It's time for us to reevaluate the offerings from HBO, a network that has given us too much good for our own good when it comes to entertainment. You can't help but recognize a drama that redefined television with a little story about a coveted Iron Throne. How can you not tip your hat to the great Larry Sanders Show? And then there are newbies, like Euphoria, that have turned the often-melodramatic teen drama category into a cutting edge storytelling device about drug use and social pressures. So here's the rundown, best as we can imagine it: the top 40 HBO shows, including our takes on characters like Tony Soprano and Carrie Bradshaw. We know there are always some capital-O opinions when it comes to the output from this beloved premium network, so sound off in the comments. But don't come at us with any pro-Westworld takes—you know that show is off its rocker.
It's time for us to reevaluate the offerings from HBO, a network that has given us too much good for our own good when it comes to entertainment. You can't help but recognize a drama that redefined television with a little story about a coveted Iron Throne. How can you not tip your hat to the great Larry Sanders Show? And then there are newbies, like Euphoria, that have turned the often-melodramatic teen drama category into a cutting edge storytelling device about drug use and social pressures. So here's the rundown, best as we can imagine it: the top 40 HBO shows, including our takes on characters like Tony Soprano and Carrie Bradshaw. We know there are always some capital-O opinions when it comes to the output from this beloved premium network, so sound off in the comments. But don't come at us with any pro-Westworld takes—you know that show is off its rocker. |
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| On January 7, even after everything, he whined that he didn't want to say the election was over. |
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Yes. Your friends are right. If you haven't done so yet, you need to watch The Bear. This show qualifies as the truest fire-and-blood depiction of restaurant life in the history of television, but it's more than that, too: the hurtling chaos of Christopher Storer's Chicago-based FX series feels like a metaphor for the collective stress of being alive in 2022. But for Storer himself, The Bear clearly embodies something else, too: a method of processing stories of loss, estrangement, trauma, addiction, and food from his own life. Esquire spoke with Storer to get the backstory on the TV show of the summer. |
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Featuring exclusive Greats sneakers, Truff hot sauce, a quick-drying towel, and more. |
| Judging by these photos, George Lazenby had the best time when the camera weren't rolling. |
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At 47, Jack White's learned a few lessons. He's been one-half of the biggest band on the planet, a troubadour, a record label boss, and a tabloid fascination. A rock god, a husband—something he became again earlier this year when he got married on stage in Detroit—and a dad, now to teenagers. Age has made him more accepting, he says, even of negative things. In the middle of a year that saw him launch a massive world tour and drop two albums—Fear of the Dawn, out in April, Entering Heaven Alive, out today—Esquire caught up with White about returning to the road, antique conventions, and showbiz. |
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