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‘Taking my clothes off is my whole life!’ Bryan Cranston on the glorious gross-out return of Malcolm in the Middle | Television
The intro to the new Malcolm in the Middle is quite the thing. Kids punch police officers. Santa Claus gets kicked in the face. A barrel full of faeces detonates inside a family car. This recap of previous episodes is so full of gross-out comedy and family fights that a grandma grabs her teenage grandson and crushes his testicles until he squeals. “And,” intones a voiceover at its end, “someone actually asked for more of this.”
Did they? It’s been 20 years since the Emmy-winning sitcom about an outrageous working-class US family with the titular child genius went off air. It’s a show whose fans remember it fondly for never dipping in quality throughout its seven seasons. But were they really clamouring for more?
“It was in all the magazines,” says Frankie Muniz, AKA lead character Malcolm. In 2015, he casually tweeted that it would be “so cool” to catch up with the characters and “I couldn’t believe the response. I was shocked.” Although, really, he shouldn’t have been. After all, he’s spent decades getting first-hand experience of how much more loved the show is than he ever dreamed.
“One of the wildest was the first time I went overseas. I had no idea people knew the show there. I was in Geneva, walking with my girlfriend and people were looking. By the end of it, we were literally being chased down the street. When I’m in Europe or I’m in Mexico or in Central America, people love the show so much that … I’m not comparing myself to the Beatles at all, but it almost was that odd level of ‘What is happening?’”
Fans should be happy. The rebooted Malcolm in the Middle (subtitled Life’s Still Unfair, after the theme tune lyrics) is every bit the laugh-out-loud pleasure that the original was. The four half-hour episodes – which reunite the original cast for parents Lois and Hal’s 40th wedding anniversary celebration – are full of killer gags, surreal humour and OTT family showdowns ranging from siblings calling the tax office on each other to Malcolm attempting to win an argument about not being stuck up by keying his own car. It’s a comedic joy.
And it would never have been made without one man. The series really came to be following a conversation Muniz had shortly after that tweet. “I had dinner with Bryan and I remember him saying something like: ‘There’s no role I’d want to revisit more than Hal,’ so he took the lead. It’s thanks to Bryan that it really did happen.”
That, just to be clear, is Bryan Cranston. AKA the star of Breaking Bad, widely regarded as one of the greatest TV shows of all time. He won the Emmy for outstanding lead actor four times in five seasons, creating one of the finest performances ever committed to screen. Is it not surprising that the one role he’s keenest to reprise is a goofball dad with a penchant for stumbling into ludicrous slapstick scenarios?
“I think it’s because he’s been murdering so many people on other shows,” laughs Jane Kaczmarek, who plays Malcolm’s mother, Lois. “He’s like, wow, I can go back and be Hal again?”
The opportunity to have fun certainly isn’t one that Cranston wastes in the new episodes. He performs a full-on choreographed dance routine in a supermarket aisle. He attempts to microdose, accidentally takes enough hallucinogens for 15 elephants and ends up imagining himself as Nine Inch Nails’ Trent Reznor, replete with thigh-high leather boots. He is repeatedly naked, including a callback to Hal’s habit of stripping down so Lois can shave off his excess body hair while his kids watch on in horror.
“Taking my clothes off seems to be my whole life,” laughs Cranston – who recently won an Emmy for appearing in an episode of Seth Rogen comedy The Studio, in which he wore a leopardskin thong. “I thought a nudity clause meant that it was circumspect as to when someone was going to be naked. I didn’t know my agent viewed a nudity clause as ‘nudity is essential’. So here I am, a 70-year-old man parading around in his skivvies – or less.”
Cranston’s all-or-nothing approach won’t exactly shock fans of the original Malcolm in the Middle. As far as he was concerned, the more extreme his commitment, the funnier the joke.
“I can’t even recall all the things that I’ve done, but all in the name of comedy, man. You gotta go for it,” he says. “I was covered in blue paint. I was tied to the front of a city bus. I had 60,000 honey bees all over me – I got stung in my crotch. In one episode I had to drink a concoction of raw meat and eggs.”
