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What to Watch and Read This Weekend: Betty Gilpin vs. AI, Round Two
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What to Watch and Read This Weekend: Betty Gilpin vs. AI, Round Two
Plus: Buffy and Beavers
By Molly Templeton
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Published on March 6, 2026
Screenshot: 20th Century Fox
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Screenshot: 20th Century Fox
In two days, we spring forward, and while I am very excited about longer days, I am less excited about dark mornings. But, like everything, those won’t last forever. I am feeling springy. I hope you have some spring fever or some spring hope, or whatever feeling it is that comes from the sight of blooming trees and crocuses and blue skies peeking out from the gray. (It feels like there should be a specific word for that feeling, no?) Things are not less dire than they have been, and are in fact more dire in many ways, but watching the seasons change reminds me that change always comes. I’m sorry, cynics; I’m feeling a little hopeful this morning. Have a good weekend, hug your friends, and call your reps!
Dawn’s In Trouble. Must Be Tuesday.
On March 10th, 1997, Buffy the Vampire Slayer made its debut. I am really sorry to point this out, but I must: That means Buffy turns 30 next year. Buffy just turned 25 five minutes ago, so this is categorically impossible. But who am I to argue with the calendar? The best thing about this Buffy-versary is that I get to use the “Dawn’s in trouble” joke, which is especially funny if you consider that Buffy didn’t even debut on a Tuesday. (Remember when shows used to have specific nights they aired? And sometimes the networks would move them around on you? No? It’s fine, I’ll show myself out.)
I’m not saying a ton about Buffy itself here because, like so many Buffy lovers, my relationship with the show has grown ever more complicated over the years as we’ve learned more about its creator. But some things stand apart from the person who made them—especially when it took a whole massive team to create the thing we know and love. Like slayer powers belonged to every potential at the end of the series, Buffy belongs to us. Let’s just hope the new version doesn’t suck. (You can watch Buffy—and eventually the Buffy sequel? Reboot? Mysterious spinoff?—on Hulu.)
The Oscars Clock is Ticking!
You have, as I write this, nine days to catch up on Oscar movies before the Oscars happen. This means it is my duty to tell you to go watch Sinners. Already watched Sinners? Go watch it again! It’s nominated for sixteen Oscars! It deserves to be watched like sixteen times!
But there are, in fact, other interesting movies up for the big award. There’s One Battle After Another (I will be able to hear features editor Leah Schnelbach’s shriek when I admit that I still haven’t seen this) Frankenstein, Hamnet, Bugonia—and let’s not forget Amy Madigan earning Weapons’ single nomination. KPop Demon Hunters is nominated for animation, Train Dreams for cinematography, Sentimental Value for a lot of things, including international feature film. Despite Sinners’ record-breaking number of nominations, it feels like a wide year, the kind of year where, you know, there were a lot of great movies. (Even if it seemed hard to see some of them! I swear If I Had Legs I’d Kick You played here for maybe five minutes, if at all.) If you would like to catch up, a decent number of them are available to watch at home—enough that I can’t list them all here. It’d take up so much space. But thankfully, a lot of those lists already exist! So here’s one at USA Today, and one at Glamour, and one at TV Guide, so you can take your pick.
How Is It Possible This Disney Movie Feels Under-Hyped?
Hoppers is a movie about a talking beaver. Sort of. Hoppers is an animated Disney movie that I have heard shockingly little about. Perhaps this is because I don’t have children. Perhaps this is because Hoppers is, I repeat, a movie about a talking beaver. Well, actually, it’s about a college student whose consciousness gets transferred into a lifelike (for a cartoon, anyway) animatronic beaver and then inspires an animal rebellion. Wait, why haven’t I heard much about this movie?? Now I need to see it. This movie has a voice cast that’s all over the place (Jon Hamm? Kathy Najimy? Dave Franco??!?) and—wait, wait. This movie is written by Jesse Andrews? Who wrote Me and Earl and the Dying Girl and the screenplay for the very good film that it was adapted into? (House of the Dragon fans: go watch baby Olivia Cooke!) Okay. No one told me anything important, I see.
Other people than me, apparently, did not overlook this movie’s arrival; our reviewer, Reuben Baron, quite liked it.
Also, here is a very good real beaver.
Always Read (and Watch) Betty Gilpin
You may know Betty Gilpin from GLOW. You may know her from Mrs. Davis, and frankly, if you don’t know her from Mrs. Davis, I suggest you stop looking at the internet and start watching Mrs. Davis, especially if you liked Pluribus. But the thing about Betty Gilpin is that she is multitalented. In 2017 she wrote for Glamour about confidence and body image. In 2022 she published an essay collection, All the Women in My Brain. She’s also written for the New York Times. And now, for The Hollywood Reporter, she’s tackled a terrible topic: the “AI actress” Tilly Norwood. It begins, “They tell me you are an actress and a computer. I am an actress and almost 40. Let’s talk.” It also includes these sentences: “Tilly, you never had to be 14, so I’ll tell you what Google can’t. It feels like your soul gets a broken glass enema.” It is blisteringly funny and, underneath all the love for art, love for acting, love for people who make things, blisteringly angry. It’s not just a rebuttal of everything “Tilly Norwood” is. It’s a reminder that art is a human creation.
Reading About Reading
It’s awards-nominating season for book folk: the Locus Poll is open, Hugo Award nominators are doing their thing, and Le Guin Prize nominations are open (full disclosure, I also work on the Le Guin Prize). If you are interested in any of those things, you might be, I dunno, thinking about books, and thinking about the way people read and write about books. I think about these things a lot! And two of my favorite resources for finding out about what other people are thinking are the newsletter Interplanetary Mixtape and the Ancillary Review of Books’ Wow! Signal column. The weekly Interplanetary Mixtape spotlights essays about SFF and related topics, but also rounds up each week’s reviews; you can read work by several people about the same book. There are also art recs and videos! ARB’s Wow! Signal is more about criticism: this week’s includes Charlie Jane Anders’ newsletter about the state of the media after losing her review column at the Washington Post; and a Caroline Shea essay I can’t wait to read called “A Candle Burning: Nation and the Agency of Nature in Fantasy.” And there’s a lot more, too. Both include Jenny Hamilton’s excellent review of Into the Midnight Wood, because it really is just that good. It’s impossible to keep up with every cool bit of writing out there (and even in here, in Reactor-land!). It’s nice to have smart guides pointing out what you might have missed.[end-mark]
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