
Review: Lauren Graham shines in Tubi's generational comedy ‘The Z-Suite'
Leading this crew is new Chief Executive Kriska (Madison Shamoun), 24, or '24½,' as she'll make a point of pointing out. She's peppy, ambitious and impatient; having worked at the firm, called Atelier, for a grand total of 168 days, including 43 'in the office,' she feels she's ready for, even due, a promotion. She's supported, if that's the word, by Clem (Anna Bezahler), who is sluggish, and Elliot (Spencer Stevenson), distracted by his own flamboyance.
Their appointment, in a real-world business sense, is idiotic — they don't have any idea how to run things, despite their 'literal communication degrees,' and depend heavily on Monica's former/Kriska's current secretary, Annabelle (Dani Kind), for guidance.
But this is a sitcom, after all — created by Katie O'Brien ('Teachers') — with no particular obligation to reality. How did Ted Baxter keep his job as a news anchor in 'The Mary Tyler Moore Show'? Did Darrin Stevens ever present even a halfway, half-baked idea for a campaign on 'Bewitched,' even with Samantha's help?
We do know that young people are good at social media and that the advertising business is full of bright stars under 30. And we know as well that people who run businesses can make very bad decisions and that people with no perceptible ability find themselves in positions of power.
There has been a good deal of feature and essay writing too about the zoomers in the work world lately — their supposed entitlement, unpunctuality, lack of initiative, lack of social skills, inappropriate dress — and 'The Z-Suite,' while not exactly taking sides, does hit these points. ('I have time blindness,' says Elliot, coming in late.) There are reasons, of course, to feel for the poorly paid young in a time when any kind of material stability seems out of reach, and society and the world have never seemed so close to collapse. Self-absorption might just be a defense mechanism.
Work, on the other hand, is so important to Monica — her work-life balance is tipped entirely to the former — that she has an exact replica of her office in her apartment. (Doug's problem is Christmas miniatures; he has apparently wiped himself out collecting them.) While the 20-somethings explore their new playground — armed with a company credit card, Elliot redecorates the office with a churro cart, a ball pit, a slide ('for aesthetic purposes only') and a llama — Monica, who finds all doors shut to her, is contriving to get back into the game.
Much of the humor comes out of mutual generational disdain. (Thus was it ever.) Each party finds the other incomprehensible — 'What is it that people your age like to do, besides correct others?' Monica asks the social media team, while she still has her job — the oldsters mangling the youngsters' slang, the youngsters' ignorant of anything they didn't personally experience, Gen-Z finding Gen-X insensitive, Gen X-finding Gen-Z too sensitive and so on. Though it's the spine of the show, it's the most obvious, least interesting aspect, and again, your own age may determine whether you prefer a joke about 'geriatric stink' to one about the 'ethically made adult sleep sack' Clem wears to a meeting. ('If I get tired, I just lie down.')
It may just be my own chronological prejudice, but there's a tiresome quality to the younger characters the show doesn't quite overcome — although one might also say that this means only that they have played their parts well.
Also at the agency are Evan Marsh as Minnesota Matt, an overeager square not as young as the youngsters or as old as the oldsters, and so reviled by both — it's a character created mostly to be abused — and Nadine Djoury as HR person Natasha, who worries that the phrase 'Oh, God' might 'trigger the deists.'
And there's good guest work from Mark McKinney as an Atelier client who defers to the taste of his 14-year-old daughter, and Rhys Darby as a roguish former colleague now out on his own — his scenes with Graham have a delightful rhythm, and one hopes to see more of him.
But what 'The Z-Suite' has going for it most of all is Graham, an actor who, however whimsical the context, comes across as absolutely real and amplifies the realness of the show that surrounds her. She has something of the quiet charisma of a Jean Arthur or Irene Dunne — actors whom all generations should know — and whatever sort of character she's playing, she's the person in any scene you'd most want to go over and talk with. As the sudden underdog here — even as a person we're to take as critically self-involved and going a little crazy — she reads as the protagonist.
