Stand-up comedians say things with no filter and no fear — just the funny truth. And that’s why fans love Daniel Tosh. Yup, he doesn’t hold back. He turns uncomfortable topics into a laughing stock with his deadpan delivery and dark sense of humor. Similarly, his stand-up career has been edgy. Also, he provides a unique flavor to modern comedy. Speaking of his work, here’s a look at the Daniel Tosh comedy specials, where to watch them, and learn if he’s hitting the road.
The Daniel Tosh Comedy Specials
Explore the list of his comedy specials according to IMDb:
True Stories I Made Up (2005)
It’s his first comedy album. Also, this one is an audio-only special. Even so, it still introduced his signature sarcasm and sharp takes.
Completely Serious (2007)
In this visual comedy showcase, Daniel went all in. Similarly, he took shots at random stuff while joking about saving the world.
Happy Thoughts (2011)
After the 2007 special, the comedian leveled up and took on San Francisco. Likewise, he dived into whatever was asking for it. Specifically, he made fun of pop culture and politics.
People Pleaser (2016)
For his latest comedy special, Daniel left no topic untouched.
Where to watch Daniel Tosh’s Comedy Specials
Daniel Tosh’s comedy shows are available for both listening and viewing. Based on his official website, fans can listen to all of his specials on Amazon Music. At the same time, they can listen to the 2005, 2011, and 2016 performances on Apple Music and Spotify. Similarly, his two most recent comedy specials are streaming on Apple TV+. Also, all of his stand-up offerings are available for purchase on Amazon.
Daniel Tosh’s Upcoming Tour Dates
Based on TicketMaster, Daniel is on the move. His tour is in full swing on the following dates:
October 04 (Saturday, 8 PM) at Las Vegas, NV | The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas
November 08 (Saturday, 8 PM) at Las Vegas, NV | The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas
November 22 (Saturday, 7 PM) at Monterey, CA | Golden State Theatre
November 22 (Saturday, 9:30 PM) at Monterey, CA | Golden State Theatre
November 25 (Tuesday, 7 PM) at Santa Cruz, CA | Santa Cruz Civic Auditorium
November 29 (Saturday, 7 PM) at San Francisco, CA | The Masonic
The Punchline
The Daniel Tosh comedy specials have a specialty. It’s walking the line between hilarious and controversial. Likewise, he’s brutally funny and sharp. He also delivers jokes with bite and no sugar coating. If you want to enjoy and laugh, you can stream his previous specials or watch him live on one of his road shows.
Comedians do more than jokes — Joe Rogan is living proof. He wears many hats. Specifically, he can host a podcast, be a UFC commentator, and more. He is where he is for a reason. It wasn’t an overnight success. But before all that, Rogan was already lighting up the stage with his signature style of comedy. Likewise, his brand signifies loud, bold, and thought-provoking entertainment. Similarly, the Joe Rogan comedy specials are unfiltered, intense, and full of sharp takes. If you’re wondering where to catch his works or if he’s going on tour, here’s everything you need to know.
For his first comedy special, Joe delivered jokes that pull no punches. Still, they land every time.
Live (2006)
The comedian shot his second showcase in Arizona and brought the heat.
Shiny Happy Jihad (2007)
In this one, Rogan did not hold back. Specifically, he touched on sex, religion, and world issues.
Talking Monkeys in Space (2009)
He went off about evolution, babies, and same-sex marriage.
Live from the Tabernacle (2012)
Next up, Joe poked fun at topics including marriage and science. Also, he tackled circumcision.
Rocky Mountain High (2014)
This time, the stand-up comedian talks about Bigfoot hunting and cold weather. Similarly, he explains why aliens would never understand Kim Kardashian.
Triggered (2016)
Rogan brings his usual energy to joke about parenting, Santa Claus, pot gummies, and dolphins.
Strange Times (2018)
Here, he takes shots at pop culture, pro wrestling, cats, and pot laws. He also speaks about vegans.
Burn the Boats (2024)
For his most recent show, Joe performed with unfiltered takes at the Majestic Theater in San Antonio.
Where to watch Joe Rogan’s Comedy Specials
Joe Rogan’s last three comedy specials (Triggered, Strange Times, Burn the Boats) are currently streaming on Netflix. On the other hand, his 2014 showcase is available through Apple TV+, Prime Video, and Spotify. As for his earlier specials (I’m Gonna Be Dead Someday, Live, Shiny Happy Jihad, Talking Monkeys in Space, Live from the Tabernacle), they are available for purchase on Amazon. Besides that, you can check out clips of his performances on free streaming platforms like YouTube.
Joe Rogan’s Upcoming Tour Dates
According to TicketMaster, Joe Rogan is not going on tour right now. In short, he has not announced any upcoming shows. Still, his official website states that he regularly performs stand-up at Comedy Mothership — his local club in Austin.
The Punchline
For sure, you know Joe Rogan for his hosting stints in the UFC and his trending podcast. But if you haven’t seen his comedy, you’re missing out! The Joe Rogan comedy specials hit hard and are hilarious. Wait no more and watch the master of mic drops.
Sarah McLachlan has announced her first proper LP in over a decade. Better Broken, which follows her 2016 Christmas album, Wonderland, and 2014’s Shine On, is set for release on September 19 via Concord. The warm, evocative title track arrives today along with a video directed by Lauren Wade. Check it out below.
