

#Who wrote utopia driver
'White Noise': All the Details on Noah Baumbach's Film Starring Adam Driver and Greta Gerwig 'Interview with the Vampire' Review: A Devilishly Sharp Spin on Anne Rice's Classic Hilary Swank's 'Alaska Daily' Doesn't Live Up to Its Top-Line Talent - or ABC's Past Procedurals Trump’s election really crystallized that concept, as so many stories post-November 2016 felt related to the president, his supporters, or the many problems connected to both. As long as you’re writing about what’s going on in the world today - and, one way or another, we all are - everything is timely. Commentators who use “timely” to describe narratives about police misconduct or racial injustice simply haven’t been paying attention long enough. People need to know know that this one is different than so much of the mindless entertainment out there, because this show speaks to the moment.īut does that mean it’s good? Bad? Effective? Affecting? “Timely,” on its own, doesn’t really tell us anything qualitative, and even as a context clue, the word has been hollowed out by misuse. When you watch a show or film that feels particularly relevant to headline news, it’s almost instinctual to throw the word “timely” into your own headline. There are obvious exceptions, when dissecting the weight of an excellent program is tied directly to its relevance, and before my pesky little trolls dig up eight old articles where I improperly lean on that particular adjective, I’ll admit: I’ve used it. By and large, “timely” is a terrible word to use in the context of a review.
