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‘The Audacity’ tears Silicon Valley a new one: Review

‘The Audacity’ tears Silicon Valley a new one: Review

If I want to hear about how billionaire tech bros are making the world worse, I can turn on the news. If I want to hear about how billionaire tech bros are making the world worse and at least laugh about it, I can watch The Audacity.

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Created by Jonathan Glatzer, a writer and producer on Succession and Better Call Saul, The Audacity takes a satirical sledgehammer to Silicon Valley. It tears into the tech world with cutting one-liners and a parade of ultra-wealthy, ultra-insecure “billionaire man children” who often feel frighteningly familiar.

What is The Audacity about?

Zach Galifianakis and Billy Magnussen in “The Audacity.”
Credit: Ed Araquel / AMC

Among those man children is Duncan Park (Billy Magnussen), the data mining CEO of tech company Hypergnosis. He’s a sleeveless vest stuffed with delusion and insecurity, a man who’s convinced of his own genius, yet still needs those around him to validate said genius.

His closest confidante is his strung-out therapist Dr. JoAnne Felder (Sarah Goldberg), who’s certainly not getting paid enough to hear about Duncan’s fraudulent activity. However, JoAnne’s record isn’t spotless either. Thanks to information from her sessions with Duncan and the other tech titans she treats, she’s picked up enough confidential information to get into some serious insider trading.

When Duncan discovers this, and when his own stock threatens to plummet, he blackmails JoAnne to help him out, resulting in a sharp, self-destructive spiral for both.

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Billy Magnussen and Sarah Goldberg kill it in The Audacity.

Sarah Goldberg and Billy Magnussen in

Sarah Goldberg and Billy Magnussen in “The Audacity.”
Credit: Ed Araquel / AMC

There are few joys in television greater than watching two great actors have it out, and you’ll get plenty of that in The Audacity thanks to Magnussen and Goldberg.

So often a highlight in supporting roles, from Into the Woods to HBO’s short-lived The Franchise, Magnussen takes center stage with his usual full-throttle commitment to ridiculousness. His Duncan is someone you love to hate: smarmy, full of himself, and always ready to keep digging deeper into a hole if it means he’ll get what he wants. Magnussen channels each of Duncan’s flaws with glee, and the result is cringe comedy gold.

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While Duncan believes he’s on top of the world, Goldberg’s JoAnne is all too aware of the fact that she’s at the bottom of the Silicon Valley pyramid. That fuels Goldberg’s impeccable take on JoAnne’s building breakdown, as does Duncan’s blackmail and her strained relationship with teen son Orson (Everett Blunck). We’ve seen Goldberg play a woman losing control before, as Barry‘s Sally Reed. (Who could forget her Season 3 elevator tirade?) Here, she once again nails that same level of desperation, coupled with JoAnne’s more composed therapist persona. Watching her go from therapist mode to panicked mode is one of The Audacity‘s darkly comic highlights. Watching the two begin to merge is even better.

Magnussen and Goldberg’s chemistry is superb, with Duncan and JoAnne wrestling for power in increasingly ridiculous ways. An early season highlight? JoAnne preferring to drive her car off a road in order to avoid interacting with an oncoming Duncan. He pulls into frame with the goofiest smile on his face, acting like her bestie even though he’s straight-up using her car data to track her. He believes he’s living in a tech thriller, while JoAnne’s fully in a horror movie. That imbalance is a core part of why JoAnne-Duncan dynamic works so well, but it’s also proof of The Audacity‘s tech bros’ total delusion: They live so far above everyone else that they feel they can do anything.

The Audacity‘s Silicon Valley is downright sinister.

Simon Helberg in

Simon Helberg in “The Audacity.”
Credit: Ed Araquel / AMC

The Audacity builds out a full, frightening world around Duncan and JoAnne. Disillusioned tech pioneers like Carl Bardolph (Zach Galifianakis) look down their noses at what Silicon Valley has become, all while trying to find a way back in. Parents like Duncan and his wife Lili (Lucy Punch) try to ensure their daughter Jamison (Ava Telek) gets into Stanford by any means necessary, hiring an elite team of coaches even though it makes her miserable. Elsewhere, inventor Martin Pfister (Simon Helberg) works tirelessly on perfecting an AI child, all while neglecting his own daughter Tess (Thailey Roberge).

