A history of the N-word in dance? Inside one of the most daring TV scenes of the year
Welcome to Screen Gab, the newsletter for everyone who likes their history with a side of creative daring.
As Jen Yamato writes in Screen Gab no. 82, thatâs what Starzâs âBlindspottingâ serves up in its second season, with a dance sequence that delivers a narrative of the N-word through colonial America, the civil rights era and the present day.
More on how the sequence achieved its âwordless clarity,â a visit from the showrunners behind âLucky Hankâ and streaming recommendations for your weekend in this weekâs newsletter. And as always, we want to know what youâre watching too. Pretend weâre at the water cooler and give us your review of a TV show or streaming movie youâve loved; it may be included in a future edition of Screen Gab. (Submissions should be approximately 100 to 150 words and sent to [email protected] with your name and location.)
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As the ever-expanding âStar Warsâ cinematic universe grows increasingly interconnected, âStar Wars: Visionsâ (Disney+) is a shining beacon that casts light on the endless creative potential for stories set beyond the nebula of the franchiseâs established canon. Where Volume 1 tapped seven Japanese animation studios to present their interpretations of the galaxy far, far away, Volume 2 â which was released timed to my favorite fake holiday, May the 4th â gets even more global with nine shorts by animation houses in Spain, France, India, South Korea and more. The beauty of âVisionsâ is that each vignette filters âStar Warsâ through a specific cultural lens in a celebration of each studioâs distinct style and artistic point of view. Among my Volume 2 favorites are PunkRobotâs âIn the Stars,â which shows how the empireâs exploitation of a planetâs natural resources devastates its Indigenous inhabitants, and Triggerfishâs âAauâs Song,â about a minerâs young daughter who possesses a unique gift. Cartoon Saloonâs haunting âScreecherâs Reachâ is also a standout in this no-skip anthology. âTracy Brown
Something to set beside âExtraordinary Attorney Woo,â South Koreaâs âOne Dollar Lawyerâ (Hulu) is a whimsical legal dramedy, with the emphasis on the âamedy,â centered on lawyer Cheon Ji-Hoon (Namkoong Min), who accepts no more than $1 (1,000 won) from his clients in need. (This business model means heâs always behind on the rent on his office, a former coffee shop with an aquarium and fittings still intact.) âA warrior of justice with high intellect,â in the translated words of its theme song, heâs cool, colorful and eccentric, something of a Sherlock Holmes with a side of Zen Master. Kim Ji-eun plays Baek Ma Ri, a reluctant apprentice against whom he formerly faced off in court; their remarkable beauty and barbed banter suggests a romantic inevitability the series is in no hurry to fulfill. Cartoon sounds and the occasional actual cartoon color the action. With Park Jin-woo as Sa Ma-jang, Ji-Hoonâs comical sidekick clerk. âRobert Lloyd
Catch up
Everything you need to know about the film or TV series everyoneâs talking about
Itâs a great time to catch up with Starzâs âBlindspotting,â one of the most creatively daring shows on television right now, which a few weeks ago in its sophomore season delivered a stunning dance sequence that warrants its own water cooler moment. When 7-year-old Sean, who is biracial, utters the N-word for the first time, it leads to a record-scratch moment for his parents, Ashley (Jasmine Cephas Jones) and Miles (Rafael Casal). They decide to teach him the history of the word during a family visitation at San Quentin, where Miles is incarcerated.
âThe big thing about that episode is that it doesnât matter what the parentsâ circumstances are; parenting doesnât stop,â said showrunner Casal, who co-wrote the episode with Daveed Diggs and tapped series exec producer Jess Wu Calder to direct it. âWe know kids who are about that age who ask that question. How would they go about talking about it, and who handles which part of it, and how much of it can be funny and how much of it has to be serious? At what point do you just tell a kid an adult thing?â
The answer unfolds like a bedtime story as seen through Seanâs curious eyes, translated onscreen into a dance sequence designed by Emmy-nominated director and choreographer Jon Boogz. Since the first episode, dancers have appeared throughout the show in lyrical vignettes that amplify charactersâ unspoken emotions, making movement as much an elemental language of the dramedy series as music and spoken word.
