And now, for our annual look at the year in pop cultureā¦. Oh, wait. This was 2020. The year everything stopped cold.
Well, not really. Truth is, people turned to culture of all kinds in 2020 ā highbrow and lowbrow ā to satisfy varied and sometimes conflicting needs: Distraction, inspiration, consolation, escapism, hope. And those needs evolved: If we began lockdown in March by addictively binge-watching the darkly bizarre āTiger King,ā by early winter we were transfixed by a different sort of animal: the graceful octopod of āMy Octopus Teacher,ā extending her tentacles to make connections that seemed achingly poignant in a time when mere hugs between humans are taboo.
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And while live entertainment was tragically curtailed due to the raging pandemic, performers often found their own stages, in endlessly creative ways. A Broadway star serenaded health workers from his apartment window, and ballet dancers performed āSwan Lakeā from their bathtubs. There were Zoom proms, drive-in concerts and a host of cast reunions.
And then there was the TikTok guy on the skateboard. Drinking Ocean Spray from the bottle. Singing Fleetwood Mac. For all of us.
A totally selective, appropriately scatterbrained journey through some cultural moments of 2020:
JANUARY:
The year starts like any other ... as if! At the GOLDEN GLOBES, RICKY GERVAIS hosts for the fifth time and seems eager to get home. MICHELLE WILLIAMS speaks passionately of a womanās right to choose, PATRICIA ARQUETTE about voting, and JOAQUIN PHOENIX about ⦠something. The world mourns the sudden loss of KOBE BRYANT, and ponders a royal first when HARRY and MEGHAN step back from their duties. What will it all mean?
FEBRUARY:
And the Oscar goes to ... was that THIS year? Yep, it was only months ago that āPARASITEā swept the Academy Awards, a historic moment for South Korea and director BONG JOON HO, clearly adored in Hollywood. (If not by PRESIDENT TRUMP, who asks supporters at a rally: āWhat the hell was that all about?ā)
MARCH:
In a landmark moment for the #MeToo movement, HARVEY WEINSTEIN is sentenced to 23 years in prison for sex crimes, the once-powerful mogul led away in handcuffs for what could be the rest of his life. Days later, the coronavirus shuts down much of life as we know it. Binge-watching reaches new heights. āTIGER KINGā on Netflix, a story of very big cats and very strange people, becomes the thing everyone canāt look away from.
APRIL:
Enough weirdness, anybody got some good news? JOHN KRASINSKIās feel-good web series named, yes, āSOME GOOD NEWS,ā brings a āHAMILTONā cast reunion for a starstruck musical theater fan and a prom for high-school seniors missing theirs, with musical guests like BILLIE EILISH. Then thereās LADY GAGAās star-studded lineup ā try PAUL McCARTNEY and the ROLLING STONES ā honoring front-line workers. A stay-at-home edition of āSaturday Night Liveā features newly minted Oscar winner BRAD PITT playing DR. ANTHONY FAUCI. āHe did a great job,ā quips Fauci (the real one).
MAY:
Whoās that singing from the fifth-floor window? Every night at 7 as front-line workers are honored with cheers and honking horns, a beautiful tenor is heard in upper Manhattan singing āThe Impossible Dreamā: Itās Tony winner BRIAN STOKES MITCHELL, just recovered from COVID-19 himself, doing his signature song. Another artist making use of pandemic free time: MISTY COPELAND, American Ballet Theatreās first Black female principal dancer, brings together 32 ballerinas from 14 countries, all dancing the famous āDying Swanā in a video for āSwans for Relief,ā a fundraiser for struggling dancers.
JUNE:
A new SPIKE LEE joint arrives at the perfect time: In a year when Black Lives Matter is forcing a rethinking of so many things, āDA 5 BLOODSā looks at the Vietnam War from the oft-ignored perspective of its Black soldiers. And in what might be the future ā or near-future ā of concert-going, GARTH BROOKS presents a one-night-only show at 300 drive-in theaters, for $100 a car. (Unlike the live, secret show KEITH URBAN did in May for health-care workers, though, Brooks' concert is prerecorded.)
JULY:
Independence Day barbecues may be canceled, but musical (and history) fans have reason to cheer: the live-captured film version of Broadway smash āHAMILTONā is fast-tracked by more than a year to stream on Disney+. The roar of a real Broadway crowd, from performances filmed in 2016, is enough to bring a tear to a theatergoerās eye. On a MUCH smaller scale, ballet lovers are treated to a wildly inventive YouTube video featuring dancers across the globe performing āSwan Lakeā in their bathtubs (Get it? Lakes?)
AUGUST:
Fans are gutted by the death of CHADWICK BOSEMAN, who achieved fame with a series of star-making performances as Jackie Robinson, James Brown and Thurgood Marshall, and as groundbreaking superhero āBLACK PANTHER.ā Boseman dies at 43 of colon cancer, an illness he kept secret from almost everyone, making movies in between surgeries and treatments. The world mourns an actor of immense talent who, like many of his characters, radiated a regal sense of dignity.
SEPTEMBER:
What do fashion shows look like in the pandemic era? Mostly theyāre virtual, but CHRISTIAN SIRIANO invites guests to his Connecticut home for a socially distanced runway show with models in masks. The EMMYS are virtual, too, but the awkward format canāt quash the ebullient celebration up in Canada for the zanily talented cast of āSCHITTāS CREEK.ā Oh, and BRAD and JEN are back together! Just kidding! But they appear together in a Zoom reading of āFast Times at Ridgemont High.ā On the other side of the world (and underwater) in South Africa, we meet a glorious creature who simultaneously captures our need for escape and for emotional connection: āMy Octopus Teacherā is an antidote for troubled times.
OCTOBER:
Oh hey, BORAT... Somehow when we werenāt looking, SACHA BARON COHEN was filming a sequel. Itās typically outrageous and features a scene with Trump lawyer RUDY GIULIANI for which the word ācringeworthyā just doesnāt cut it. āDAVID BYRNEāS AMERICAN UTOPIA,ā a filmed version of the Broadway concert helmed by SPIKE LEE no less, finds the sweet spot in translating the exhilaration of live performance to the screen. Speaking of exhilaration, try watching @420doggface208, aka Nathan Apodaca of Idaho, peacefully skateboarding on TikTok to Fleetwood Macās āDreamsā and drinking Cran-Raspberry juice on the way to work ā a thing we somehow never knew we wanted to do.
NOVEMBER:
The first post-election āSNLā ends with ALEC BALDWIN holding a sign that says āYOUāRE WELCOME!!!ā -- a reference to his long-running Trump impersonation (and Trumpās loss). BEYONCĆ, already the most nominated female artist in GRAMMY history, scores nine more, including for āBlack Parade,ā released on Juneteenth. In his final screen role, BOSEMAN fittingly soars in āMA RAINEYāS BLACK BOTTOMā with a searing performance as a troubled jazz trumpeter.
DECEMBER:
āMy name is Elliot.ā ELLIOT PAGE, the Oscar-nominated actor for āJuno,ā announces he is trans, a landmark moment for Hollywoodās trans community. In a year with precious few blockbusters, WONDER WOMAN gears up to lasso end-of-year attention for its sequel, to be released simultaneously in theaters and on HBO Max. And speaking of blockbusters, how about BOB DYLANās deal: The 79-year-old bard sells his entire catalog for a sum estimated at more than $300 million. As a treacherous 2020 draws to a close, arenāt we all just so ready, as Dylan was in 1964, for these times to be a-changinā?