logo
A zippy episode of Duster steps on Elvis' blue suede shoes

A zippy episode of Duster steps on Elvis' blue suede shoes

Yahoo24-05-2025

Last week's Duster premiere established the show's retro world and tone. Now we get a chance to see what it looks like as a weekly series. Here that means an in-medias-res cold open, an ever-growing web of conspiracies, a new crime lord named Sunglasses (Patrick Warburton), and a Palm Springs heist to get Elvis' famed blue suede shoes. For now, the show is using Josh Holloway's Jim Ellis for episodic romps while Rachel Hilson's Nina focuses on bigger-picture mysteries, which is a structure that feels pulled straight from a network TV procedural. Only Duster offers the swearing, nudity, bloody violence, and higher production value of a prestige-ish streaming show.
While this second episode lacks a little of the cinematic flair of last week's pilot, the 1970s pastiche vibes are still the main calling card of the series. Writing wise, this episode doesn't really deepen or complicate anything we didn't already learn last week. But there's at least a strong sense of pacing and a lighter comedic touch to keep things clipping along. Last week's installment ended with the reveal that Bible-thumping, pedophilic local cop Sergeant Groomes (Donal Logue) saw Jim and Nina's informant deal go down. A traditional prestige series might have stretched out his ominous snooping for half a season. But here he's seemingly killed off, then miraculously revived, all in one episode. Poor Sunglasses, meanwhile, only gets to last a little bit longer before his own gruesome death-by-bowling-pin resetter.
In other words, don't get too attached to the guest stars on Duster. This seems like a world where people are more likely to come and go than stick around to fill in the corners of Phoenix, Arizona. Hopefully that means the show will take the chance to rope in some more TV all-stars for one-off appearances. Warburton strikes just the right notes of goofy menace and unexpected tragedy in his guest spot here.
Speaking of world-building, one of the fundamental divides of Duster is that Jim's world is much more fleshed out than Nina's. The show went out of its way to give him a huge number of supporting characters to interact with—not just within Saxton's family crime organization, but also with his dad Wade, his stepmom Charlotte, his ex Izzy, and his daughter Luna. New-in-town Nina, meanwhile, just has her colleagues at the Bureau and her unseen mother on the telephone. This episode intentionally shrinks her world even smaller by zeroing in on her partnership and growing friendship with Asivak Koostachin's Awan Bitsui.
Admittedly, there's a bit of clunkiness to how this episode gets the two to bound with one another. This week they're hunting down the missing files from Nina's predecessor Agent Breen, who seems to have doctored the details of Jim's brother's death and then been shipped off to a mental institution. A visit to Breen's wife Evelyn (Adrienne Barbeau—remember that name) highlights the racist condescension that fuels the Bureau as a whole. If Nina wants to get to the truth about Saxton, she's going to have to work (slightly) outside the system to make it happen. And she's going to need Awan as her detail-oriented right-hand man.
Unfortunately, the show seems pretty allergic to subtext on the FBI side of things, with Nina and Awan pretty much voicing everything they're thinking—from discussing their shared experiences with prejudice to him openly demanding she tell him her tragic backstory with Saxton. Still, despite the occasional expositional inelegance, I like the idea of the two of them becoming a dynamic duo for the law enforcement side of the show.
Holloway is getting the much flashier action-adventure half of the series so far. And if Duster can find its own earnest noir tone for the Nina half of things, that would go a long way toward making the show feel more balanced. It's not quite there yet. But pairing Nina with Awan to track down Agent Breen's missing files and investigate Joey's exploded van is a welcome start.
Jim, meanwhile, has quite the 15 hours this week. That starts when Groomes shows up to demand ten grand to stay silent about the fact that Jim is working with the feds. Though Jim plays it cool in the moment, he's anxious enough that he assumes Saxton is calling him into his office to kill him. (Some ominous plastic sheeting doesn't help.) But it turns out Saxton just wants to thank Jim for personally pumping his son's heart during his transplant surgery—something I'm glad the show hasn't forgotten about because I'm still reeling from it.
