The Monitor

WIRED
The Monitor

Tune in each week to hear the WIRED Entertainment squad discuss (and sometimes bicker over) the biggest news in movies, music, TV, and Internet culture. Want to know what we think of the latest superhero flick, prestige TV show, or Twitter beef? It's all right here—you just have to turn off all your other screens first.

Episodes

  1. 12/10/2016

    Which Late-Night TV Host Is Better at Trump Takedowns?

    If the month before a presidential election is a time ripe for anything, it’s political satire. Memes, op-ed essays, riffs by standup comedians—all these things hit fever-pitch levels in the weeks before folks got to the polls in the US. But nowhere has it been more prevalent this year than on late-night television. But who is doing it best? Is it Samantha Bee and the team at Full Frontal? Is it The Late Show with Stephen Colbert? Or is it Lin-Manuel Miranda hosting Saturday Night Live? All of them have done segments riffing on the election—and, more specifically, taking Trump to task—but which has done it best? That’s the topic of this week’s Monitor—and while we won’t spoil the outcome here, we will say that the debate is heated. So check it out, won’t you? We’ve got writers and editors Peter Rubin, K.M. McFarland, and Angela Watercutter on the mic, and each of them is taking a different side in this matter. Then stick around after the late-night TV discussion for an excerpt from Watercutter’s interview with Issa Rae, the creator and star of HBO’s new series Insecure. A few helpful links for things we talk about in the podcast: -WIRED’s liveblog of the second presidential debate -The best tweets of the debate -Kenneth Bone and the other best memes from the debate -Angela Watercutter’s piece on the impact of last weekend’s Saturday Night Live -Charley Locke’s review of the Insecure pilot -The New York Times Magazine’s profile of Issa Rae

    38 min
  2. 05/10/2016

    Trust Us: Luke Cage and Westworld Are Better Off on TV

    Westworld started life as a Michael Crichton movie. Luke Cage first burst on the scene as a comics character decades ago. This past weekend, both of those stories made their television debuts—and both are better suited for the small screen. At least, that’s what we think here at The Monitor. Luke Cage’s story, you see, is about one hero trying to help his community in Harlem. That’s a tale much better told in a series of episodes on Netflix than it is in a massive Avengers-vs.-everybody summer blockbuster. (Though we would really like to see Cage join the Avengers in a movie rumble sometime.) Meanwhile, Westworld, which premiered Sunday on HBO, is about what happens if a bunch of artificially intelligent “hosts” at twisted theme park get a virus and start acting out. AI technologies have advanced a lot since Crichton’s movie came out in 1973. Now HBO’s series can dig deep into the big questions of AI every week—instead of trying to tackle them all in one movie. Do you agree? Think we’re full of it? Check out this week’s WIRED Culture podcast to see if we’re on to something. Also, we’re not just talking about Westworld and Luke Cage. We also have writers and editors Peter Rubin, K.M. McFarland, and Angela Watercutter riffing on the season premiere of Saturday Night Live and editor at large Jason Tanz talking with Cage’s showrunner Cheo Hodari Coker. Tune in! A few helpful links for things we talk about in the podcast: -K.M. McFarland’s review of the Luke Cage pilot -Jason Tanz’s feature on Luke Cage -Charlie Jane Anders’ story examining whether Westworld can do for sci-fi what Game of Thrones did for fantasy -K.M. McFarland’s review of the Westworld pilot

    44 min
  3. 28/09/2016

    Folks, TV May Have Reached Peak Millennial Slacker-Com

    You can’t fire up a Roku these days without immediately being offered a steady stream of shows about twenty-, thirty-, and fortysomethings figuring out their lives in the hip ‘burgs of cities like New York, Los Angeles, and Chicago. (See: Love, You’re the Worst, Master of None, etc.) The most recent additions—Easy and High Maintenance—both dropped within the last couple weeks, and while we here at WIRED Culture are enjoying them, they’ve got us wondering: Are we at peak millennial slacker-com? (That’s not what these shows are actually called; we just made that up.) On one hand, the Monitor crew argues, it is possible that too many shows in the same vein can be overkill. But on the other, these shows come from smart creators like mumblecore maverick Joe Swanberg and stoner comedy mavens Katja Blichfeld and Ben Sinclair—and with most of these shows being on streaming services like Netflix and HBO Go, they’re great for leisurely consumption. So maybe the answer is, appropriately, just ¯\_(ツ)_/¯. Regardless, we’d like to know. And we’ve got writers and editors Peter Rubin, K.M. McFarland, and Angela Watercutter in the booth hashing it out and we’d love to have you listening in. Also, stick around after their discussion to hear Rubin and a few other members of the WIRED cohort engage in a little pun-off. (It’s funny. Promise.) A few helpful links for things we talk about in the podcast: -WIRED’s binge-watching guide for Love -Liz Stinson’s story on High Maintenance -Angela Watercutter’s review of the Easy pilot -Jason Tanz’s feature on the Duplass brothers

    36 min

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Tune in each week to hear the WIRED Entertainment squad discuss (and sometimes bicker over) the biggest news in movies, music, TV, and Internet culture. Want to know what we think of the latest superhero flick, prestige TV show, or Twitter beef? It's all right here—you just have to turn off all your other screens first.

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