
Netflix Bites brings tastes of shows to Vegas. Think Stranger Things pizza, Bridgerton tea
To enter Netflix Bites, the restaurant collaboration between the streaming giant and the Las Vegas hotel MGM Grand, you pass through glistening red lips, opening wide just off the casino floor, then proceed up a gentle incline.
Advertisement
As you crest the summit, a large image of Beth Harmon,
Anya Taylor-Joy 's character from The Queen's Gambit, hangs to the right. Harmon nestles in a giant martini glass, a chess piece held aloft, chess boards above and below.
Other images from the titles that inspired Netflix Bites hang throughout: a surfer riding a slice of pepperoni pizza that nods to the Surfer Boy Pizza chain in
Stranger Things , Queen Charlotte from
Bridgerton literally spilling all the tea as she reads Lady Whistledown gossip, the One Piece pirate ship with a cargo of Japanese rice-and-seaweed musubi snacks, and several more artworks.
These images, rendered in saturated colours, owe something to cartoon stills, something to pop art, even a little something to posters by 19th-century French painter Toulouse-Lautrec.
Netflix Bites aims to bring the streaming platform's shows to life, according to its vice-president of consumer products Josh Simon. Photo: AFP
Their aesthetic appeal joins with the game of identifying the shows 'behind' the art – yes, that is a manager from
Squid Game shown as the frank in a hot dog – and with favourite memories from watching these shows.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


RTHK
6 hours ago
- RTHK
Art lovers set for feast in rare Picasso auction
Art lovers set for feast in rare Picasso auction Bernard Piguet with some of the ceramic plates and dishes made by Pablo Picasso. Photo: AFP A clutch of one-off and hitherto unseen ceramic plates and dishes by Pablo Picasso are going under the hammer in Geneva on June 19. Emblematic motifs from Picasso's artistic universe – pigeons, fish, a goat, a bull and a bird adorn the colourful plates and dishes. "It's a truly exceptional collection," said Bernard Piguet, director of the Piguet auction house in Geneva. "The plates and dishes we have here are real Picasso works. "These unique pieces belonged to Picasso's estate, and in the early 1980s, his heirs gave them to one of their friends." The close friend, a French art lover whose name has not been revealed, kept them until his death. His heirs have decided to put the ceramics up for sale. Made between 1947 and 1963 in the Madoura workshop in Vallauris on the southeast French coast, the ceramic artworks are being exhibited to the general public for the first time ahead of Thursday's auction. The seven pieces are being sold in separate lots. Two large platters decorated with pigeons are both expected to fetch between 30,000 and 50,000 Swiss francs. A third plate depicting three blue, pink, and brick-coloured fish on a white background, resembling a child's drawing, is estimated at 20,000 to 30,000 francs. A thin brick, titled "Head of a Bearded Man", and painted with ceramic pastels in yellow, white, garnet, brown, blue orange and green, has the same estimate. Glazed on a painted background in shades of grey, brown, and black, a terracotta plate depicting a goat's head bears the prestigious stamp "Original Picasso print" on the back. It is valued at 20,000-30,000 francs. The two others feature a bull on a hexagonal terracotta tile and a stylised bird on a plate painted in black and white were valued at at least 15,000 francs each. "It's a lot," Piguet said of the price. "But don't forget that these are works of art in their own right and unique pieces" without replicas. "If you step back from Picasso's work and his drawings, which are becoming practically unaffordable today, you have here original works by Picasso that command a reasonable estimate." Picasso created thousands of plates, platters, vases, pitchers and other earthenware utensils in the Madoura ceramics studio, run by the pottery couple Georges and Suzanne Ramie. After World War II, "Picasso was already an internationally-renowned artist", said Adeline Bisch Balerna, head of paintings and sculptures at Piguet. "He had already opened up a huge number of avenues for all artists; the great, well-known works had been created, and he was seeking new means of expression for his art." Picasso would visit the Madoura studio, meet Georges Ranie, and be "captivated by all the possibilities offered" by this new artistic outlet, she explained. Piguet is also auctioning two Picasso works "never before seen on the art market", from the same family friend's collection: "Serenade" (1919), an Indian ink and watercolour painting estimated at 20,000-30,000 francs, and the pencil drawing "Famille balzacienne" (1962), valued at 80,000-120,000 francs. (AFP)