Boogz himself performs in the number, in which dancers move through three fraught scenes to a poignant score by series composers Ambrose Akinmusire and Michael Yezerski â a slave auction block in colonial America; a segregated diner in the civil rights era; and a contemporary street protest turned tragic by a police killing â depicting the connection among all three with wordless clarity.
âI love the fact that weâre using Black street dances in vernacular to tell that story,â Boogz told The Times last year during rehearsals for the number, shot in evocative dreamlike scenes by director of photography Tarin Anderson. âTo me, thatâs what gives it the magic. Even though itâs traumatic with our history as African Americans in America, I love that weâre telling this historical story using something thatâs magical, that comes from our environments and our communities, which is street dance. Thatâs why the vernacular and style of movement is very specific, because I wanted to honor the Black and brown communities that created these dances that have changed the world.â
In a show thatâs shot on the docks of the San Francisco Bay, has staged an entire episode at the Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk and convinced Too $hort to play himself (among other only-on-âBlindspottingâ coups), itâs a standout segment of the season. One Boogz believes has more riding on it than a teachable moment.
âWeâre not just dancing here. Weâre trying to change peopleâs minds on whatâs possible with the art form,â said Boogz. âThis is the biggest dance sequence in âBlindspottingâ history, and I think itâs going to make history for film and television. Thereâs no doubt in my mind that this is one of the most artistic pieces that people will have ever seen on television before.â âJen Yamato
Guest spot
A weekly chat with actors, writers, directors and more about what theyâre working on â and what theyâre watching
Having gone through a Richard Russo phase in high school, begun after his 2002 novel âEmpire Fallsâ won the Pulitzer Prize, it was no surprise to me that the authorâs rip-roaringly funny campus comedy âStraight Manâ has been adapted for the screen â just that it took so long to do so. If it means having Bob Odenkirk back on TV so soon after the end of âBetter Call Saul,â though, or having replacement therapy for Netflixâs enjoyably infuriating âThe Chair,â âLucky Hankâ (AMC) was certainly worth the wait. Before the series, starring Odenkirk as an unraveling English professor at a rust belt college, wraps its first season on Sunday, showrunners Aaron Zelman and Paul Lieberstein stopped by Screen Gab to discuss their favorite campus fictions, Russoâs adaptability and what theyâre watching. âMatt Brennan
What have you watched recently that you are recommending to everyone you know?
Aaron Zelman: I loved âWhite Lotusâ [HBO Max] but everyone already knows thatâs great. One of my favorite movies of the last couple of years was âTriangle of Sadnessâ [Hulu]. I love the director, Ruben Ăstlund. A lot of people have seen âForce Majeureâ [HBO Max], one of his earlier films. But for some reason not as many seem to know âThe Squareâ [Magnolia Selects, VOD], his next film. I think itâs a genius mix of comedy, satire and intense drama.
Paul Lieberstein: I donât really enjoy watching television or movies anymore. Itâs little to do with the state of entertainment, itâs me. And I donât understand whatâs going on.
Whatâs your go-to âcomfort watch,â the movie or TV show you go back to again and again?
Zelman: I have two young kids and one thing we can all agree on is âThe Great British Baking Showâ [Netflix]. Now weâre watching a spin-off, âThe Professionals.â Itâs lovely to see reality TV that isnât mean. Also we love food, and the stuff they make is a work of art. [And] itâs nothing like any TV I make, which means I donât have to worry about being jealous.
Lieberstein: I donât really have a comfort watch. For this, I eat.
This isnât the first time Richard Russoâs been adapted for the screen, after the film âNobodyâs Foolâ and the miniseries âEmpire Falls.â What is it about his work that translates so well?
