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What's Good Wednesdays

Humpday Recommendations: Doing business in China, Jazz on screen, Looking for Mom, Vargas at 20

Want to know what your GZERO writers are reading/ watching/ listening to at the moment?

Read: Red Roulette — What would you do if you came from nothing and years later ended up making billions from brokering business deals with China's red aristocracy, but then your well-connected, uber-rich wife divorced you and kept most of your money before vanishing in one of Xi Jinping's first anti-corruption crusades? You'd get the hell out of Beijing and write a book about it, of course. That's exactly what Desmond Shum did, and interestingly not a peep from the CCP so far. By the way, his ex-wife is still missing. — Carlos

Watch: Round Midnight – It's not just the soundtrack. Or the great Dexter Gordon's performance, which earned him an Oscar nomination. Or director Bertrand Tavernier's obvious love for jazz and the men and women who create it. Round Midnight (1986) is the best film about music, any kind of music, I've ever seen because Tavernier lets the players play, and he reveals the relationship between the music and the life going on around it. — Willis


Read: I Couldn't Love You More — Are You My Mother, part of the Dr Seuss brand, is a story about a baby bird searching for his mother, and was a staple in my home growing up. I couldn't help but think of the children's book when I recently read the novel I Couldn't Love You More by British writer Esther Freud. The story focuses on three generations of women in one family, mainly traversing England and Ireland in the 1960s. Using delicate prose, Freud explores how very messy maternal and familial relations can haunt a person well into adulthood. It also subtly raises the question: what is a mother anyway? — Gabrielle

Raise: Victor — It's been twenty years since the brash Dominican teenager Victor Vargas tried to pick up the lovely "Juicy Judy" at NYC's Hamilton Fish public swimming pool. But Peter Sollett's classic indie film Raising Victor Vargas is just as fresh, intimate, and sweltering a portrait of life, love, and family on Manhattan's Lower East Side today as it was then. Check it on Netflix or Amazon here. Bonus: the film was shot the week before 9/11 -- see if you can spot the Twin Towers cameo. — Alex

More For You

Listen: “The Discography of Asha Bhosle.” If you’re looking for new music after Bieberchella, may I introduce you to the legendary Indian singer, Asha Bhosle, whose voice helped redefine modern Indian music. Born pre-independence in 1933, Asha tai (aunt) began performing as a child alongside her sister, Lata Mangeshkar, another one of the greats. [...]
Track: Pizza. Many sharp-eyed reporters and analysts closely watch for patterns in the timing around the Trump administration’s biggest moves. Now, there’s a new indicator in the mix: pizza. The Pentagon Pizza Index tracks spikes in pie orders to the Pentagon. According to the site’s creators, cheesy upticks “frequently coincide with elevated [...]
See: “Raphael: Sublime Poetry at the Met.” The first Raphael retrospective ever mounted in the US is running through June 28 at the Met Museum. This is the kind of show that only comes around once in a generation. It traces his entire career, from his early days in Urbino to rivaling Leonardo and Michelangelo in Florence, to becoming the papal [...]
Watch: “The Studio.” If you’ve ever wondered how the movies get green-lit before they hit the big screens, you’ve got to watch this 13-time Emmy-winning show. It is a chaotic comedy that follows the life of studio head Matt Remick, played by Seth Rogan, and his team at the fictional Continental Studio. It gives a glimpse into what really happens [...]