. NCAA 14 on the other hand is a little more modern in comparison with plays like the read option and spread systems being a much more normal part of the game.

MVP Baseball 2005 – PlayStation 2, Xbox, GameCube, PC, PSP

MVP Baseball 2005 was so ahead of its time that it was for years the benchmark standard that every other baseball game was trying to reach. Minor league teams, the ability to edit ballparks, and in-depth franchise modes gave this game infinite replay-ability. Fans still have fond memories of the hours they sunk into MVP baseball and we can see why when we consider that a lot of these features went away for years. The ability to create our own ballparks for example was a recently celebrated addition to MLB: The Show 21.

While this is a game that likely has aged it was never really the gameplay that felt so great about it but rather all the extras around it. The soundtrack was great. The roster creation was in-depth and addicting. It had fun minigames. There was just so much to do and, in an age where sports games usually only offer three options, it’s nice to go back to something with so many fun extras. They don’t make games like this anymore, literally, because MVP Baseball was discontinued after this due to licensing issues.

ESPN NFL 2K5 – PlayStation 2, Xbox

Yes, it’s very trendy to call ESPN NFL 2K5 the best NFL game ever made, because everyone is very tired of Madden. However, it would be a lie to say there isn’t a little bit of truth to that statement. Mainly that, presentation-wise, few sports games in general have been able to top 2K5. Games would start with Chris Berman giving a quick rundown of the two teams, it would give insight into players mid-game, and the menus would diagnose how a team typically schemed itself.

Above all else, players looked normal as they moved around. QB’s took actual steps, players would have mannerisms that looked natural as they walked up to the line, and it helps for an older game look good despite the age on it. It was the little details that helped the game stand out in a time where it was acceptable for sports games to look clunky. Unfortunately, with some games still unable to overcome that clunkiness, it seems that 2K5’s impact on sports games did not go beyond the cult favorite status it has today.

Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 2 – PlayStation, Nintendo 64, Dreamcast

The game that defined an entire genre. The game that impacted the musical taste of hundreds of kids. The game that even Tony Hawk himself says was the best. Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 2 had a cultural impact that went beyond “good sports” games. It is for many people their favorite game thanks to incredible level design, fun missions, and movement that feels great. While actual skateboarding is an achievement when a few tricks are strung along, Pro Skater 2 made the idea of thousand-point combos a norm.

Even now, all these years later, Pro Skater 2 is still considered the model that every skateboarding game is held to. It’s the higest rated sports game on Metacritic and even the remake Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 1+2 didn’t come close to achieving the same cultural status. Fans will always love Pro Skater 2 and it’s earned every bit of praise it’s ever received.

NBA Street Vol. 2 – PlayStation 2, Xbox, GameCube

Basketball and video games have always had a weird relationship together. It took a long time for the simulation games to really approach a status that was considered as good as the NFL and college football games also being made. Now though, despite being considered one of the most consistently good sports games out there, franchises like NBA 2K are kind of frustrating. They just constantly have a problem with them whether it’s microtransactions, the shooting, or unskippable ads. Too often these issues get in the way of the fun of playing basketball.

This is when it’s time to go back in time and look towards NBA Street Vol. 2. While not as flashy as the modern 2K games, the NBA Street series did one thing extremely well: the arcadey basketball is extremely addicting. Breaking ankles, throwing the ball off backboards and defenders heads, the street games capture the fun of basketball in a way that modern games sometimes fail to do. Throw in a good mix of real players alongside fake ones and we have a combo that is still just as fun now as it was back in 2003.

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Nobody Worry, Steve Zahn Got To Pick His Own Prosthetic Penis For ‘The White Lotus’

The White Lotus was a huge hit for HBO this summer. The dark comedy was the talk of social media, as people really seemed to enjoy watching several groups of people have very weird vacations. You could argue, however, that no character had a weirder trip than Steve Zahn’s Mark.

Spoilers here if you haven’t seen the HBO show’s six-episode arc, but Zahn plays the husband of a very powerful tech CEO who was grappling with a number of issues while at the resort. Mark tries to bond with his son and learns a secret about his father that he spends the rest of the trip trying to unpack. That revelation came after he got a diagnosis about his genitals, which he worried may have been cancer.

One scene that got people talking came in the show’s first episode, where Zahn showed his aforementioned genitals to his wife, played by Connie Britton, to get her opinion on his potential medical issue. And now we know two important things about that scene: one, yes, the penis was a prosthetic; and two, also yes, Zahn got to pick it out himself. According to an interview with The Wrap, show creator Mike White actually gave Zahn the option to pick his own fake member before filming.