With only four episodes available for review, whatever longer game the show is playing — whether lessons will be learned or no lessons will be learned — remains unknown. Perhaps Monica and Kriska will discover that, experience aside, they're not so different after all. In any case, this being Tubi's first foray into original scripted content, it's reasonable to assume that the series won't end with the season. I'm good with that.
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"Dark sarcasm" isn't something that one would expect to hear in the jazz- and classical-influenced pop of Laufey. The 26-year-old Icelandic-Chinese musician is known for her romantic and dreamy tunes inspired by the Great American Songbook—a canon of classic pop songs, Broadway numbers and jazz standards from the first half of the 20th century, including works by such composers as George Gershwin, Cole Porter and Rodgers and Hammerstein—and rendered with a Gen Z perspective. Yet several songs on her upcoming new record, A Matter of Time (August 22), take a more candid—and at times, sobering—tone that contrasts with her earlier material about growing up and being in love at a young age. Album announcement Album announcement Emma Summerton "I'm a very sarcastic person," Laufey (pronounced Lay-vay) tells Newsweek. "With the last album [2023's Bewitched], I showed the light, and I wanted to show a little bit of darkness on this album. I had a lot of fun doing it. It's kind of like an anxious Cinderella." A Matter of Time, Laufey's third studio record, marks another step in the career of the Los Angeles-based singer-songwriter, whose story reads like a fairy tale come to life. Since her 2022 debut album, Everything I Know About Love, Laufey has played sold-out shows; performed with such artists as beabadoobee, Norah Jones, Barbra Streisand and Billy Joel; and won a Grammy Award in 2024 for her second record, Bewitched. Her music attracts nearly 19 million monthly listeners on Spotify, and her TikTok account has 8.7 million followers. Larger and Bolder Sound For A Matter of Time, Laufey says she wanted to make a work that sounded larger and bolder. "But at the core," she adds, "I didn't want to move too much away from my own sound. There's definitely more sonic exploration on the album, which was really important to me." Helping Laufey achieve that vision were her longtime producer Spencer Stewart and, for the first time, The National's Aaron Dessner, whose production credits include albums for Taylor Swift and Gracie Abrams. "I've always wanted to work with Aaron," Laufey says. "I'm such a big fan of his and The National. I worked with Aaron [on] a session, and something felt really right about it. It brought a level of speed and shine to the album that I was looking for." An example of Laufey branching out stylistically for this record is the country-inspired track "Clean Air." "It's about letting go of something toxic from the past, whether it's a job, a relationship or a friend," she says. "It immediately landed in this dreamy country world. I love the harmonies of Dolly Parton, Linda Ronstadt and Emmylou Harris. I wanted to have that sound in some way, and it felt like it wasn't a far toss from my world." The song "Silver Lining," the first single released ahead of the new album, recalls early 1960s pop music; Laufey wrote it while she was at Electric Lady Studios in New York City. "I found this vintage electric guitar in a corner and was like, 'I want to write a '60s song with the fun strings and this mid-century vibe and reverbed-out kind of sound.' I wanted it to be a love song, but sarcastic. Icelanders are not good at saying things very directly. We find these side ways of saying it. And I think 'Silver Lining' was kind of my way to do that." Yet A Matter of Time isn't a drastic stylistic left turn from Laufey's first two albums—the lush and elegant arrangements and her sublime torchy singing voice remain the cores of her work, such as on the bossa-nova-styled "Lover Girl" and "Clockwork." But her perspectives about love and the world around her have matured. "It's definitely more bold as well," she says of the lyrics. "It's more honest. It's more raw. It was a fun challenge finding growth within myself." Snow White lead Snow White lead Emma Summerton The feisty "Tough Luck," which finds Laufey throwing shade at a rotten boyfriend, is a notable counterpoint to her usual romantic perspective. "I just wanted to write a mean song," she says. "I had this experience, and it was so funny to me. I was like, 'This is a song.'" On the lush and heartbreaking "Snow