Whether or not saving Royce's life will buy Jim some grace from Saxton in the future remains to be seen. Rather than push his luck, Jim decides to take matters into his own hands. After Nina turns down his request for help dealing with Groomes (he hasn't delivered anything worthy of official FBI protection yet), he heads off to local fixer Sunglasses to strike a different deal instead: If Sunglasses scares off Groomes, Jim will get him Elvis' famed blue suede shoes—the ultimate prize for a King-obsessed criminal.
It's a supremely goofy crime-of-the-week, with Jim switching his strategy from breaking and entering to party crashing when he finds the house full of guests. That includes Elvis' infamous manager Colonel Tom Parker (Brian Reddy doing a slightly less ridiculous accent than Tom Hanks in Elvis). And in a very meta bit of comedy, guest star Mikaela Hoover is on hand playing future Maude star Adrienne Barbeau in an episode where the real-life Barbeau also appears. The dreams of the 1970s are truly alive and well, folks!
In fact, with an assist from the (fictional) Barbeau, the whole heist goes down way easier than I expected. Jim hilariously just wears the shoes and walks out. Instead, the main action happens back in Phoenix, where a Sunglasses/Groomes barn shootout and that aforementioned bowling-alley brawl between Jim and Sunglasses up the show's violence well beyond its occasional network TV vibes.
Indeed, between Sunglasses' look, the stylish Palm Springs party, the bowling alley setting, that '(Let Me Be Your) Teddy Bear' needledrop, and the shocking tragic-comic deaths, this episode aims for a sort of Quentin-Tarantino-meets-the-Coen-brothers flair. But what helps keep it from feeling like a mere knockoff is the unexpected core of wholesomeness at its center. What else do you call an episode that ends with Jim and his dad turning over a new emotional leaf while burying a dead body in the desert together?
While I'm not sure if Duster has quite found its right tone yet, that sense of sweetness seems like it could be the key ingredient that helps differentiate the series from all the many reference points it's aping. We have it running between Jim and Luna, Jim and Wade, and now Nina and Awan too. While the show has yet to fully define Jim and Nina's dynamic with one another (they're largely separated into their own storylines again this week), I'm curious to see if/how some warmth might eventually color their currently spiky relationship too.
For now, however, this episode ends with another cliffhanger. Last week showed us Groomes spying on Jim to set up this episode's conflict. Here we see Agent Breen's wife calling a connection in Washington, D.C. to inform him that Nina is looking into Joey's death and Breen's missing files. 'Don't you worry about her, Evelyn,' the cowboy-hat-wearing contact (J.R. Yenque) replies. 'I'll take care of her.' In a traditional prestige show, it might take a whole season to circle back around to that tease. Here it's nice to know that we'll probably be getting more answers as soon as next week.
• This week in 'It's the 1970s!': Shirley Chisholm is running for president and Elvis is planning his Aloha From Hawaii live satellite concert.
• This episode tweaks the show's opening credits to add a pair of blue suede shoes hanging off a powerline. I wonder if we can expect similar episode-specific nods each week.
• I think we're meant to assume Jim buried Sunglasses in the blue suede shoes, but in real life they were sold at a British auction house for $152,000 last year.
• Jim and Nina only share one brief scene this week, but she leaves it frustrated enough that she does a bunch of parking garage push-ups to cool off.
• Izzy takes a rather ominous trip to the doctor's office. Do we think she's sick? Or pregnant?
• Duster clearly wants to honor the sex-positive 1970s feminist movement, but it's a little weird to take the phrase 'grown women make their own choices' and apply it to the sexually abusive power dynamics of Hollywood casting.
• A recovering Royce is excited to receive a copy of Michael Crichton's new book The Terminal Man. (He loved The Andromeda Strain.) We see how he's the soft, nerdy pushover who's being unfairly lifted up over his more hardcore, business-minded sister, Genesis, because of their dad's patriarchal values.
• In what feels like a little bit of a retcon, Nina discovers that Jim was at the scene when Joey died in the car explosion. I wonder if we're going to be in for a reveal that the explosion was actually meant for Jim.
More from A.V. Club
3 new songs and 3 new albums to check out this weekend
A zippy episode of Duster steps on Elvis' blue suede shoes
Roy Wood Jr. says no one at The Daily Show could really explain the Hasan Minhaj controversy