“A lot of the lyrics on this record came from thinking about the world right now and asking, ‘How do we move through this landscape? How do we keep our heads above water when it feels like so much is falling apart?’” McLachland said in a press release. “I don’t know if I have any answers, but channeling all that angst and uncertainty into the music has been so cathartic. I hope that this record provides people with some relief and release—but in the end I just want them to take whatever they need from it, and make the songs part of their own story.”
McLachlan laid down the new album at Sound City Studios in Los Angeles. She enlisted producers Tony Berg and Will Maclellan and a cast of musicians including Wendy Melvoin, Matt Chamberlain, Benny Bock, and Greg Leisz. MUNA’s Katie Gavin makes a guest appearance on the song ‘Reminds Me’.
Better Broken Cover Artwork:
Better Broken Tracklist:
1. Better Broken
2. Gravity
3. The Last to Go
4. Only Way Out Is Through
5. Reminds Me [ft. Katie Gavin]
6. One in a Long Line
7. Only Human
8. Long Road Home
9. Rise
10. Wilderness
11. If This Is the End…
For a while, the names Frankie Cosmos and Greta Kline could almost be used interchangeably. Deriving her moniker from the poet Frank O’Hara, the musician hoped the distinction would serve as a shield of privacy despite the intimate nature of her songwriting, and at least until her label debut, 2014’s Zentropy, it probably helped. Now, Frankie Cosmos is a four-piece that includes Alex Bailey (guitarist and member of the band since 2017), Katie Von Schleicher (who co-produced 2022’s Inner World Peace and is a singer-songwriter in her own right), and drummer Hugo Stanley. Their new album, Different Talking, is the first that they recorded as a unit with no outside studio producers, tracking it at a house in upstate New York that they all lived in for a month and a half. Which, in a funny little way, means that it is the first self-produced Frankie Cosmos since Kline first started posting sparse folk-pop songs on Bandcamp. More than reevaluating the meaning of home-recording at a different point in life, of course, Different Talking considers and embodies home, grief, and all those microcosmic, universe-expanding feelings the heart seems to produce in circles as the world flashes by. “We can all agree/ That time is both frozen and moving faster than we can see,” goes a song titled ‘One! Grey! Hair!’. We can all agree, and Frankie Cosmos can play to its rhythm.
We caught up with Frankie Cosmos to talk about kitchen table crafts, recording in a house, going to town, and other inspirations behind Different Talking.
Kitchen table crafts
Greta Kline: I wanted to make a category that kind of encompasses two things: Katie and I were doing watercolors throughout, and Hugo and I were doing spirograph. All of us were doodling and stuff, and we had notepads around. I ended up using scraps of everybody’s different visual art throughout the album in the insert. The kitchen was where we would do other visual stuff, and it was a nice mental break.
Hugo Stanley: I don’t know how intentional this was, but I feel like Greta almost curated or cultivated the vibe of the creative activities in the kitchen, and it’s cool that it ended up informing the art for the album. It felt like a way to take a break from working on the record. But in retrospect, it was actually also productive in some way. Unless that was your plan all along.
GK: No, it wasn’t.
Alex Bailey: What I remember is every night, Katie would go to bed at a reasonable time, and then Greta and Hugo and me – I would be there too, but I didn’t spirograph as intensely as Greta and Hugo. They would sit there and think that they were unlocking, like, theoretical shapes with the spirograph. [laughter] They would be on theoretical shapes Wikipedia talking about, like, Mobius Strip.
Katie Von Schleicher: I’d wake up at, like, eight or something and do my morning stuff, and Greta would come down and before even having coffee would be like, “Here’s a Mobius Strip that I created. Do you actually know how the Mobius script works?” And I’d be like, “What happened at 2am?”
AB: There’s a good video of you guys talking about the Mobius Strip.
GK: It’s a nonorientable surface… [laughter] It’s kinda like we were at this little summer camp – there’s the music room, and then there’s the art room, and the cafeteria becomes the art room after hours. Katie and I did crafts during the day, we did watercolors in the afternoon, have a coffee or matcha and paint on this little paper that we got in town.
KVS: I spent more time probably in the control room just doing, whatever, crossfades in Pro Tools.
HS: I feel like Katie, by virtue of being the engineer, was just on a completely different schedule than the rest of us in a way, even though we were together a lot of the time. An engineer’s work fully encompasses the band work, and then some. So there were a lot of times where we’d be getting takes, and the three of us maybe would walk away and Katie would continue to work hard.
GK: If Katie had a break, it meant we all had a break.
KVS: I think my schedule is just because I’m an introvert, and I wanted some time alone to sit and stare at the wall at night.
Going to town
I’m assuming you mean this literally, not figuratively.
AB: [laughs] Yeah, I didn’t consider, like, going to town.
GK: I meant it literally. We were ten minutes from town, and we didn’t have very close neighbors. It was a pretty isolated house, so we could have gone the whole summer without seeing a single other human, and we elected to go on trips to the grocery store and to the farmer’s market and to get treats, and that became a really nice break activity.
KVS: All of us are used to living in a city, right? So I would just jog around this circle around the field where we were, or jog on this hiking trail up the hill. But otherwise, I would be like, “Can we please just drive fifteen minutes to town and walk around and stare at antiques for an hour?”