White," she critiques idealized beauty with the ironic lyric: "A woman's best currency is her body, not her brain." "I was frustrated with beauty standards and myself for needing to compete with those standards," she says. "Like, 'Why can't I just remove myself?' The lyrics are about how the world has kind of set us all up to need to fit into those standards to compete." "Sabotage" is the album's final and most dramatic track, featuring a dissonant-sounding coda that seems more appropriate for an indie rocker than a pop song; Laufey calls "Sabotage" the album's thesis statement. "It's about that contrast between this glass-like beauty and chaos. This album, for me, showcases the complexity of female emotion to the world. So often, we're good at putting up a beautiful front on the outside, but then there's a noise or mess going on inside, this anxiety. I wanted to find a way to use songwriting and music to describe that contrast." Although Los Angeles is her current home, Laufey pays homage to her Icelandic roots on the track "Forget-Me-Not," recorded with the Iceland Symphony Orchestra; some of the lyrics were written in her native language. "It's a song about the experience of leaving your home country and feeling like you're losing it a little bit," she says. "This was my way of reaching back and reminding it that I love [Iceland] and pleading to 'not forget me.' And so the lyrics—at least in the chorus—had to be in Icelandic because I want to speak to its soul." Born Laufey Lín Bing Jónsdóttir, she was introduced to classical music through her Chinese violinist mother, and her exposure to jazz-pop standards came courtesy of her Icelandic father's record collection. At a young age, she played both cello and piano. "I was like listening to orchestra rehearsals in my mother's womb," Laufey, who was raised in Reykjavík and Washington, D.C., says. "I was given a violin when I was 2. Classical music was what I've heard at home my whole life. But also, it was a lot of jazz music and the Beatles." Although she harbored the idea of becoming a singer in addition to being a musician, Laufey initially didn't think it was realistic for her to forge a career in the vintage music that she grew up with. "I didn't have any example of success from somebody who looked or sounded like me in current times. My favorite singers were from the '40s, '50s and '60s. So I just didn't believe it. I knew that music was always going to be a huge part of my life. I was just too scared to jump into it. Laufey later attended Berklee College of Music in Boston on a scholarship, which was a turning point for her. "There were so many people writing around me, and it kind of empowered me to explore my sound and try things. So I started writing in a way that reflected my favorite music, which was songs from the Great American Songbook. I realized that if I wrote in that form but used modern experiences, it could create something that people would be interested in." Her breakthrough came when she wrote and released a single, "Street by Street," in 2020 that topped the Icelandic radio charts. Laufey's fame grew around this period when she started posting popular videos online of her performances of classic standards by jazz legends such as Ella Fitzgerald and Chet Baker, as well as her original compositions. Through AWAL, a record company that allows its artists to retain ownership of their work, she released her albums Everything I Know About Love and, a year later in 2023, Bewitched. 'A Generation of Mixture' Much has been written about Laufey's huge popularity with her Gen Z audiences, which is remarkable given that jazz and pop songs from the 1920s to the 1960s are generally a tough sell to mainstream youth. One major aspect of Laufey's appeal to her young fan base is that, underneath the music, her mostly autobiographical lyrics are relatable and contemporary. "I loved it [the Songbook sound] so much growing up.... It's very natural to me to advocate for that. I couldn't fake being a pop singer—this is just what I do. I'm so lucky that people are interested in it. I think it's because Gen Z is just so open to different styles of music. And with the amount of access we have to music from all different genres and decades, the palette of young listeners has really changed. "There are so many artists who have styles that don't fall into a certain box, but are applauded because we are a generation of mixture. So many of my fan base are mixed race like me or from different cultural backgrounds. I think that's a part of it." Laufeyperforms with Gustavo Dudamel & LA Phil at the