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘Be like Boomer': Oakland teacher mourned at large memorial service
‘Be like Boomer': Oakland teacher mourned at large memorial service

Yahoo

time11 hours ago

  • Yahoo

‘Be like Boomer': Oakland teacher mourned at large memorial service

OAKLAND, Calif. (KRON) — Castlemont High School teacher Marvin Boomer was honored and remembered by family members, students, friends, and city leaders Friday during a large memorial service at Acts Full Gospel Church in Oakland. Boomer was killed in May 28, just two days before his senior students received their diplomas at Castlemont High School's graduation ceremony. Boomer and his girlfriend, Nina, were out on an evening stroll May 28 when a stolen car zoomed through an Oakland neighborhood and crashed into them on a sidewalk, investigators said. Less than a minute before the crash, the teenaged driver was chased by California Highway Patrol officers. The teacher pushed his girlfriend out of the direct path of a car that slammed into Boomer, according to a home surveillance video reviewed by KRON4 and a statement from his family. His family described the act of heroism as 'a final act of love and selflessness,' his family wrote. East Oakland community members were invited to attend the church service, which was also livestreamed by Acts Full Gospel Church. Nina was emotional as she talked about the love of her life. 'I called him 'Mr. Wonderful.' Marvin and I shared something special, it was rare. It was deeply rooted in honesty, intention, and love. We knew everything about each other, not just the easy parts, but the hard truths,' Nina said. She also spoke about the tragedy, and remembered seeing a CHP patrol car racing by. 'We didn't even know what we were walking into. Speeding through neighborhoods, high speed chases through residential neighborhoods, should not be commonplace in the city that I love. I was raised in East Oakland. It's sad to say I lost the love of my life in Oakland. And I'm mad. It was preventable. No one should have to endure this,' Nina said. The math teacher is remembered for taking students under his wings as Castlemont's College and Career Pathways Coach, as well as making 'being smart cool,' friends said. Boomer had recently completed his Ph.D in Educational Research and Policy Analysis. One of the teacher's best friends stood up in the church and said, 'Be like Boomer.' Students said their teacher cared about them, he could turn any bad day around into a good day, and he was always smiling. One Castlemont student said she had promised Boomer that she would return a stuffed bear that she borrowed from school after she graduated. The recent graduate gave the stuffed bear to his family on Friday. 'Dr. Boomer was more than a teacher — he was a mentor, a friend, and a source of strength and inspiration in the halls of Castlemont. His legacy will live on in the school community and in the countless lives he helped shape,' Oakland Unified School District officials wrote. Family members decided to have an open-casket viewing Friday because the teacher had a widespread impact spreading his joy for learning and education. A verified GoFundMe page is raising donations to honor Boomer's legacy. Nina said, 'I am grateful to have known him. I hope you will use his life as a call to action. To smile every day. Use his life as a light to be your best self.' Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

That Time the FBI Conspired To Get George Foreman an Award for Boxing
That Time the FBI Conspired To Get George Foreman an Award for Boxing