I feel like the tension between staying inside and going out – wanting to be part of the world or simply observing it – is embedded on the album. I’m thinking of the first lines on the final track, ‘Pothole’, even though it’s looking back on living in the city.
GK: I’m realizing that that last track, it feels a little like The Truman Show. It’s like everything revolves around me, whether it’s negative or positive – the first half is kinda negative and the second half is finding the beauty in the world – and I think that relates to the concept of going to town because it’s about these little characters in your that might be microscopic on the scale of the universe, but they’re a huge part of your experience of a time in your life. For us, there were these specific things that became regular parts of our schedule. We became friendly with the woman who sold mozzarella at the farmer’s market and the local paper that we would pick up at the grocery store. We would read about the town’s comings and goings. And even though we were kinda weird outsiders, we got to have this connection to these little random things.
KVS: I think the paper was also this marker of time because we were outside of the city, in this very constant sort of visual space – even when you go outside, nature is also this constant. It’s just very different from a city. It was a weekly paper, so it would be like, “Is there a new one?” And we’d be like, “Oh, no.” Because we kind of had no sense of time outside of if the new paper drops. It would be spread across the kitchen table, and we’d be collectively doing the crossword. It became part of the crafts. I also think that the reason it feels so album- y to me is that we spent so long, but there are not, like, a million little sounds across the album. We had this set of watercolors that we used to make all of the songs coalesce, and I think it is informed by where we were. Like you said, on ‘Pothole’, reflecting back on the city, it still feels like it was painted with the brush of where we were when we did it.
GK: That’s really cool, Katie. I hadn’t thought about it like that, but all the tools were in the house, and that was our limitation. And then sometimes you go to town and you have to get another tool.
AB: While we were practicing ‘Against the Grain’ was when we saw the first mouse appear.
GK: He came into the room where we were playing loud music, and he kinda ran around and then ran out. Like, he liked ‘Against the Grain’.
AB: It was a vibey song for him. We humanely caught, what was it, 27 mice or something and released them.
HS: Assuming there weren’t any repeats.
AB: Absolutely, Hugo, that’s a good point. It felt like we were sort of providing dinner and an Uber service to the mice. [laughter] It was like, “Come to this restaurant inside of a tube, and I’m gonna meet you back outside.”
GK: We gave them delicious cheese and delicious halva and all kinds of great stuff.
Was that from the mozzarella lady?
GK: Sometimes. We mostly ate the mozzarella from the mozzarella lady.
AB: For a while, we were doing this multiple times a day.
GK: Every night, we would set the traps, and every morning, we would empty them, and they would have little cute mice in them. Everyone emptied them except for me – I didn’t want to empty them.
KVS: Well, if we have to make it metaphorical, it’s kind of a metaphor for all of our different experiences within the world to the same stimuli, because we all had very different feelings about the mice.
HS: Our interactions with the mice and the mouse traps would be at different times sometimes based on our sleep schedule. The first person up would sometimes be the person that liberates the mice. Sometimes I’d be lying in bed but still awake, and I’d hear the trap go and take one out, because otherwise they’re in there for hours and hours.
Was the tally correlated with your productivity in any way?
GK: Personally, my goal was to record at about the same rate that we were collecting mice. When we had released three, I wanted to have three songs recorded. There was a point where it was feeling in tandem, and I wanted to keep up with the rate. I don’t know if I expressed that to you guys. And we kept a tally also, for the information – it was really to relay to the owners of the house, this is where the mice are mostly getting caught, what time and stuff like that, so that they could figure it out. But I had a really detailed tally every day, like, “Katie released one that was found in the office room, caught with halva.” I had a list of what songs we practiced that night, what songs we recorded that day, what movie we watched, and how many mice had been caught, sort of graphing them altogether.
KVS: Not surprising given your songs, Greta, but, obviously, Greta records every detail of everything. It’s really impressive. I usually forget and have no idea, and she’ll be like, “Here’s my list of the exact facts of what happened throughout time.”
Sometimes it’s “The facts: I felt betrayed” [a line from ‘One! Grey! Hair!’], and sometimes the facts are a list of every mouse and how it was caught.
GK: Exactly.
AB: I was taking them out three at a time by myself.
KVS: I took one out almost every morning. One time, it was two.
GK: If I didn’t see Alex take them out or if Alex didn’t see the mice before Katie, my fear was that Katie was just gonna set them back loose in the house. Because Katie liked them a little too much. Katie wanted to live amongst the mice.
AB: She would grab a handful of fucking rice on the way out and be like, “This is for the mouse.”
KVS: I have a pet bird, and I would feed her rice, so I had this cooked brown rice. And yeah, I got to a point where I started feeling so guilty because even though we’re living in the country, we’re still in this very separated world from the mice and how they live, and they don’t live outside. They’ve never lived outside. Even across a field yeah, they’re just gonna… So I would leave a little rice for them to be oriented by.
Wah pedal
There’s a range of guitar textures and tones that are weaved throughout the album, and I’m curious why you picked the wah pedal.
AB: Whenever you hear the really biting, trebly guitar, like on ‘Not Long’ or the end of ‘Pothole’, that’s the wah pedal.