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For the show’s teen ensemble of Orson, Jamison, and Tess, alienation from their parents is the norm. Through their eyes, Silicon Valley becomes a nightmare place to grow up.

Through the adults’ eyes, the Valley doesn’t seem so pretty either, despite the lavish mansions or luxury mud baths just a helicopter ride away in Napa. Instead of a tech heaven, it’s a surreal tech dystopia, one where a single algorithm can play God and package every bit of a person’s data for exploitation. It would almost feel like science fiction if this kind of data mining technology didn’t already exist, and that’s part of The Audacity‘s bleak appeal: making us laugh at ridiculousness that’s just one step removed from reality.

“The world there is not the world,” Orson says of Silicon Valley. He’s right. It’s a bubble bursting with big net worths and bigger egos. But, The Audacity reminds us, that bubble has a major impact on the real world, and isn’t that a silly, frightening thing?

The Audacity was reviewed out of its premiere at SXSW. It premieres April 12 at 9 p.m. ET on AMC and AMC+.

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Space nerds, rejoice! A fully-stacked, 20-story tall space shuttle will soon be on display at a brand new exhibit, appearing as though it’s ready to soar to the skies once more.

The California Science Center has announced that its long-anticipated Samuel Oschin Air and Space Center will open to the public on November 13, kicking off the final mission of the Space Shuttle Endeavour. The retired orbiter will be on permanent display at its new home in Los Angeles, boasting a vertical, ready-to-launch position as the museum’s centerpiece.

A legendary run

Endeavour was NASA’s fifth and final space shuttle, built to replace the lost Challenger orbiter. Its maiden voyage was in May 1992, when crew members pulled-off a daring spacewalk to capture a stranded satellite so that it could be repaired and launched again.

Endeavour also took part in the first servicing and repair mission of the Hubble space telescope in 1993. Over the course of 12 missions, Endeavour helped in the assembly and servicing of the International Space Station (ISS).

Endeavour landed for the final time on June 1, 2011, at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida after a 16-day mission to the ISS. Following that landing, only one other Shuttle mission took place, the Atlantis STS-135 mission, marking the end of NASA’s 30-year-long shuttle era, which began in 1981.

Retirement home

Since its retirement, Endeavor has been on display at the California Science Center, albeit laying horizontally rather than standing straight as though it’s ready for liftoff.

The upcoming display will include the Endeavour orbiter, the rocket’s solid boosters, and its external tank. Once fully stacked, the 20-story-tall vertical display will be the only “ready-for-launch” Space Shuttle system in the world in terms of its staging and appearance.

It took approximately six months for engineers to fully assemble the Endeavour for its new display through an intricate, Go for Stack process that began on July 20, 2023 and went on until the Endeavour orbiter was hoisted and mated to the external tank.

In just a few months, the Space Shuttle Endeavour will be available for view in all its glory at its new permanent home to commemorate its soaring legacy.

#Ready #Liftoff #Space #Shuttle #Endeavours #Exhibit #Opens #Public #YearNASA,rockets,Space Shuttle">Get Ready for Liftoff: Space Shuttle Endeavour’s New Exhibit Opens to the Public This Year
                Space nerds, rejoice! A fully-stacked, 20-story tall space shuttle will soon be on display at a brand new exhibit, appearing as though it’s ready to soar to the skies once more. The California Science Center has announced that its long-anticipated Samuel Oschin Air and Space Center will open to the public on November 13, kicking off the final mission of the Space Shuttle Endeavour. The retired orbiter will be on permanent display at its new home in Los Angeles, boasting a vertical, ready-to-launch position as the museum’s centerpiece. A legendary run Endeavour was NASA’s fifth and final space shuttle, built to replace the lost Challenger orbiter. Its maiden voyage was in May 1992, when crew members pulled-off a daring spacewalk to capture a stranded satellite so that it could be repaired and launched again. Endeavour also took part in the first servicing and repair mission of the Hubble space telescope in 1993. Over the course of 12 missions, Endeavour helped in the assembly and servicing of the International Space Station (ISS).

 Endeavour landed for the final time on June 1, 2011, at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida after a 16-day mission to the ISS. Following that landing, only one other Shuttle mission took place, the Atlantis STS-135 mission, marking the end of NASA’s 30-year-long shuttle era, which began in 1981.