Coachella Stage during the 2025 Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival on April 19, 2025 in Indio, California. Laufeyperforms with Gustavo Dudamel & LA Phil at the Coachella Stage during the 2025 Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival on April 19, 2025 in Indio, Coachella Laufey will be touring large arenas in support of the new album—further evidence of her growing popularity—including two nights at New York City's Madison Square Garden. Yet she has stayed mostly grounded through all of the attention. "I've been practicing that since I was so young," she says, "like the highs and lows of going on stage, playing a recital, coming back home and knowing that I still have to finish my homework the next day. My Chinese upbringing is, 'Stay humble and thankful and respect everyone around you.' That is something that I carry with me always." "I am in true shock over my career," she adds. "It's always surprising to me. It's very hard to have any sort of ego about it when I'm kind of curious as to how it even happened in the first place." Further Listening Everything I Know About Love [ARTWORK] Everything I Know About Love [ARTWORK] Emma Summerton Everything I Know About Love AWAL, 2022 If someone was listening to Laufey's 2022 debut album for the first time and did not know that its music consisted of mostly original material, they could've sworn she was interpreting classic Broadway and jazz-pop songs from the era of Frank Sinatra, Ella Fitzgerald, Peggy Lee and Tony Bennett. That's a credit to how Laufey faithfully mines that era with letter-perfect precision and authenticity: from the melodies and lovelorn lyrics to Laufey's wistful and sultry voice. "It's about dealing with growing up," Laufey said of the album in a press release at the time. "It's also very 'hopeless romantic.' All the songs are based on my personal experiences in the past years, but the way I write about them is like fiction." Bewitched Cover Bewitched Cover Emma Summerton Bewitched AWAL, 2023 Laufey didn't experience the dreaded sophomore slump with Bewitched. Instead, it won a Grammy in 2024 under the best traditional pop vocal album category. In addition to containing the hugely popular "From the Start" and the title song, Bewitched features Laufey's cover of the Erroll Garner standard "Misty." "This is a love album," she said in a previous statement, "whether it be a love towards a friend or a lover or life. The first album also touched a lot on things like moving out of my childhood home and moving into a new city for the first time—being an adult. With this one, I've experienced a little bit more of that, and I'm writing about the magic in the love of being young."


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5 must-watch movies you can stream for free on Tubi now
The biggest streaming platforms like Netflix and Prime Video often take the headlines, but did you know that, thanks to the best free streaming services, you can stream some incredible movies without having to cough up a monthly fee? One of the best free streamers in the business right now is Tubi. The platform offers hundreds of movies that you can enjoy without a subscription and without even signing up. The only 'price' is having to tolerate a few commercials, and while I'm certainly no fan of ads, the odd break in the action is a small price to watch these excellent flicks for free. However, while Tubi's library is vast, there's quite a lot of bargain-bin or TV-quality fodder in the mix. Nevertheless, there are plenty of Hollywood favorites, and some modern classics as well. That's why I've picked out the five movies you need to watch on Tubi now. Before Christopher Nolan was one of the biggest names in Hollywood, helming a trilogy of Batman movies and turning the life of Robert J. Oppenheimer into one of the most compelling biopics of the 21st century, he crafted a psychological thriller called 'Memento." It seems relatively quaint in comparison to Nolan's grand-scale recent work. However, it's no less gripping, with a truly phenomenal hook and a performance from Guy Pearce that ranks as one of his best roles. A masterclass in non-linear storytelling, 'Memento' offers two separate narrative strands that at first appear confusing and a little contradictory, but by the end join together in a satisfying full-circle moment. Pearce plays Leonard Shelby, a former insurance agent, suffering from amnesia, and on the hunt for the man he believed murdered his wife. To say any more would spoil some of the movie's surprises, but I'll just advise you to watch this one