KVS: A wah pedal is just a filter, so Alex used the wah pedal completely pushed all the way up, which actually presses it to a zone that’s brighter than is possible without the wah pedal on. Every synthesizer on the record became these pulses of a filter opening and closing, which to me, in ‘Pothole’, is like the sun peeking over the city’s skyline in the second half. I feel like maybe that’s a response to where Alex was at because Alex came into the sessions with this new set of tools, like the attenuator on the amp and the wah pedal. I did synths later, maybe responding to your sonic palette a little bit with the filter.
AB: This could have gone into the “going to the town” category too, because we bought the wah pedal at a guitar shop very close by. It’s also tied into this whole Cindy Lee style of guitar – I’m a huge fan of Pat Flegel and Women in general – and if you cross check it, it does sound a lot like that.
GK: Yeah, I think we all like that Cindy Lee record.
KVS: Because we weren’t in a studio, perhaps, but sonically, the thing I’m so proud about with this album is that we had this palette and we stuck to it for every song. To give Hugo a lot of credit as a drummer, he’s super textural and creative, so with the drums, he sets different tones throughout different songs. We had our jobs to do that, but we kept using our same set of tools.
AB: On something like Inner World Peace, we were changing the guitar sound, and I was wanting to basically fix it because we were getting something wrong every time. But I think with this one, even from the arrangement part, I had it figured out, and I didn’t feel like I needed to change anything basically the whole time.
HS: Because we arranged and recorded in the same place, I feel like that’s conducive to being more economical with arrangements. More often, my experience has been that you work on songs for a year or two, and then you go into the studio and suddenly you’re in this new environment and you have to reimagine what it should sound like in a way. There’s this sense of like, “It sounds like this in the practice space, but it’s not gonna sound like this when we make the record.” Whereas in this situation, we were in the space we were gonna record, and we were using the tools that we were gonna use. We could rely less on this hypothetical future sound, and there was a sort of practicality to the arranging.
Cooperative games
I’m guessing this also fits in with the crafts.
GK: The way that it fits in is that we were playing Boggle, which, sometimes you doodle on the sheet where you’re writing words, and there was a Boggle sheet that ended up part of the album art. But mostly, we were playing a lot of this game called Codenames and another game called Redactle. With Redactle, you go on a website and it shows you a random Wikipedia page, but it’s completely redacted except the articles, so you have to guess words until you unlock what the page is about. And it’s either impossible or really, really fun. We would all be on the same Redactle page, working together, typing in a bazillion guesses, all of us sitting on our own computers at the kitchen table.
KVS: That was a nice, silent thing. The screen of Redactle is black with white text – it looks like we’re coding or something. It’s strange.
GK: I actually have a really good way to connect Codenames to making the record too. It’s a board game that comes in a set, and you have these cards that have words on them, and you’re working in teams to get someone to guess which words are part of your group of words that you’ve been assigned. We also invented a bunch of new ways to play it also, and I think that gameplay and creating a puzzle for yourself fits into the thing of having a palette and using it in different ways. We had this board game, but we weren’t just playing it the way it was intended. We were also making up new versions of it because we got bored of the original version or just wanted to try something new.
KVS: To do some Greta credit for a second, we made this album in, I think, the most romantic possible way. We were isolated in a house together for weeks at a time. We used a tape machine. We used these old Tascam preamps. We constantly interacted with one another playing games when we weren’t working. All of this is possibly how a band hates each other and stops talking to each other. [laughs] I think it speaks to Greta being the person who brings these four people together and the person who absolutely creates all of these things happening at all. I could have easily just been on my computer, doing whatever in another room. But Greta is endlessly curious and ready to play, to solve a new puzzle. I feel like you hold all of that together.
GK: That’s nice. We set up to record this album having only toured for ten days together total as a four piece. We’d been playing together and practicing, but we hadn’t toured that much together when we set out to make the record, so I feel like I was being a camp counselor trying to get us to bond. In tandem with making a record, we were also building our rapport as a band and our communication and our dynamics together, figuring that out just day by day. And it’s not like everyone was getting along so great every single day.
AB: Especially, in regards to games, yeah, I would get really upset. [laughter]
GK: And recording an album, there’s always gonna be disagreements. It’s hard to get four people to all be like, “That was the take. Let’s move on.” The reason that a basketball team has a coach – Alex was explaining to me because I’ve been getting into basketball – is so that the teammates don’t have to communicate with each other in the harsh critical way that an outsider might be able to. That’s what a producer does a lot of the time, and we were all thrust into that position. It was a really good team building summer.
KVS: I guess that’s why I think it’s romantic overall.
Louis Theroux’s Weird Weekends
GK: We started out watching movies when we started recording, and then we just descended into watching Weird Weekends every night. We just really all liked it, and it was entertaining. I think watching stuff together is also part of the same thing – the quotes that you all laugh at, that you then say to each other the next day, the slang that you pick up; if you’re watching the same thing as each other, you’re gonna be more on the same page. You’re eating the same foods and you’re playing the same games and you’re watching Weird Weekends at night, and then you’re making jokes about that episode of Weird Weekends while you record whatever guitar part.
Recording in a house
What conversations did you have going into the process, having had the experience of recording in a studio? Were there things you were wary of?
