RECENT ARTICLES
"We’re Like the Anti-‘Billions’": How ‘Succession’ Makes Wealth Look Miserable
It’s a new day in corporate America, and Kendall Roy needs a bachelor pad. Back when Succession began, Kendall was still living in the home he once shared with his ex-wife, an Upper East Side townhouse fit for a family—or awkward break-up sex on the staircase. For his emo phase in Season 2, Kendall sort of moved on, ditching the house that “smelt of Rava” and finding a rental (“It’s fashion week; all the good penthouses are gone”) where he could lick his wounds. He then bought a block of five luxury condos in Tribeca, one of which later in the real world for $10 million. Unlike the...…It’s a new day in corporate America, and Kendall Roy needs a bachelor pad. Back when Succession began, Kendall was still living in the home he once shared with his ex-wife, an Upper East Side townhouse fit for a family—or awkward break-up sex on the staircase. For his emo phase in Season 2, Kendall sort of moved on, ditching the house that “smelt of Rava” and finding a rental (“It’s fashion week; all the good penthouses are gone”) where he could lick his wounds. He then bought a block of five luxury condos in Tribeca, one of which later in the real world for $10 million. Unlike the...WW…
We’re Going to Run Out of TV
Filed under:In the early months of the pandemic, television was in a rare position to maintain a modicum of normalcy. But as the shutdown drags on, and as sets remain closed, a drought is upon us.For the past half-decade, TV has been defined by its surplus. The era we’re in, which is maybe just ending, has many names: Peak TV, Too Much TV, the Streaming Age. Whatever you call it, the result is a proliferation of platforms and content to stock them. With precious few exceptions, the conversation around TV has shifted from shows themselves to the surrounding infrastructure. The average...…Filed under:In the early months of the pandemic, television was in a rare position to maintain a modicum of normalcy. But as the shutdown drags on, and as sets remain closed, a drought is upon us.For the past half-decade, TV has been defined by its surplus. The era we’re in, which is maybe just ending, has many names: Peak TV, Too Much TV, the Streaming Age. Whatever you call it, the result is a proliferation of platforms and content to stock them. With precious few exceptions, the conversation around TV has shifted from shows themselves to the surrounding infrastructure. The average...WW…
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