RTHK
a day ago
- RTHK
Beach Boy Brian Wilson, surf rock poet, dies at 82
Beach Boy Brian Wilson, surf rock poet, dies at 82 Brian Wilson performs during the Pet Sounds Tour in 2017. Photo: AFP Brian Wilson, the Beach Boys co-founder who masterminded the group's wild popularity and soundtracked the California dream, has died, his family announced on Wednesday. He was 82. "We are heartbroken to announce that our beloved father Brian Wilson has passed away. We are at a loss for words right now," read the statement published on Wilson's social media accounts. "We realise that we are sharing our grief with the world." The pop visionary crafted hits whose success rivalled The Beatles throughout the 1960s: between 1962 and 1966 a seemingly inexhaustible string of feel-good hits including "Surfin' USA", "I Get Around", "Fun, Fun, Fun" and "Surfer Girl" made the Beach Boys into one of America's biggest-selling bands. But after five years of prodigious songwriting, in which he produced 200 odes to sun, surfing and suntanned girls, Wilson sank into a deep, drug-fuelled depression for decades. He would emerge 35 years later to complete the Beach Boys' unfinished album, "Smile," widely regarded as his masterpiece. Born on June 20, 1942, in a Los Angeles suburb, music was a haven of safety and joy for Wilson after an upbringing in which he suffered abuse from his domineering father, who would go on to manage the group. Music was Wilson's protection, as he gathered his brothers around a Hammond organ in the living room to teach them jazz and gospel harmonies. The Beach Boys were a family affair. He formed the band with his two brothers Dennis and Carl, his cousin Mike Love and neighbour Al Jardine when he was 19. Wilson did all the songwriting, arranging, sang, and played bass guitar. His bandmates just had to sing in harmony. Their first song, "Surfin" in 1961, combined the rock styles of Chuck Berry and Little Richard and the preppy vocal harmonies of "The Four Freshmen." By late 1962, there was hardly a teen who did not know them thanks to "Surfin' USA." (AFP)


RTHK
5 days ago
- RTHK
UK's Prince William calls for action to protect oceans
UK's Prince William calls for action to protect oceans This week's UN conference aims to get more countries to ratify a treaty on protecting ocean biodiversity. File photo: AFP Britain's Prince William on Sunday called on world leaders and businesses to take urgent action to protect the planet's oceans, saying it was a challenge "like none we have faced before". Speaking ahead of the UN Ocean Conference, which begins in France on Monday, William said rising sea temperatures, plastic pollution and overfishing were putting pressure on fragile ecosystems and the people who depend on them. "What once seemed an abundant resource is diminishing before our eyes," William, heir to the British throne, told the Blue Economy and Finance Forum in Monaco. "Put simply: the ocean is under enormous threat, but it can revive itself. But, only if together, we act now," he told the meeting of investors and policymakers. This week's UN conference aims to get more countries to ratify a treaty on protecting ocean biodiversity which currently lacks sufficient signatories to come into force. William addressed Sunday's gathering in his role as founder of the Earthshot Prize, launched by the prince in 2020 with the aim of making huge strides to tackle environmental problems within a decade. On Saturday, William's office released a video of him talking to David Attenborough, one of the world's best-known nature broadcasters, about his latest documentary "Ocean" which examines the plight of the seas. "The thing which I am appalled by, when I first saw the shots that were taken for this film are what we have done to the deep ocean floor," Attenborough told him. "If you did anything remotely like it on land, everybody would be up in arms." (Reuters)