KVS: I can say at the outset, I was very worried as the person who was providing all of the recording equipment. I had never tracked a band to this tape machine. There were a lot of really practical concerns from me. I felt really afraid from an engineering perspective, because I always do feel that way before something I feel very excited about, honestly. Just this trepidation of, like, Hugo can play the best thing ever, but if I record it poorly – that responsibility initially felt like it was mine.
AB: The way that we recorded this to the tape affected it a lot, because you want to try to keep everything that you’re recording to tape that one time. I played acoustic guitar on a lot of it, and I played the easiest thing possible to make sure that whatever I played made it onto the tape and we didn’t have to erase and redo. And that’s very different from the idea that you’re recording digitally, and you can try something literally a million times if you want to and redo it. A lot of things I played, I played from start to finish, which is really rare for me personally.
HS: It’s funny because on the one hand, the tape creates this limitation to get complete takes, but on the other hand, what comes with recording in a house versus a studio is that you’re not watching money fly out the window as the clock ticks. So in a take-by-take, more microcosmic sense, it feels temporally limited. When you’re recording digitally, there’s this open-endedness and lack of limitation. So the tape provided this limitation, but I think that was a wanted or even needed limitation, in the context of the lack of limitations that comes with recording in a house.
KVS: All of those actual technical constructs were as much or even more so psychological ones. The tape was, for certain of us, such a psychological thing. First of all, it is like looking in a mirror that you know will be nice to you. It does this nice thing with the frequencies of an instrument – with a little bit of compression, so, okay, that’s the technical reality of the tape. But then the psychological reality of the tape is really helpful. Most people record to a click in this very modular way now, and this was not because all of the tempos inside Greta’s songs are constantly fluctuating in response to the song and what it needs. There was zero, like, “We are beholden to a tempo.” We’re actually beholden to nothing except for the take that we create.
GK: I’m just warped against the grain. [laughter] I’m just really happy with how the record sounds, and it does feel somehow reflective of recording in the house. It feels like a cozy record to me, maybe because I was there, but I also think the sounds are warm. You can feel that–
AB: The amp was in the bathroom.
GK: Yeah, and we were recording drums in the same room that we were watching TV at night. We would take the blanket off the TV and then put the blanket back on for sound during the day. I just feel like you can feel that.
Katie, you mentioned the phrase “psychological reality,” and I wanted to take another line out of context: that question of “Is it really home?’ from ‘Tomorrow’.Did you feel like this physical space was becoming an emotional space that wasdefined along the lines of the group, too?
GK: It’s complicated because it’s a house that Alex and I have lived in for a longer period of time separate from this. I’d be curious to see if Katie and Hugo ever felt at home there the way that I did. But I think I’m always asking questions about home, as a state of mind more than a physical place. I think this record lyrically does ask a lot of questions about physical spaces and who you are in them, and if you change and then you go back to the same place, how does it feel different?
KVS: How much of the writing of the songs, Greta – because you lived in the house during lockdown – do you think could be potentially informed by your own experience in the space way prior?
GK: It’s hard to say. It’s been a formative five, six years, with or without COVID. I’ve lived in New York my whole life, I’ve never really lived anywhere else. We lived in this place upstate sporadically, but it’s still very close to the city, and I still consider it living in New York. I think being a musician and choosing this life and building a family with a band and making an album, which is like making a home for yourselves – the line on ‘Pothole’ that I really wanted to end the record with is, “Here’s what we have, what we have made” And it’s the album: that’s our home that we built around ourselves, piece by piece. That’s something that I’ve been thinking about as I get older and decide whether I wanna keep touring and keep – it’s a life you keep choosing, being a musician, and I keep choosing it. It’s part of me, and it’s also outside of me, and it’s something we’re all doing together. I think all those questions probably would have come up regardless of where I was in the world. Some of them were written on tour, some of them were written when I lived in Brooklyn. Some of them were upstate. Some of them are Upper East Side. One of them was written in 2015; that’s the only one that’s not new at all.
The song ‘Tomorrow’?
GK: Yeah, it’s an old song. And I actually have a photo booth video from 2015 of me writing that song and playing it on an acoustic guitar in the very room that we recorded this album in. Life keeps going on, and you keep finding yourself in the same places being a different person in the same place. And to me, the song ‘Tomorrow’ is about being like, “Am I really doing this? Are you gonna do it with me? And why not?” About making music and being like, “Is this really what my life is gonna look like, and who am I building it with?” It’s really special to play it, especially with someone like Alex, who’s now been in the band for six years, and has been pushing to put that song on a record for the last couple records. So then we did it, and it’s so beautiful to bring it to life with these people that I’ve chosen to make my family right now.
KVS: Coming in as an outsider and choosing this life – I’m a little bit older, and I became an engineer, and I have been in other music things. But feeling that sense of home in this particular band has been really powerful for me. You have to all be in the right place in your life, obviously, to say, “Yeah, I’ve got eight weeks to live in a house with you.”
AB: When we had the tape machine, but we weren’t gonna record yet – we still had days ahead of us where we were not gonna record – I remember being outside with Hugo at night and being like, “Damn, I really wanna go and press record right now.” [laughter] Being really excited it’s all gonna happen, like, “I can do this. We can do this, and we’re gonna do it all here.”