Lieberstein: Russo creates worlds that we donât want to leave and characters that we want to write and play and sit on the couch next to. So we do, we adapt them to keep them alive for ourselves.
Zelman: His dialogue is hilarious and rich, somehow both ironic and very sensitive at once. This is an extremely hard thing to achieve. Itâs something I always aspire to. Luckily, Russo has given us a great head start with âStraight Manâ/âLucky Hank.â
The campus novel / film / TV show is an established genre in its own right. Whatâs your favorite iteration of the form, in any medium, and why?
Lieberman: âWonder Boysâ [Pluto TV, Paramount+] is a movie I wonât turn off, âLucky Jimâ is a book I wonât put down â but my favorite, âStraight Manâ aside, is a short story called âThe Discipline of Shadows,â by Tim Horvath, where we get a look at a fledgling Umbrology department. Very fun and worth a read.
Zelman: âRushmoreâ [VOD]. Actually, itâs one of my favorite movies in any genre. Iâve seen it maybe more times than any other movie. It still makes me laugh in all the places it made it me laugh when I saw it the first time. And almost every time I watch it I find another little detail I missed before. Itâs more than a movie to me. Itâs a worldview. I wish I could spend weeks in that world. Maybe months. Maybe my whole life.
Whatâs next
Listings coordinator Matt Cooper highlights the TV shows and streaming movies to keep an eye on
Fri., May 5
âThe Great American Baking Showâ (Roku): The competitionâs back for a star-studded sixth season. Ellie Kemper and comic Zach Cherry co-host.
âHarriet the Spyâ (Apple TV+): The animated series based on Louise Fitzhughâs beloved childrenâs novel returns. With Beanie Feldstein.
âSiloâ (Apple TV+): The remnants of humanity eke out an existence in an underground city in this new dystopian drama. With Tim Robbins and âDuneâsâ Rebecca Ferguson.
âTaste the Nation With Padma Lakshmiâ (Hulu): Your humble host goes coast to coast in new episodes of her foodie travelogue.
âWhose Line Is It Anyway?â (The CW, 9 p.m.): âCrazy Ex-Girlfriendâsâ Rachel Bloom plays along in this new episode.
âThe Articulate Hourâ (KOCE, 9 and 10 p.m.): Scientists, artists, et al. discuss this ever-changing world in which weâre living in this new series.
âMama June: Family Crisisâ (WE, 9 p.m.): Here comes another season of the âHere Comes Honey Boo Booâ spinoff.
Sat., May 6
âVigilante, Inc.â (Tubi): This new exposĂŠ investigates the dark side of online sleuthing by everyday citizens.
The coronation of King Charles III (various channels, 3 a.m.): Broadcast and cable news outlets will offer live coverage of the proceedings from Westminster Abbey in London.
âWhen Love Springsâ (Hallmark, 8 p.m.): Amenities at this bed and breakfast include turndown service in this new TV movie. With Rhiannon Fish.
âAbducted on Prom Nightâ (Lifetime, 8 p.m.): If itâs not too much of a stretch, weâre guessing the limo driver did it in this new thriller.
Sun., May 7
âLast Cowboy Standingâ (Fox Nation): Theyâre taking the bull by the horns in this new rodeo-themed reality competition.
âEarth Focus Presentsâ (KCET, 8 p.m.): Young STEM students compete in a NASA-sponsored coding contest in the new episode âZero Gravity.â
âThe Real Housewives of Atlantaâ (Bravo, 8 p.m.): Trash will be talked, drinks thrown, etc. as the reality franchise entry returns.
âAccomplice to Murder With Vinnie Politanâ (Court TV, 8 p.m.): They didnât do the deed but they may or may not have helped in this new true-crime series.
âNaked and Afraid: Last One Standingâ (Discovery, 8 p.m.): Theyâre rough, tough and in the buff in this new entry in the outdoor-survival series.
â2023 MTV Movie & TV Awardsâ (MTV, 8 p.m.; other channels): Emmy winner Jennifer Coolidge is singled out for special honors.