“I remember when I got the script asking Mike if I was going to have to do full frontal. And he’s like, ‘No, it’s going to be a prosthetic,’” Zahn told TheWrap. “I did have to approve the prosthetic that they used. He showed it to me first. And I was like, ‘Yeah, that’ll do.’”

He didn’t lobby for a more generous member? “No, I was like, ‘OK, great.’”

Zahn is predictably funny about the whole thing in the interview, admitting that he thought he was actually going to have to show off his real junk, not what ended up being somewhat swollen fake junk.

“I come from the old school where we were actually naked when we were naked,” Zahn said. “I mean, my ass is in so many movies and shows it’s not even funny.”

It’s good to know that Zahn was game for whatever White had in the script, even if it wasn’t necessary to reveal too much. And as we now know, somehow, given what went down at the end with Armond and the suitcase, that quick bit of full-frontal wasn’t even the most graphic thing that happened in the short series.

[via The Wrap]

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3, 2, 1 Let’s Jam: Here Are The Stylish First Stills From Netflix ‘Cowboy Bebop’ Live-Action Adaption Are Here

Alright, time to “get everybody and their stuff together,” because Netflix has finally unveiled the first stills from their upcoming live-action adaptation of the critically-acclaimed anime series Cowboy Bebop and they look good. Earlier today, the streaming service behemoth seemingly intent on bringing joy to anime and video game lovers alike released six stills and two promotional images from the upcoming series — and they look every bit as stylish as their source material. Netflix also confirmed the series release date and luckily for us, it looks like we’ll be seeing space cowboy Spike Spiegel a whole lot sooner rather than later. The live-action adaptation of Cowboy Bebop is scheduled to hit Netflix November 19.

Based on the late-90s anime of the same name, the upcoming series follows hitman-turned-bounty-hunter Spike Spiegel (John Cho) and his band of misfit friends as they fight to make a living and stay alive in a nearly lawless universe. Among his allies are spaceship captain Jet Black (Mustafa Shakir), the lazy-yet-endearing con-artist Faye Valentine (Daniella Pineda), and, last but certainly not least, an adorable Corgi named Ein. Together, they embark on adventures equal parts cool and chaotic, until the romp-filled sci-fi series turns into something with a bit higher stakes and one hell of an emotional toll.

In addition to Cho, Shakir, and Pineda, both Alex Hassell (The Miniaturist, The Isle) and Elena Satine (Magic City, Payback) are attached to the series. André Nemec is set to be both an executive producer on the show as well as its showrunner, and 0riginal series fans will be thrilled to know director Shinichirō Watanabe is acting as a consultant on the series and original composer Yoko Kanno has returned to work on its music.

The stills released today feature everything from Spike lounging on his signature yellow couch to that iconic showdown in the church. Overall, it’s a pretty good look at what’s to come without giving too much away, and definitely tides us over until Cowboy Bebop premieres on November 19:

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The Kid Laroi And Justin Bieber’s ‘Stay’ Is No. 1 On The Hot 100 Chart For The Third Week Straight

Rising star The Kid Laroi recently made history as the first Australian artist to go No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in 40 years for his Justin Bieber collaboration “Stay.” Now continuing the streak, “Stay” remains at No. 1 for a third week in a row.

The Billboard Hot 100 chart dated August 28 was released Monday, showing a lot of familiar names. According to Billboard, “Stay” gained 51.3 million radio airplay impressions, 32.7 million US streams, and 14,400 downloads this week, up an impressive 14 percent from the week prior. While “Stay” continued to hover at No. 1, Ed Sheeran’s “Bad Habits” jumped from No. 3 to No. 2, switching places with Olivia Rodrigo’s “Good For U.”

This week also saw Lizzo’s “Rumors” make its chart debut this week. The Cardi B-featuring track landed at No. 4 on the Hot 100, earning the singer her third-ever top ten track, following “Truth Hurts” and “Good As Hell.” For Cardi, “Rumors” is her tenth top ten single, which includes five No. 1 tracks. “Rumors” debuted with 30.1 million radio impressions, 20.9 million streams, and 25,200 physical and digital sales.

Lizzo shared the news of her “Rumors” success on Twitter, writing, “I calmed down & I’m locked in.. AND MY RECORDS LIVE IN THE TOP TEN.” Continuing her celebration, Lizzo graced her Twitter followers with a photo of her butt as a thank-you to her fans.