 Retirement home Since its retirement, Endeavor has been on display at the California Science Center, albeit laying horizontally rather than standing straight as though it’s ready for liftoff. The upcoming display will include the Endeavour orbiter, the rocket’s solid boosters, and its external tank. Once fully stacked, the 20-story-tall vertical display will be the only “ready-for-launch” Space Shuttle system in the world in terms of its staging and appearance. It took approximately six months for engineers to fully assemble the Endeavour for its new display through an intricate, Go for Stack process that began on July 20, 2023 and went on until the Endeavour orbiter was hoisted and mated to the external tank.

 In just a few months, the Space Shuttle Endeavour will be available for view in all its glory at its new permanent home to commemorate its soaring legacy.      #Ready #Liftoff #Space #Shuttle #Endeavours #Exhibit #Opens #Public #YearNASA,rockets,Space Shuttle

announced that its long-anticipated Samuel Oschin Air and Space Center will open to the public on November 13, kicking off the final mission of the Space Shuttle Endeavour. The retired orbiter will be on permanent display at its new home in Los Angeles, boasting a vertical, ready-to-launch position as the museum’s centerpiece.

A legendary run

Endeavour was NASA’s fifth and final space shuttle, built to replace the lost Challenger orbiter. Its maiden voyage was in May 1992, when crew members pulled-off a daring spacewalk to capture a stranded satellite so that it could be repaired and launched again.

Endeavour also took part in the first servicing and repair mission of the Hubble space telescope in 1993. Over the course of 12 missions, Endeavour helped in the assembly and servicing of the International Space Station (ISS).

Endeavour landed for the final time on June 1, 2011, at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida after a 16-day mission to the ISS. Following that landing, only one other Shuttle mission took place, the Atlantis STS-135 mission, marking the end of NASA’s 30-year-long shuttle era, which began in 1981.

Retirement home

Since its retirement, Endeavor has been on display at the California Science Center, albeit laying horizontally rather than standing straight as though it’s ready for liftoff.

The upcoming display will include the Endeavour orbiter, the rocket’s solid boosters, and its external tank. Once fully stacked, the 20-story-tall vertical display will be the only “ready-for-launch” Space Shuttle system in the world in terms of its staging and appearance.

It took approximately six months for engineers to fully assemble the Endeavour for its new display through an intricate, Go for Stack process that began on July 20, 2023 and went on until the Endeavour orbiter was hoisted and mated to the external tank.

In just a few months, the Space Shuttle Endeavour will be available for view in all its glory at its new permanent home to commemorate its soaring legacy.

#Ready #Liftoff #Space #Shuttle #Endeavours #Exhibit #Opens #Public #YearNASA,rockets,Space Shuttle">Get Ready for Liftoff: Space Shuttle Endeavour’s New Exhibit Opens to the Public This YearGet Ready for Liftoff: Space Shuttle Endeavour’s New Exhibit Opens to the Public This Year
                Space nerds, rejoice! A fully-stacked, 20-story tall space shuttle will soon be on display at a brand new exhibit, appearing as though it’s ready to soar to the skies once more. The California Science Center has announced that its long-anticipated Samuel Oschin Air and Space Center will open to the public on November 13, kicking off the final mission of the Space Shuttle Endeavour. The retired orbiter will be on permanent display at its new home in Los Angeles, boasting a vertical, ready-to-launch position as the museum’s centerpiece. A legendary run Endeavour was NASA’s fifth and final space shuttle, built to replace the lost Challenger orbiter. Its maiden voyage was in May 1992, when crew members pulled-off a daring spacewalk to capture a stranded satellite so that it could be repaired and launched again. Endeavour also took part in the first servicing and repair mission of the Hubble space telescope in 1993. Over the course of 12 missions, Endeavour helped in the assembly and servicing of the International Space Station (ISS).

 Endeavour landed for the final time on June 1, 2011, at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida after a 16-day mission to the ISS. Following that landing, only one other Shuttle mission took place, the Atlantis STS-135 mission, marking the end of NASA’s 30-year-long shuttle era, which began in 1981.