You had to?
“Yeah, of course I did. Because I wanted to. Because I know the audience would wonder if I really did it. So in the same shot that I’m cracking eggs, putting raw meat in, and blending, I start drinking it.”
And this is the role you were desperate to do over?
“It was seven great years of my life – in which I met the most wonderful people. There’s no better job than going to work and thinking of how to be funny.”
The intervening years have taken the cast in very different directions. Kaczmarek took a hiatus from acting, as “my life went topsy-turvy. I got divorced shortly after the show ended and had three kids that I really wanted to raise.” Erik Per Sullivan, who played Malcolm’s younger brother Dewey, is currently studying for a master’s degree at Harvard – and is the only member of the original family to be recast (Kaczmarek: “He’s studying Dickens and is an incredible student – they offered him buckets of money to come back, and he just said: ‘No thank you’.”) Muniz threw himself into alternative ventures, from becoming a professional racing driver to running an olive oil shop with his wife in which he “was personally filling 600 bottles a day – because I want to make sure everything’s perfect”. The latter came as no surprise to the cast.
“I remember him saying once in the makeup chair he was thinking about buying warehouses in Australia,” laughs Kaczmarek. “And I thought, what 16-year-old kid is thinking about buying a warehouse? He was a good kid. He didn’t drink. He didn’t do drugs. He was a real straight arrow.”
Given that some of them stepped away from acting, you can’t help but wonder whether it felt odd to be back on screen. Especially given that one of them became quite possibly the greatest actor of his generation.
“I think Bryan was more nervous to work with me again,” laughs Muniz. “I wasn’t intimidated to work with him, because he’s always just been such an amazing guy to me. Throughout all the success he’s had, he’s always been there to support whatever I’m doing. When I had the olive oil company, he bought the olive oil. I was in a band, and he came to the shows. When I was racing, he checked on me after a wreck. I was just excited to spend more time with him.”
This is a vibe that comes across pretty clearly in the show. To see the cast back together is to marvel at chemistry that is somehow every bit as vigorous after two decades apart. Second child Reese (Justin Berfield) steals scenes with his hilariously malevolent rivalry with Malcolm and non-binary sibling Kelly (the one new addition to the cast, as Lois was pregnant with them in the original run, played by Vaughan Murrae). Eldest son Francis’s (Christopher Kennedy Masterson) manic – and futile – determination to be the apple of his mother’s eye is still hilarious (“Mom … I’m senior management. I have 75 people under me.” “That’s 75 people plotting to replace you!”).
It’s exactly the slice of joy the world needs right now. Did the team ever feel like helping to bring some laughter into people’s lives was a public service given how dark the world feels?
“Comedy is essential right now. It’s not even important. It’s essential,” says Cranston. “Because it’s a break from the bombardment of non-stop information. People who have the news on 24 hours a day in their homes, I don’t think they realise the damage they’re doing. You might as well make a house full of asbestos or just have radiation constantly emitting through your house.”
There is one thing about bringing the show back that doesn’t feel quite right, though. When the original run wanted to prove Lois’s unshakeable belief in Malcolm, it ended with her telling him he could be the greatest person on the planet – the US president.
“God, who would want to do that now?” says Kaczmarek. “Talk about unfair: look who we got as president. If only Lois had raised Donald Trump, she could have put a couple of good kicks up his backside.”
Malcolm in the Middle: Life’s Still Unfair is on Disney+ on 10 April.
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Aaron Judge RBI drought hits career-long 10 games
NEW YORK — When Ben Rice launched his 16th home run of the season earlier this week, grabbing a share of the Yankees’ team lead, it seemed only to be a matter of time before Aaron Judge would respond.
That’s how it went in April, when the captain remarked, “I couldn’t let him catch me.” Yet that game this week against the Blue Jays passed without an answer from Judge — followed by a couple more, including Thursday’s 2-0 loss at Yankee Stadium.
