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Five Great Reads: Jamie Lee Curtis v plastic surgery, Elon Musk's Hollywood diner, and the rise of the X-rated novel

Five Great Reads: Jamie Lee Curtis v plastic surgery, Elon Musk's Hollywood diner, and the rise of the X-rated novel

The Guardian10 hours ago
Top of the weekend to you all. If you need a side order of silly in your life, here's something to add to your calendar before tucking into this week's main course.
Elon Musk last week opened a Tesla-themed diner in Hollywood. What could possibly go wrong? As many things as you'd expect from a master of 'move fast and break things'.
Lois Beckett braved the lengthy queues, encountering tech glitches, unavailable menu items and a small flotilla of tricked-up Cybertrucks.
Sales pitch: The Tesla boss said on an earnings call his diner was 'a shiny beacon of hope in an otherwise sort-of bleak urban landscape'. It is located on Santa Monica Boulevard, in a neighbourhood full of high-end art galleries.
How long will it take to read: Four minutes.
If you're not already furious about having microplastics in your semen/breast milk/unborn baby's placenta, may I present to you a potential tipping point. This interactive tells the story of how plastic contaminates entire ecosystems – and even the food we eat.
Fun fact: A single washing machine cycle can shed up to 700,000 tiny plastic fragments and threads. A single thread could voyage around the natural world for centuries.
How long will it take to read: Three minutes.
Further reading: How petrostates and well-funded lobbyists are derailing a deal to cut plastic production.
Jamie Lee Curtis's energy fair bursts out of the screen in this interview with Emma Brockes. The conversation is a wild ride highlighted by the 66-year-old's distaste for plastic surgery and Hollywood's rejection of her movie-star parents, Tony Curtis and Janet Leigh, once they'd reached 'a certain age'.
'I've been very vocal about the genocide of a generation of women by the cosmeceutical industrial complex, who've disfigured themselves. The wax lips really sends it home.' – Curtis on why she brought a prop to the Guardian photoshoot.
How long will it take to read: Nine minutes.
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Each week our editors select five of the most interesting, entertaining and thoughtful reads published by Guardian Australia and our international colleagues. Sign up to receive it in your inbox every Saturday morning
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Yes, the news cycle is unrelentingly grim, but John D Boswell is here to preach you some optimism. He reckons humans seem 'largely blind to the many profound reasons for hope' – mostly because they are accumulating gradually and quietly.
Medical miracles incoming: Says Barney Graham, an immunologist who played a pivotal role in developing mRNA vaccines: 'You cannot imagine what you're going to see over the next 30 years.'
How long will it take to read: Four minutes.
'Sex remains at the centre of much of the best fiction,' writes the author Lara Feigel, 'and we need powerful fictions to show us what sex is or can become.' From Miranda July's All Fours to the 'romantasy' of Sarah J Maas, modern readers cannot get enough of sexually explicit novels – and Fiegel has some theories as to why.
Sally Rooney says: 'The erotic is a huge engine in the stories of all my books.'
How long will it take to read: Five minutes.
In case you missed it: Our interviews with Sally Rooney and Miranda July are worth revisiting.
If you would like to receive these Five Great Reads to your email inbox every weekend, sign up here. And check out out the full list of our local and international newsletters.
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Four years ago, Tyler Perry's stepfather offered him a job in the office of his dog-training company in Portsmouth, Rhode Island. Perry had little else to fill his time: he was 29 and living in his mother's basement, uncertain what he should do with the rest of his life. In 2017, he had left Berklee College of Music, where he had ostensibly studied songwriting, but largely smoked weed and skipped class. The songs he wrote then were introspective and folk-driven, in the lineage of Nick Drake and Elliott Smith – artists he had been drawn to in his senior year of high school, who had spoken to him just as depression had first set in. 'I was depressed for, like, 10 years,' he says. In idle moments in the office, he would scour Craigslist, imagining a different life in New York or Nashville or LA. One day, on a whim, he applied for a recruitment job at a commercial real estate company in Los Angeles. He lied about his experience, and the fact he didn't have a degree. 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The classes were held in a theatre, and on the first day, Taylor invited each of his 40 students to stand on the stage. You had to go up and hold your palms out to the audience, and shift your weight from one foot to the other in time, and look everybody in the eye. It struck Perry as brilliant. In Los Angeles, Perry remembered the class, and it struck him as an act of radical presence; something Tyler Ballgame might do. He started to try it in his live shows. 'I'd reach out to the audience and look them in the eye. Like, we're both here to do something. I'm trying to connect, and we're going to live this experience together.' The songs came with an ease. Soulful, and sad sometimes, but also brimming with something hopeful and alive. They carried the richness and simplicity of the classics. Perry relocated to East Los Angeles, began collaborating with other neighbouring musicians, and playing live as much as he could. 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He looks out to the crowd, gently spreads his palms, and begins to sing. It is a golden performance, the songs sounding almost as if they have always existed, and Perry entirely mesmerising. As he plays, I think of something he told me over lunch – about the freedom and fluidity of performance. 'I want to be totally in the flow state, like gone,' he said. 'Where nothing is canned or prepared or contrived.' Some shows, he told me, you get it, and the rest of the band get it, and the audience gets it, too. 'And then it's like real magic. It's a celebration of the joy of performance and the joy of music.' Today as Perry and the band play, the air is filled with a kind of joy – with something like real magic in the warmth of a Sussex afternoon. Tyler Ballgame's new single New Car is out now. He plays the End of the Road festival, nr Blandford Forum, 30 August, and The Lexington, London, 10 September.

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