May ends with many of its subjects sticking around a bit more, including a regular HBO show climbing to the top spot, and an HBO Max special that brought along most of the cast of Friends. Not that June didn't start with remarkable things, the most present being a horror movie based on true events.
Writing\reading this Report, a pattern can be noted that articles on TV shows enter right as the season starts, and either remain steady or lose visits with more episodes, with the only thing that raises views being the season finale. This HBO drama starring Kate Winslet as a policewoman with a fractured home life investigating a murder managed to invert it, as Mare of Easttown only earned a slot by the third episode and has only grown since then, with the miniseries closer managing to the top the list - which is also a reflection of its actual ratings, with the seventh having nearly a million more viewers compared to the first!
On May 31 and June 1, 1921, the Black population of Tulsa, Oklahoma was devastated by attacks from a White mob. Hundreds were killed, thousands were left homeless, and the prosperous Greenwood District—known as "Black Wall Street"—was destroyed. The massacre was left out of American popular history until relatively recently; the revival probably owes a lot to HBO, as both the 2019 Watchmen miniseries and last year's Lovecraft Country both featured the events. 2020 also had the unfortunate coincidence of last year's George Floyd protests being at their height on the anniversary of the massacre.
Shh! The John Krasinski-directed horror flick A Quiet Place, about a family (led by himself and real life wife Emily Blunt) who must live their lives in silence to avoid killer aliens with amazing hearing, earned itself critical and audience acclaim as well as beaucoup bucks. It got itself a sequel, but does anyone else kind of hate it when they just slap "Part 2" in front of things? It could've been A Quieter Place, or A Quiet Place: Hold Your Breath, or A Quiet Place: Shut the Fuck Up. In any case, Jim Halpert seems to have avoided the sophomore slump with this one if online ratings are to be believed.
Many viewers of the Friends reunion were worried about Perry after a withdrawn performance. During the show he admitted to anxiety surrounding how many laughs he would get. He has since announced that he and his fiancé had split after 4 years.
Osaka was fined $15,000 for not giving a press conference after her first game in the French Open; the next day she withdrew, citing her mental health.
In 1957, Kameny was fired from the Army Map Service after his superiors learned of his homosexuality. He unsuccessfully fought this in the courts, and afterwards became a gay rights activist. The late Kameny, and pride month itself, was commemorated with a Google Doodle on Wednesday.
The standup comedian and director of Eighth Grade (2018) released a new special, Inside, on May 30. The special was written and recorded amidst the COVID pandemic, which put a hold on basically all live performances; essentially, it's the standup version of Swift's Folklore.
#6 adapts this court case where a man tried to defend killing his landlord claiming to be a victim of demonic possession. Johnson is played there by Ruairi O'Connor.
Behind the portrayer of the possibly the most popular character of Friends (#7) comes the one star who managed to build a successful film career afterwards. Both are also the only ones of the six main actors without children (even if Aniston's character had a daughter during the show).
The wife of #16, a dietitian most famous for starting the Christian diet programs with Weigh Down Workshop, and who died alongside him in a plane crash.
Netflix released the latest episodes of this show revolving around DC Comics' interpretation of the Devil, and also announced a sixth and final season is on its way.
Zack Snyder's return to the zombie genre, which earned a positive response even if being noted for both indulgency (it's two and a half hours long, tossing around lots of ideas instead of just being a movie about people stealing from a casino vault in a undead-infested Las Vegas), and questionable cinematography where seemingly every shot is mostly out of focus.
The Conjuring Universe centers around the stories of these paranormal investigators, such as the haunted house that inspired The Amityville Horror and the "Devil Made Me Do It" case currently in theaters (#6, #16). The Warrens are played in those movies by Patrick Wilson (pictured) and Vera Farmiga (pictured on #6).
32 years since the Chinese government responded to students protesting by sending in rifles and tanks (in the latter case, inspiring an iconic image, which seemingly vanished from Bing last week). And they have since done everything in their power to deny the violent events that ironically happened in a "Heavenly Peace Square", down to cracking down a vigil that happened in Hong Kong last week. Or somehow comparing the events tothe invasion of the U.S. Capitol in January, when that one didn't end with hundreds of unarmed civilians being shot dead.
Closing off, the continued resonance of HBO Max reuniting the stars of a highly popular sitcom (and also bringing a plethora of guests, ranging from the show's supporting actors to famous Friends fans), first with the show about six New Yorkers who lived peculiar lives and drank lots of gourmet coffee itself, and then two more protagonists - sorry, Lisa Kudrow and Courteney Cox.
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