Some of the artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

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A Song Taylor Swift And Ed Sheeran Wrote The First Day They Met Will Be On ‘Red (Taylor’s Version)’

Taylor Swift and Ed Sheeran have enjoyed a friendship for years now, so it was probably easy for Swift to get him to re-record his vocals for the new version of “Everything Has Changed” for Red (Taylor’s Version). That won’t be his only appearance on the re-recorded album, though, as there’s another song on which he features, titled “Run.” The track didn’t appear on the original version of Red, but it’s been around for a while, as Sheeran revealed that he and Swift wrote the song on the first day they met.

Today, Sheeran shared a video of him re-recording his “Everything Has Changed” vocals and wrote on Instagram, “The vinyl for Red (Taylor’s version) goes up for preorder today. Also presave on all platforms. Head to @taylorswift’s page for more details. Here’s a video of me rerecording my bit for a song you might know. There’s also a brand new song me and Taylor wrote the first day we met called ‘Run’ that’s out with the new version of the record, November 19th. Enjoy guys ! Was so fun reliving all of this x.”

It’s a busy time for both Swift and Sheeran. Swift has the impending release of Red (Taylor’s Version), while Sheeran recently announced his next album, =.

Ed Sheeran is a Warner Music artist. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

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An Intense ‘Battle For The Soul Of The Universe’ Has Begun In ‘The Morning Show’ Season 2 Trailer

Despite the cheery tune, the UBA team in Apple TV+’s Emmy award-winning series The Morning Show is anything but “so happy together.” Ahead of its debut on September 17, Apple has at long last released the trailer for the show’s second season — and things look more and grim and intense than ever before.

According to the trailer’s YouTube description, the series picks up after the “explosive events of season one,” and “finds The Morning Show team emerging from the wreckage of Alex (Aniston) and Bradley’s (Witherspoon) actions to a new UBA and a world in flux, where identity is everything and the chasm between who we present as and who we really are comes into play.”

So, what exactly does this mean for the team over at UBA? Based on the trailer, a whole lot of reestablishing company values and what it looks like following a powerful predator being ousted, as well as having some intense and much-needed conversations about systemic racism. If you couldn’t get enough of the drama, comedy, and scathing social commentary that made The Morning Show season one so well-received, it looks like you’re going to love season two.

In addition to Aniston and Witherspoon, Steve Carell, Billy Crudup, Mark Duplass, Nestor Carbonell, Karen Pittman, Bel Powley, Desean Terry, Janina Gavankar, Tom Irwin, and Marcia Gay Harden will all be reprising their roles in season two. While that list seems like more than enough star power already, there are also several new stars entering the battleground, such as Will Arnett, who will be playing Alex’s lawyer, Doug Klassen, Greta Lee who will portray Stella Bak, a Silicon Valley techie who has joined the UBA executive team, and Hasan Minhaj who will take on the role of new Morning Show team member Eric Nomani. Ruairi O’Connor, Holland Taylor, Tara Karsian, Valeria Golino, and Julianna Margulies are all also slated to star in the show.

Developed and run by Kerry Ehrin and executive produced by Michael Ellenberg as well as both Aniston and Witherspoon, The Morning Show‘s 10-episode second season will debut on Friday, September 17 on Apple TV+ with the first episode, followed by one new episode weekly, every Friday.

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Stan Van Gundy Will Reportedly Return To TNT As A Game Analyst

After one season back on the bench as the head coach of the New Orleans Pelicans, Stan Van Gundy is returning to the broadcast booth. His foray back into coaching in the NBA didn’t go as planned, as he seemed unable to connect with the young Pelicans as the New Orleans brass had hoped and was fired after his lone season in the Big Easy.

However, Van Gundy had a pretty comfortable backup plan should coaching not pan out, as he had become one of the best game analysts in the booth for the NBA on TNT, a gig he will reprise for this upcoming season, per Andrew Marchand of the New York Post. Van Gundy brought a sharp eye for the game and was less prone to hot take rants and lengthy tangents in his first stint with TNT, making him a favorite of many. Returning to TNT for game work (and NBA TV as a studio analyst) makes tons of sense for both parties, as Turner was already in need of a replacement for the departing Chris Webber.

Van Gundy worked primarily with Ian Eagle in his initial TNT run and one would expect those two to be paired again fairly often, but Turner may opt to run a more regular rotation of commentators and analysts next year as they enter their first season post-Marv Albert — Marchand notes they may not officially name a “top booth” for some time. In any case, Van Gundy’s return to game broadcasts is a win for NBA fans, as his easy insight into the game will be a welcome sight.