Yahoo

time20 hours ago

  • Yahoo

That Time the FBI Conspired To Get George Foreman an Award for Boxing

The FBI is concerned with a great many things today. Incels. Orgasm cults. Facebook posts. Safe-deposit boxes. Encryption. But in October 1968, the Bureau was concerned with whether George Foreman got the proper recognition as a boxer. Files released under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) show that the Racial Intelligence Section of the FBI's Counterintelligence Division intervened to get Foreman an additional award for his patriotism after winning an Olympic gold medal. Foreman "gave every American an emotional lift when immediately after defeating Inoas Chepulis [Jonas Čepulis] of the Soviet Union…he showed the world that he was proud to be an American by waving a small American flag," Associate Director G.C. Moore wrote in a memo to Assistant Director William Sullivan. The Bureau also saw Foreman as a useful cudgel against domestic opponents. Foreman's patriotic victory display, Moore wrote, "was in sharp contrast with the earlier despicable black power-black gloved demonstration of Tommie Smith and John Carlos on the Olympic victory stand and the anti-Vietnam stand of Cassius Clay." Smith and Carlos were kicked off the American team for making a black power salute after winning a 200-meter race. Clay, who changed his name to Muhammad Ali, had won an Olympic gold medal for boxing in 1960. He was convicted of defying the military draft in 1967—Ali opposed the Vietnam War on religious grounds—a conviction that was overturned in 1971. Back in 1968, Moore suggested helping get Foreman his "justly deserved award," on the recommendation of two special agents who belonged to the American Legion. With the approval of FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, the Bureau eventually settled on trying to get Foreman the Americanism Award from the Freedoms Foundation. Although he was nominated for the award, Foreman didn't win that year. He did win a George Washington Honor Medal from the Freedoms Foundation in 1974. Foreman, who died in March 2025, had a long career after his Olympic victory. He remained undefeated until his famous "Rumble in the Jungle" with Ali. He retired in 1977, became a Christian minister in the 1980s, returned to boxing in 1994, and began marketing the famous George Foreman Grill that same year. Reason requested Foreman's FBI file after he passed away, and the Bureau released the memos on his Olympic victory earlier this week. The FBI's interest in Foreman came amidst COINTELPRO, a paranoid Cold War counterintelligence program that treated everyone from draft resisters and Martin Luther King, Jr. to the Ku Klux Klan as vectors for foreign subversion. In addition to trying to get Foreman an award, the Bureau heavily spied on Ali and Carlos. Ali ultimately got the last laugh. During his 1971 match with Joe Frazier, a group of dissidents known as the Citizens Committee to Investigate the FBI used the boxing match as a distraction to break into an FBI office in Pennsylvania and steal the COINTELPRO files. The burglary led to Congress reining in the FBI's power. Fortunately, America has learned from those dark days. Surely, the FBI no longer uses fantasies about foreign conspiracies as an excuse to spy on Americans and interfere with domestic politics. Right? The post That Time the FBI Conspired To Get George Foreman an Award for Boxing appeared first on

Ohio State football legend passes away at age 87
Ohio State football legend passes away at age 87

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Yahoo

Ohio State football legend passes away at age 87

An Ohio State football legend has passed away. Former Buckeye and Minnesota Vikings defensive end Jim Marshall died at the age of 87 on Tuesday. He played under Woody Hayes in 1957 and 1958, helping lead the team to a national championship in 1957. He was a two-time All-Big Ten performer and was recognized as a third-team All-American in 1958. Advertisement His Ohio State career was awfully good, but it was the NFL where he really shined. Marshall began his professional career in the Canadian Football League with the Saskatchewan Roughriders, but was eventually traded to the Cleveland Browns in a rare CFL/NFL swap. He played one year in Cleveland before being traded to the Minnesota Vikings as part of the 1962 NFL expansion. He became a perennial star in the Twin Cities. During a very long 20-year career (the last 19 with the Vikings), Marshall made two Pro Bowls, was a captain 14 consecutive seasons, set the league record for consecutive games played at 270 (since broken by Brett Favre in 2008), and helped anchor the famed "Purple People Eaters" defensive line. He was an NFL champion in 1969, has been inducted into the Minnesota Ring of Honor, and also has his No. 70 retired in the Twin Cities. "The entire Minnesota Vikings organization is mourning the loss of Jim Marshall," Vikings owner Mark Wilf and their ownership group said in a statement. "No player in Vikings history lived the ideals of toughness, camaraderie, and passion more than the all-time iron man. A cornerstone of the franchise from the beginning, Captain Jim's unmatched durability and quiet leadership earned the respect of teammates and opponents throughout his 20-year career. Jim led by example, and there was no finer example for others to follow. His impact on the Vikings was felt long after he left the field. Jim will always be remembered as a tremendous player and person." Advertisement Marshall was inducted into the Ohio State Athletics Hall of Fame in 1978. May he rest in peace. This article originally appeared on Buckeyes Wire: Ohio State football and Vikings legend passes away at age 87

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store