very closely. Watch "Memento" on Tubi now Get instant access to breaking news, the hottest reviews, great deals and helpful tips. Martin Scorsese's 2013 crime comedy reveals in excess, not least of which via the chunky three-hour runtime. But that's sort of the whole point. This lampooning of the Wall Street lifestyle casts a condemning glance over a seedy world where 'enough is never enough.' Frankly, this movie sells itself based on the talent involved with Leonardo DiCaprio in the leading role, and Jonah Hill, Margot Robbie and Matthew McConaughey flanking him in support. With Scorsese behind the camera, no wonder it's considered a modern great. The subject matter is Jordan Belfort (DiCaprio), a real-life former stockbroker who eventually pleaded guilty to fraud and market manipulation after years of illegal activities. The movie follows Belfort from entry-level Wall Street grunt to the leader of his own firm. A trail of debauchery-fueled carnage follows in his wake, and while his rise is swift, his eventual fall comes equally as fast. 'The Wolf of Wall Street' is funny, smart and most of all, supremely entertaining from beginning to end. Watch "The Wolf of Wall Street" on Tubi now Ask somebody on the street to name a war movie, and I would wager there's a very strong chance they will reply 'Saving Private Ryan.' Steven Spielberg's 1998 epic is judged by many to be his magnum opus, which, when you consider his filmography bursting with classics, is extremely high praise indeed. It sets the tone with its devastating opening set on Omaha Beach during the Normandy invasion of June 1944, and from there, it's an often-bleak exploration of the horrors of World War II. But what makes 'Saving Private Ryan' so impressive is that while it showcases the brutality of war, it doesn't forget to give viewers glimpses of hope and humanity. It sees Captain John Miller (Tom Hanks) tasked with leading a squad of men behind enemy lines to locate the eponymous Private James Ryan (Matt Damon). Ryan's three brothers have been killed in combat, and the U.S. military determines that, for moral purposes, Ryan must be found and brought home to save his family from more heartbreak. While attempting to find Ryan, the group faces overwhelming odds and huge hardship, but they approach each obstacle with honor and unrelenting courage. Watch "Saving Private Ryan" on Tubi now There's something in those Cronenberg genes because Brandon Cronenberg proved himself to be just as capable of crafting a psychologically riveting sci-fi as his father, the iconic David Cronenberg, with his memorable debut 'Possessor.' This twisty movie will really stay with you, and you'll probably want to watch it more than once just to unravel its many layers. It presents a simple story on the surface, but there's plenty to dig into beyond the basic setup. Plus, the leading performance from Andrea Riseborough is really quite special. 'Possessor' is set in the near future and sees an elite assassin, Tasya Vos (Riseborough), complete various hits for a corporation. The intrigue comes in her method, which involves taking control of other people's bodies to complete the job, but things get complicated when a host fights back against Tasya's invasion of their mind. If you need further convincing, "Possessor" holds a 94% score on Rotten Tomatoes. Watch "Possessor" on Tubi now If I were judging movies based solely on the quality of their screenplay, then '12 Angry Men' would be almost unrivalled. It packs some of the greatest writing in Hollywood history, and the fact that everything else about it is seriously fantastic is just a very appreciated bonus. Directed by Sidney Lumet, written by Reginald Rose, and starring the legendary Henry Fonda, it's a legal drama so riveting that it challenges even the best thrillers and has more than stood the test of time. Even its themes of societal prejudice and the true nature of justice remain as timely today as they were back in the 1950s. The 12 men in question are the members of a jury in a New York County Courthouse. Their job is to decide the fate of a young 18-year-old boy accused of murdering his father. Convening in the jury chamber, initially, all but one juror (Fonda) is convinced of the boy's guilt, but as they begin to discuss the facts and their theories, each is forced to consider their morals and values, and reasonable doubt begins to creep in. Oh, and I can't talk about '12 Angry Men' without tipping my cap to Lee J. Cobb for his role as Juror No. 13, a man who is the most convinced of the dozen of the boy's guilt. Watch "12 Angry Men" on Tubi now