Plus: Young Thug is going home.
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GQ's Manual
How to entertain yourself this weekend.
Ethan Slater talks Oz, Ari, and Marcel Marceau, plus new music from Tyler, the Creator and everything else you want to watch,
listen to, and read about this weekend. —Alex Pappademas, culture editor
Trending
* Ryan Reynolds is a buff Bode bro
* Young Thug is going home
* After a 35-Year wait, a legendary vintage watch brand has finally returned
Ethan Slater
Oz Fest
Ethan Slater was already, by some metrics, pretty famous—dude played Spongebob on Broadway with no special effects save a necktie
and some squarish pants and got himself a Tony nomination for it. But when GQ’s Eileen Cartter caught up with him in New York City
not long ago, she found Slater cautiously negotiating new territory like a veritable Sponge Out of Water (okay, that’s our last
sponge joke this newsletter; thank you for your indulgence).
At the end of next month, you’ll see Slater as an historically pivotal Munchkin in Wicked, the first half of Jon M. Chu’s
blockbuster-in-waiting adaptation of the hit Broadway musical about good and bad witches, and he’s an even bigger part of the
second Wicked film, which drops next year. Plus he’s dating Ariana Grande, his Wicked co-star and fellow Jim Carrey fan, so he’s
got the gossip-press attention from that to contend with as well. It’s enough to make a man want to go live under the sea, in some
sort of scaly yellow fruit—OK, that’s the last sponge joke—but for now Slater’s hanging in there, anxious yet focused, dreaming of
a future in which he can leverage his physical-comedy skills to become another Carrey while also being the next Tracy Letts. That
is such a specific lane that we want it to work out for him, just to see what that would look like: Ace Ventura Osage County,
anyone?
Odder Future
Tyler, the Creator’s Chromakopia dropped this week at the convention-bucking and notably humane-to-online-culture-journalists hour
of 6AM on Monday morning. It finds the Odd Future mastermind-turned-multihyphenate following up 2021’s no-crying-on-the-yacht
award-tour Call Me If You Get Lost with a decisive vibe shift—this, writes GQ’s Frazier Tharpe, is “the album version of a
vacation hangover, coming home to find the real world and all its stresses lying in wait.”
It’s still a Tyler album, with all the ornery braggadocio and God-moving-over-the-face-of-Lake-Como beat-changes that entails, but
the Creator is beginning to question his priorities after years of accumulating Grammys, cars and private-jet miles while his
real-world friends log more traditional game-of-life milestones (marriages, kids, etc): “They sharin’ pictures of these moments,
shit is really cute/And all I got is photos of my ‘Rari and some silly suits.” As this is GQ, we can neither confirm nor deny that
there’s more to life than silly suits, but it’s inspiring to watch Tyler work through these questions with the same blunt honesty
and mordant wit he’s brought to everything he’s done since the days of the cockroach. Best rap album ever about turning 33 (aka
“the gateway to 35”)? That, we can confirm.
Oddest Future
Lastly, but by no means least: ‘80s teen-movie actor turned semi-enthusiastic online-irony-industrial-complex participant Corey
Feldman also sings and plays guitar and writes songs. Did you know that? Did you know that, this summer, Corey opened for Limp
Bizkit on a tour that Limp’s always-I’m-rubber-you’re-glue-ing frontman Fred Durst dubbed “Loserville”? Having absorbed those two
pieces of information, do you have follow-up questions? Then you’re going to want to check out GQ contributor Cole Louison’s epic
account of a few days on the road with Feldman and Durst and the people in their respective orbits, which (we will humbly suggest)
is the finest ten thousand word story you will ever read about the divergent yet converging lives and careers of two guys who met
on Backgammon Night at the Playboy Mansion and the different bargains they’ve both struck with the world.
Style
* Piaget is re-releasing Andy Warhol’s most iconic watch
* These boots were made for gawking
Wellness
* How Randall Park trained for his first marathon at age 50
* You should be doing hamstring stretches every day—here’s why (and 7 to try)
Entertainment
* Tom Hanks's Uncanny-Valley movie Here is good. No, for real
* How Venom: The Last Dance leaves room for the next dance
Sports
* The New York Yankees have completely lost their aura
* On the Road with Richard Sherman, who likes an acai bowl but can’t quit Taco Bell
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