“I’m not doing enough at the plate,” Judge said. “That’s what we’re doing right there. … I wouldn’t say we’re not seeing the ball well. I think it’s about making sure we’re swinging at the right pitches.”
For most players, a couple of hitless nights is unremarkable. Judge, as you may have noticed by a trophy case that includes three American League MVP awards, isn’t most players.
So when Judge struck out four times in Wednesday’s loss to the Jays, then took a collar on Thursday, it prompted questions. Thursday marked Judge’s 10th consecutive game without an RBI, which matches the longest drought of his career (done three times previously). Judge went 1-for-15 in the series against Toronto pitching, with one walk and eight strikeouts.
“He’s just going through it a little bit right now,” manager Aaron Boone said. “Usually, that means good things are coming on the other side. He’s a little in-between, probably. Fastballs got on him, and he was a little out in front of some other pitches.”
Overall, Judge will enter Friday’s series against the Rays batting .250 (46-for-184) with 16 homers and 30 RBIs in 51 games, carrying a .935 OPS. He’s tied with Rice for third in homers among all Major Leaguers and is seventh in OPS.
Boone frequently lauds Judge’s hot streaks by saying that he is simply “playing a different game than everyone else.” Even during the off nights when his performance returns to sea level, Boone said he’s not concerned about his superstar.
“Usually anytime a hitter goes through it, it’s a little timing related,” Boone said. “I think that’s all it is. He’ll get through it, and somebody will pay the price real soon.”
This weekend would be a good time. With the first-place Rays coming to town, Judge knows he and the rest of the lineup will need to put up runs against a tough pitching staff.
“Anytime you’ve got a hot team coming in, it’s going to make it tough,” Judge said. “Especially a team like that, where they took care of business in Tampa when we just saw them. We’ve just got to tighten up a couple of things here with us and we’ll be right where we need to be.
“The offense isn’t too far off. You get a couple of timely hits, you get a couple of walks when you need it, and some good things are going to happen. You’ve just got to get some traffic back out there.”
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BTS fans pack Las Vegas Chinatown as Allegiant Stadium shows begin
LAS VEGAS (FOX5) — As hundreds of thousands of fans of K-Pop group BTS head into Las Vegas for Memorial Day weekend, numerous small businesses are being inundated with fans after a phenomenon: the BTS Army effect.
BTS will perform at Allegiant Stadium for four nights from May 23 through 28.
Across Chinatown, patrons will see lines outside restaurants and various establishments after a visit from one of the K-Pop band members or the group.
While BTS and members of the boy band have notably visited other popular establishments across Las Vegas, they have been spotted along the Chinatown corridor at popular mom-and-pop shops for good Asian eats.
MORE ON FOX5: BTS brings Arirang World Tour to Las Vegas, local businesses prepare for fan surge
“Where they go, we know it’s going to be good. We know there’s going to be a mob of people, but at least it’s like, our people,” said one fan who is coming in from the Bay Area, who had already seen a prior show locally.
Urban Matcha found a line outside the door, this morning, after band member J-Hope came Thursday for a shaved ice matcha dessert; millions of fans watched videos of the visit circulate on social media platforms.
Fans also visit establishments that appeared on a BTS Army “live feed;” other establishments hold BTS-themed special events with special menu items through the performance dates.
“Our small businesses in Chinatown and small businesses that are members of the Chamber are so excited for BTS to come here the second time around. They bring a factor to them as they love to support small businesses– and as they support small businesses, the Army follows and supports small businesses,” said Catherine Francisco of the AAPI Chamber.
The business boost comes after a packed previous weekend on the heels of the Electric Daisy Carnival in town; hundreds of thousands of attendees headed to Chinatown establishments in search of food and drink at all hours of the day and night.
“Everyone really discovering Chinatown– and its great businesses and great products and food and drinks. We thank them for really supporting small businesses,” Francisco said.
Establishments have ramped up staffing and preparations to accommodate extra patrons in town during the back-to-back EDC weekends and BTS performances, Francisco said.
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