GK: We obviously couldn’t and wouldn’t have done this process if Katie hadn’t joined the band – that was a huge step towards this dream coming true of being able to self-record in this way. But it’s hard to talk about because I don’t want to undermine Katie as a musician in the band – the reason she’s in the band. I wasn’t producing and engineering this, but we were all contributing, and it felt empowering the same way that it felt when I first was making music and first recording myself and figuring out that I could double my voice on GarageBand or whatever. It felt like having a band for the first time in a way that I hope all of us felt, this sense of youthful exploration and excitement.
KS: Totally. Also, I am the only person who engineers for a living, but everybody knows how to engineer in this band. And the reason I did this is solely from a romantic point of view: I just want to seize the means of production for myself so that no matter what’s happening in your life, whether you get a label budget or no one in the world wants to hear your music, you can still make it – you’re still empowered to do so. I hope that maybe everyone left with the feeling of that same empowerment that there’s no great mystery to recording something well. There is this veil of mystery around it, being an engineer, but it’s a very multifaceted thing that I think most people can actually do for themselves.
GK: I’m realizing that part of why ‘Tomorrow’ fits in with this record is because I think lyrically, a lot of this record, I’m singing to my younger self, raging and grieving stuff for her. I think that’s why her song fits into my record because, yes, she’s me, but I also think I’m kind of reaching through time and singing a lot to a past version of myself.
This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity and length.
Intense Netflix drama Olympo seems to be the new show everyone is talking about. Sexy and chaotic, it makes for an excellent summer binge, delivering the kind of thrills that compel you to immediately watch the next episode.
The downside? Before you know it, you fly through the entire season and are left wondering whether there’s a fresh dose of action on the way. Unfortunately, we might have to wait a bit longer to get answers.
Olympo Season 2 Release Date
At the time of writing, the series hasn’t officially been renewed for more episodes. That said, its chances look good.
Olympo premiered in June 2025 and became the number 1 non-English show on Netflix in only a few days. Moreover, it’s getting hype on social media, so we’re optimistic about it coming back for more.
As long as that’s the case, Olympo season 2 will likely arrive sometime in summer 2026.
Olympo Cast
Clara Galle as Amaia Olaberria
Nira Oshaia as Zoe Moral
Agustín Della Corte as Roque Pérez
Nuno Gallego as Cristian Delallve
María Romanillos as Núria Bórges
Andy Duato as Renata Aguilera
Najwa Khliwa as Fátima Amazian
What Could Happen in OlympoSeason 2?
Olympo is a Spanish teen drama set at a high performance centre where young athletes train under immense pressure. The action revolves around Amaia, the captain of the national synchronized swimming team, who becomes suspicious that some of her peers may be doping.
The series has mystery, a beautiful cast, and lots of sex. Viewers get to follow the athletes as they train, hook up, and compete for sponsorship deals. They also push their bodies to their limits, so everyone looks incredible. If you were craving an addictive watch as steamy as a heatwave, you can’t go wrong with this one.
By the end of this first batch of episodes, viewers witness Amaia having a moral and physical collapse, setting the stage for a darker and probably even more thrilling next chapter.
Olympo Season 2 will likely move the story forward in exciting directions as some of the athletes continue their fight to stop those responsible for pushing a dangerous drug.
Are There Other Shows Like Olympo?
If you’re into Olympo and haven’t seen Netflix’s hit Élite, there’s no time like the present to rectify that. It’s set at an exclusive private school in Spain and delivers a similar mix of sex, thrills, and drama.
You might also like Euphoria, Gossip Girl, Bet, Spinning Out, Rebelde, and Tell Me Lies.
Netflix’s new soapy drama The Waterfront is getting plenty of buzz following its June premiere. The series debuted at No. 1 on the platform’s weekly charts, amassing an impressive 8.3 million views in only a few days.
Crafted by Kevin Williamson, who co-created bona fide hit The Vampire Diaries, the new show is enjoying quite the momentum. In other words, its chances for renewal are excellent.
The Waterfront Season 2 Release Date
At the time of writing, Netflix hasn’t officially announced whether The Waterfront will return with new episodes. The online chatter and good viewership numbers, however, are great signs.
The service is known to occasionally wait a bit before deciding the fate of new series. As long as it gives the green light, The Waterfront season 2 could arrive in late 2026 or early 2027.
The Waterfront Cast
Holt McCallany as Harlan Buckley
Melissa Benoist as Bree Buckley
Jake Weary as Cane Buckley
Rafael L. Silva as Shawn West
Humberly González as Jenna Tate
Danielle Campbell as Peyton Buckley
What Could Happen in The WaterfrontSeason 2?
The Waterfront follows the Buckley family, who control the fishing industry and upscale restaurant scene of a fictional coastal town. When the family patriarch suffers two heart attacks, the clan scrambles to keep their empire afloat, eventually having to resort to less-than-legal actions like drug smuggling.
At the same time, daughter Bree returns home and becomes entangled in a risky relationship. A recovering addict who has lost custody of her son, she’s in a fragile state, and ends up putting the family’s future (and her own) in jeopardy.
The series is highly addictive, featuring love triangles, deaths, and unexpected twists. That makes the fact that it’s inspired by real events even more surprising.
“I come from a long line of fishermen. The fishing industry sort of upturned in the ’80s — it all started to go away, and my dad couldn’t feed his family. So someone came along and said, ‘Hey, if you do this one thing, you can make all this money.’ And it was hard to say no to,” Williamson told Tudum.