 Retirement home Since its retirement, Endeavor has been on display at the California Science Center, albeit laying horizontally rather than standing straight as though it’s ready for liftoff. The upcoming display will include the Endeavour orbiter, the rocket’s solid boosters, and its external tank. Once fully stacked, the 20-story-tall vertical display will be the only “ready-for-launch” Space Shuttle system in the world in terms of its staging and appearance. It took approximately six months for engineers to fully assemble the Endeavour for its new display through an intricate, Go for Stack process that began on July 20, 2023 and went on until the Endeavour orbiter was hoisted and mated to the external tank.

 In just a few months, the Space Shuttle Endeavour will be available for view in all its glory at its new permanent home to commemorate its soaring legacy.      #Ready #Liftoff #Space #Shuttle #Endeavours #Exhibit #Opens #Public #YearNASA,rockets,Space Shuttle

Space nerds, rejoice! A fully-stacked, 20-story tall space shuttle will soon be on display at a brand new exhibit, appearing as though it’s ready to soar to the skies once more.

The California Science Center has announced that its long-anticipated Samuel Oschin Air and Space Center will open to the public on November 13, kicking off the final mission of the Space Shuttle Endeavour. The retired orbiter will be on permanent display at its new home in Los Angeles, boasting a vertical, ready-to-launch position as the museum’s centerpiece.

A legendary run

Endeavour was NASA’s fifth and final space shuttle, built to replace the lost Challenger orbiter. Its maiden voyage was in May 1992, when crew members pulled-off a daring spacewalk to capture a stranded satellite so that it could be repaired and launched again.

Endeavour also took part in the first servicing and repair mission of the Hubble space telescope in 1993. Over the course of 12 missions, Endeavour helped in the assembly and servicing of the International Space Station (ISS).

Endeavour landed for the final time on June 1, 2011, at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida after a 16-day mission to the ISS. Following that landing, only one other Shuttle mission took place, the Atlantis STS-135 mission, marking the end of NASA’s 30-year-long shuttle era, which began in 1981.

Retirement home

Since its retirement, Endeavor has been on display at the California Science Center, albeit laying horizontally rather than standing straight as though it’s ready for liftoff.

The upcoming display will include the Endeavour orbiter, the rocket’s solid boosters, and its external tank. Once fully stacked, the 20-story-tall vertical display will be the only “ready-for-launch” Space Shuttle system in the world in terms of its staging and appearance.

It took approximately six months for engineers to fully assemble the Endeavour for its new display through an intricate, Go for Stack process that began on July 20, 2023 and went on until the Endeavour orbiter was hoisted and mated to the external tank.

In just a few months, the Space Shuttle Endeavour will be available for view in all its glory at its new permanent home to commemorate its soaring legacy.

#Ready #Liftoff #Space #Shuttle #Endeavours #Exhibit #Opens #Public #YearNASA,rockets,Space Shuttle

Listen to Music Through Your Cheekbones With the Best Bone Conduction HeadphonesShokz has long been the leader in bone conduction headphones, despite a minor misstep with the first-generation OpenSwim, which lacked Bluetooth streaming. The OpenSwim Pro rectifies this, making it an excellent choice for far more than just swimming.Whether you stream via Bluetooth or use the built-in 32-GB music player, the OpenSwim Pro delivers impressive open-ear audio. It offers surprising bass and warmth, along with the clarity needed for audiobooks and phone calls.With standard and swimming EQ modes, you can easily tailor the sound for land or water. The IP68 waterproof rating ensures strong protection against sweat and water, while the silicone and titanium neckband offers both comfort and a secure fit.The headphones feature easy-to-reach physical controls and a battery that lasts up to nine hours when streaming via Bluetooth, or six hours when using the built-in music player. While the OpenSwim Pro may not be Shokz’s flagship model, it strikes the best balance of sound, design, and performance, placing it in a coveted position at the top of my list.SpecsHeadphone designNeckbandWeight27.3 g/0.96 ozBluetooth version5.4Microphones2Battery life6-9 hoursMusic player storage32 GBFile formatsMP3, M4A, WAV, APE, FLACWaterproof ratingIP68Charging typeProprietary cable#Listen #Music #Cheekbones #Bone #Conduction #Headphonesshopping,headphones,buying guides,audio,recovery mode

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