âViceâ (Showtime, 8 p.m.): The Emmy-winning newsmagazine is back with new episodes.
âRich & Shamelessâ (TNT, 8:30 p.m.): The mystery of former NBA star Dennis Rodmanâs missing millions is probed in the season premiere.
âSummer House: Marthaâs Vineyardâ (Bravo, 9 p.m.): A group of Black friends cohabitate at the tony vacation destination in this new franchise entry.
âThe 2010sâ (CNN, 9 p.m.): Are you already nostalgic for a decade that ended not all that long ago? Try this new docuseries.
Mon., May 8
âTo the Endâ (Hulu): Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, et al., keep the fight against climate change on the front burner in this inspiring 2022 documentary.
âJeopardy! Mastersâ (ABC, 8 p.m.; also Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday): Top-ranked players take part in this new three-week tournament hosted by Ken âthe GOATâ Jennings.
âIndependent Lensâ (KOCE, 10 p.m.): A 30-something man tries to come to terms with his motherâs mysterious disappearance decades earlier in the poignant 2022 documentary âSam Now.â
Tue., May 9
âHannah Gadsby: Something Specialâ (Netflix): The genderqueer Aussie comic waxes domestic in their latest stand-up special.
âJudge Steve Harveyâ (ABC, 9 p.m.): Heâs back on the bench for a second season of this unscripted comedy series.
âAccusedâ (Fox, 9 p.m.): âNashvilleâsâ Keith Carradine guest stars as an aging rocker in the crime anthologyâs Season 1 finale.
âDancing Queensâ (Bravo, 9 p.m.): Six women from diverse backgrounds shake a leg on the ballroom circuit in this new unscripted series.
Wed., May 10
âAfrican Queensâ (Netflix): Cleopatra (Adele James) is ready for her close-up in a new edition of this historical docudrama from Jada Pinkett Smith.
âBecoming Ian Bradyâ (Prime Video): This new true-crime series retells the dark tale of the child killer and his lover/accomplice Myra Hindley who terrorized Manchester, England, in the mid-1960s.
âClass of â09â (FX on Hulu): Fledgling FBI agents prepare to fight the future in this decades-spanning techno-thriller. With Kate Mara and âAtlantaâsâ Brian Tyree Henry.
âThe Muppets Mayhemâ (Disney+): Dr. Teeth and the Electric Mayhem Band â a.k.a. the âMuppet Showâ house band â bring the boogie in this new spinoff. With Lilly Singh.
âWild Scandinaviaâ (KOCE, 8 p.m.): See the lovely lakes, the wonderful telephone system and many interesting furry animals including the majestic moose in this new three-part special.
âNovaâ (KOCE, 9 p.m.): The new episode âHidden Volcano Abyssâ revisits the powerful volcanic eruption and subsequent tsunami that struck the island nation of Tonga in 2022.
âThe Game Show Showâ (ABC, 10 p.m.): Find out whatâs behind Door #2 with this four-part history of the TV game-show genre. With Bob Eubanks, Vanna White, et al.
âIconic America: Our Symbols and Stories With David Rubensteinâ (KOCE, 10 p.m.): The Gadsden Flag â you know the one: yellow field, coiled rattlesnake, âDonât Tread on Meâ â is the subject of this new episode.
Thu., May 11
âIntelligence: A Special Agent Specialâ (Peacock): David Schwimmer and âTed Lassoâsâ Nick Mohammed are back on the case in a one-off episode of the spy comedy.
â58th Academy of Country Music Awardsâ (Prime Video, 5 p.m.): It donât mean a thang if it ainât got that twang as Dolly Parton and Garth Brooks co-host the annual ceremony.
â(Re)solvedâ (Vice, 9 p.m.): A new episode reexamines the 2008 overdose death of Oscar-winning âDark Nightâ actor Heath Ledger.
The complete guide to home viewing
Get Screen Gab for everything about the TV shows and streaming movies everyoneâs talking about.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.