By the time the season wraps up, a dramatic showdown results in a death and Bree’s rescue. Despite things looking up, though, we learn that Bree is in talks with a member of an even more powerful crime family, setting the stage for a thrilling next chapter.
We’re guessing The Waterfront season 2 would continue this storyline, and we’ll see The Buckleys treading even rougher waters.
Are There Other Shows Like The Waterfront?
The Waterfront is a combination of Ozark and Yellowstone, with a low-key Succession vibe thrown in for good measure. If you’ve already seen these shows, you might also like MobLand, Bloodline, Ray Donovan, and The Sopranos.
Popular Netflix docuseries America’s Sweethearts: Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders is back with season 2, and it continues its hot streak.
The new episodes garnered 3.3 million views in only a few days and managed to climb to the number 5 spot in the streamer’s Top 10 show list.
In other words, viewers are still interested in following the cheerleaders and learning more about what goes on behind the scenes. Hopefully, this means it isn’t the last time we get to catch up with the dancers.
America’s Sweethearts: Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders Season 3 Release Date
At the time of writing, the series hasn’t officially been renewed for additional episodes. That said, viewership numbers are good, and Netflix tends to occasionally wait a few months before giving the green light.
As long as they decide in the show’s favour, America’s Sweethearts: Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders season 3 will likely arrive in summer 2026. Seasons 1 and 2 both premiered in June, so we’re guessing the next installment would follow the same pattern.
America’s Sweethearts Cast
Kelli Finglass
Judy Trammell
Victoria Kalina
Kelcey Wetterberg
Reece Weaver
Anna Kate Sundvold
Charly Barby
What Is America’s Sweethearts About?
The show follows the Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders, which is the official cheer squad of the NFL team Dallas Cowboys. Viewers get a front row seat to their entire journey, from grueling auditions and training camp to the pressure‑packed NFL season.
Both rookies and seasoned veterans fight for a coveted roster spot, with the series successfully mixing personal stories with professional highlights.
Season 2 gave fans a little bit of everything, from friendship to comeback stories to the dancers fighting for pay equity. Memorable moments include veteran dancer Armani opening up about alopecia and Head Choreographer Judy Trammell stepping into the spotlight. Alum Victoria Kalina shared the next chapter in her life, and two dancers made a spectacular return.
Additionally, the season chronicles the DCC’s efforts to address dancer compensation, which pay off big time. We’re guessing any potential America’s Sweethearts: Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders season 3 would follow the same format. We’ll hang with the dancers both on and off the field.
Are There Other Shows Like America’s Sweethearts?
If you like America’s Sweethearts: Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders, you will probably be into Netflix’s other acclaimed cheerleading docuseries, Cheer.
Additionally, sports fans in general should also check out Last Chance U, Formula 1: Drive to Survive, Break Point, and The Last Dance.
Korean drama Tastefully Yours has been performing well for Netflix ever since it premiered. Probably due to its enchanting mix of food and romance, two ingredients few K-fans can resist.
The series spent six weeks in the global Top 10 for non-English shows and is currently charting in 19 countries. With the first season over, however, many viewers are wondering whether they’ll get to follow these characters again in the future. For now, only time will tell.
Tastefully Yours Season 2 Release Date
At the time of writing, there’s no news about a potential Tastefully Yours Season 2.
The show airs on ENA in South Korea and is available on Netflix in select territories. In other words, it’s not on Netflix to make the decision. Additionally, many K-dramas wrap their stories in a single season, so a follow-up might not happen this time around.
Still, never say never. If the drama does get renewed, a second season could arrive sometime in 2026.
Tastefully Yours Cast
Kang Ha-neul as Han Beom-woo
Go Min-si as Mo Yeon-joo
Kim Shin-rok as Jin Myeong-sook
Yoo Su-bin as Shin Chun-seung
What Could Happen in Tastefully YoursSeason 2?
Dubbed a culinary rom-com, Tastefully Yours revolves around Han Beom‑woo, director at one of Korea’s largest food conglomerates. He’s keen to earn a third Michelin-esque star, so he’s on a quest to collect unique recipes, even if that means buying out small independent restaurants.
This obsession leads him to Mo Yeon‑joo, a passionate chef who believes the key to great cooking is care. She runs a single‑table eatery in Jeonju and refuses Beom‑woo’s offers. As it often happens in rom-coms, the two will end up going from adversaries to something more.
Turns out, opposites attract, and when circumstances force them together, the couple grows from culinary rivalry to quiet camaraderie. Over the course of the season, viewers get to see them fall in love, despite various setbacks.
The heartfelt finale ends the show on an uplifting note, with Yeon‑joo and Beom‑woo happily together. While Tastefully Yours season 2 may be unlikely, it could follow their blossoming relationship, while keeping cooking with sincerity a central theme.
Are There Other Shows Like Tastefully Yours?
If you’re into romantic comedy series, Netflix has plenty to offer. For English hits, try Forever, From Scratch, XO, Kitty, Emily in Paris, The Royals, and Nobody Wants This.
Meanwhile, popular K-dramas include Business Proposal, Alchemy of Souls, Crash Course in Romance, and When Life Gives You Tangerines.
