This week, Donald Glover interviewed himself, South Carolina beat UConn to win the 2022 NCAA women's basketball championship, and Ketanji Brown Jackson was confirmed to the Supreme Court.
Here's what NPR's Pop Culture Happy Hour crew was paying attention to — and what you should check out this weekend.
SASAMI's song "Make It Right"
I've been catching up on albums released this year, and one that I keep coming back to is SASAMI's new album, Squeeze.
SASAMI is an artist out of Los Angeles, who was in the band Cherry Glazerr for a bit, and Squeeze is her second solo album. Some of the tracks on the album are very influenced by the kind of 90s and early aughts Nu Metal bands that you'd expect to hear on The Matrix soundtrack. But the album also has songs that wouldn't feel out of place on the new Big Thief album (like Tried To Understand) or as a Weyes Blood song (like Call Me Home). My favorite track off Squeeze is "Make It Right." It's a fast-moving earworm that, I think, balances all the sounds on the album really, really well. I just can't get it out of my head. —Danny Hensel
Joan Shelley's new song "The Spur"
This week, the wonderful Kentucky singer-songwriter Joan Shelley just released the first single off of her upcoming album, The Spur, and I am so excited because she is one of my favorite artists in the entire world.
Joan Shelley's records always seem to come out at anxious points in American life — perhaps because every point in American life is anxious. This latest record comes out on June 24th and touches on her experience retreating to her family's farm in Kentucky during the pandemic when she was pregnant with her first child. It's very focused on this idea of, you know, "I reflected on my life and the things that matter," and the music is just so soothing. It really has a sense of contentment and comfort to it. —Stephen Thompson
Watching Sue Bird and Diana Taurasi's play-by-play telecast during the women's NCAA Final Four
March Madness wrapped up about a week ago, and it was also so fun to watch WNBA legends Sue Bird and Diana Taurasi co-host a MegaCast — which is a kind of live sportscast on a secondary ESPN channel — during the women's NCAA Final Four.
Sue Bird and Diana Taurasi go all the way back to UConn, where they played together, and are real-life best friends, so they have a very easy dynamic between them. It was great to hear Sue and Diana just be themselves, and get their dues in some way – because even just putting people in that position tells you, you know, that they are valued and respected. I love watching women's sports, and it's just been so great seeing it get more attention over these last couple of years. —Daisy Rosario
My Mom, Your Dad on HBO Max
The premise of My Mom, Your Dad is this: a bunch of college-age kids bring their single parents to a house called The Second Chance Retreat to meet other parents, mingle, and do all that stuff that people do on dating shows.
The catch is the kids are in a house just down the road, living together and watching everything that happens at Second Chance Retreat. They get to set their parents up on dates and meddle with them, while the parents think some random dating consultants are making all these choices and giving them these challenges. It's a show that doesn't really have a villain, and all these kids just want their parents to be happy. I love a cheesy dating reality show, and this one scratched my itch for a new one. Plus, it's eight episodes long! —Aisha Harris
More recommendations from the Pop Culture Happy Hour newsletter
- A real historical gem was uncovered last weekend: Archival news footage from 1970 of Prince Rogers Nelson as a tween, being interviewed outside his school about a Minneapolis educators strike. It's a brief clip, but very cool thing to see, and the story of how it was found is a pretty fun read, too.
- Erotic thrillers appear to be having a moment right now, and I'm here for it. The newest season of Karina Longworth's beloved (for good reason) podcast You Must Remember This is a part of this wave, a deep dive into the intersection of sex and Hollywood of the past several decades. The first episode, which dropped this week, takes on the "Porno Chic" era of the 1970s, with movies like Deep Throat and Last Tango in Paris.
- Dana Stevens's appraisal of Chris Pine's career thus far – which includes a solid argument for why he's this generation's Robert Redford – is well worth a read. —Aisha Harris
NPR intern Fi O'Reilly adapted the Pop Culture Happy Hour segment "What's Making Us Happy" into a digital page. If you like these suggestions, consider signing up for our newsletter to get recommendations every week.
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