In the world of online gaming, connection is everything. Whether you’re assembling a raid team in an MMORPG, tracking down an old clanmate, or verifying the identity of a suspicious teammate, speed matters. And that’s where fast search people come into play — quietly but powerfully changing how gamers build communities, form alliances, and protect themselves in virtual worlds.
Behind every username is a real person — and sometimes, players want to know more.
Gaming Is No Longer Anonymous — And That’s Not a Bad Thing
Once upon a time, you could roam digital landscapes as “xXShadowKillerXx” with zero traceable links to your real identity. But today’s gaming ecosystem is more connected than ever. Platforms like Steam, Discord, Xbox Live, and Battle.net often tie in social accounts, email addresses, or even real names. And gamers are increasingly building long-term relationships across countries, time zones, and genres.
With that closeness comes curiosity — and a desire to know who you’re really playing with.
Why Gamers Use People Search Tools
Fast people search in gaming isn’t about stalking — it’s about context and connection. Here’s how it plays out in real scenarios:
Reconnecting with players you lost touch with after a guild disbanded
Verifying the identity of someone claiming to be a streamer, developer, or known player
Tracking down scammers or cheaters who reappear under new names
Building trusted teams for competitive matches or long-term collabs
Resolving disputes after in-game drama spills onto social media or forums
Speed is essential — because gaming is dynamic. Players move on quickly, change usernames, or switch servers. If you don’t search now, you might lose your window forever.
The Tools Behind the Search
Gamers don’t need FBI-level software — just a smart mix of public tools:
Discord ID lookup: Many communities use bots that reveal a player’s join date, roles, and message history.
SteamRep or Battlemetrics: Useful for checking scam history or ban records.
Reddit & forums: Gamertags often appear in shared posts and match histories.
Google reverse image search: Helps identify users from profile pictures or Twitch thumbnails.
Usernames + email handles: Try matching patterns across platforms (e.g., same nickname used on Steam, Twitter, and Twitch).
Fast people search websites: If a real name or phone number is involved (e.g., from a merch purchase or private chat), basic searches can provide confirmation — or red flags.
Connection, Collaboration, and Caution
Fast people search empowers collaboration. You find the right teammate faster. You avoid wasting time with impostors. And you build better communities based on trust, not just performance.
But there’s a line. Just because you can learn more about someone doesn’t mean you should use that information recklessly. Doxxing, public shaming, or harassment are never justifiable — and can get you banned from games and platforms.
Smart players use people search tools with integrity — to connect, not to control.
A New Layer of Multiplayer Interaction
Gaming has always been about people — not just pixels. What’s changed is how quickly we can connect, verify, and re-engage with those people across platforms. Fast people search isn’t a threat to gaming culture — it’s an evolution. One that blends accountability with community, and curiosity with caution.
So the next time you wonder “Hey, wasn’t this the tank from our old WoW guild?” — don’t be afraid to look. Your next great co-op session, team victory, or digital friendship might just be a search away.
With 28 Years Later just around the corner, many fans are excited to see both the original writer and director team, Alex Garland and Danny Boyle, back at the helm for the first time since the first film in the trilogy.
Ground Zero: 28 Days Later
The infected first tore across our screens in late 2002. Unlike the zombies that came before, these were not shambling, undead monsters; they were us, possessed by the insatiable ‘rage virus’.
The raw energy of these horrific antagonists melded perfectly with Boyle and Anthony Dod Mantle’s kinetic cinematic style. This combination was truly unique, making use of new digital camcorders, most memorably in the opening sequence, in which Cillian Murphy’s character wakes from a coma and navigates the barren streets of central London.
Expanding the Outbreak: 28 Weeks Later
In 2007, 28 Weeks Later arrived. It had a bigger budget and an equally impressive cast, as well as some excellent jump scares. It was even produced by Danny Boyle, although a new director, Juan Carlos Fresnadillo, was brought on.
The themes explored in this new take on the infected world included international interactions, military presence, and necessary but ruthless sacrifice. Although distinct from the original, it retained some of Boyle’s signature energy.
The story follows a group of isolated survivors who are forced to venture onto the mainland, where it is discovered that a mutation has spread from the infected to the other survivors.
A Full-Blown Franchise?
The third film in the series is expected to do well, with a strong advertising campaign and the original creators steering it. It’s been a long time in the works, and fans have high expectations.
Whether or not we’ll see a fourth instalment is anyone’s guess, but if 28 Years Later proves to be the financial success that people are expecting, it’s a possibility.
If successful, we might also see the franchise branch into other areas, including possible TV spin-offs, merchandise lines, graphic novels and more. This kind of franchising is even seen in the iGaming industry, with themed slots and bingo games drawing from TV and film often a popular choice. In the zombie genre, this has been seen in The Walking Dead franchise, with The Walking Dead Cash Collect slot an example here. Therefore, it’s not out of the question that we’ll see more IP-based attractions in the near future.
Nobody would argue that these are conventional zombie films, but they are beloved by fans of the zombie genre, including the legions of horror fanatics who hail Romero’s Night of the Living Dead as the indisputable champion.
But that’s not to say that it isn’t equally worthy. Boyle and Garland have built a world and a style that are utterly unique, blending savage camera movements and fast cutting with Garland’s heartfelt and deeply human writing.