All the movies, podcasts, books, albums, and TV that made us feel a little more human this year.
Anna Lind-Guzik, Founder
Best Thing I Read: Cutting for Stone by Abraham Verghese. It was my first time reading Verghese, and I’ve added him alongside Chekhov to my mental list of favorite writers who are also doctors. It’s an epic novel mostly set in a hospital in Addis Ababa, with unforgettable characters and a stunning historical backdrop. The bodily detail can be gruesome at times, but the characters’ humanity is what sticks with you.
Best Thing I Watched: When I want to cry-laugh and feel things, I watch Somebody Somewhere, created by Bridget Everett. It’s a quiet show set in rural Kansas about chosen family, grief, and vulnerability. The series just ended on HBO, but I hope it gets picked up by another network for more seasons because it’s a beautifully moving story with characters that feel so real, and aren’t like any you’ll find elsewhere on TV.
Best Thing I Listened To: I went deep on relationship podcasts this year, and *ugh* they were genuinely helpful with personal growth. Because I’m a nerd, I looked for academics and practitioners to teach me, and the top two I turned to were Reimagining Love with Dr. Alexandra Solomon and my longtime fave, Where Should We Begin? with Esther Perel.
Kovie Biakolo, Contributing Editor
The Best Book I Read: You Don’t Know Us Negroes And Other Essays by Zora Neale Hurston has been one of my favorite reads this year, even though I’m not quite done with it yet. It’s an essay collection that covers almost every facet of Black American folk culture from church and church going to dance to the politics of race and gender, showing Hurston as every bit of the all-rounder she truly was. Reading it with 2024 eyes, Hurston’s writing easily allows you to place yourself in the time and landscape of the early 20th century she wrote in, but there’s an authenticity and love to her writing about culture that transcends time.
The Best Thing I Watched: Tell Me Lies Season 2 is an amazing feat, considering it is only eight episodes and the second season has come two years after the first. For a show that jumps timelines between present day and the past lives of Millennial college students, it traverses a lot of serious issues, from sexual and emotional abuse to grief to murder. But if it sounds so serious you couldn’t possibly enjoy it, you’d be wrong, because almost every episode manages to keep you on your toes and keep you invested in the outcome of a story largely depicting a bunch of deeply flawed—or really terrible—people.
The Best Thing I Listened To: I’ve listened to Shaboozey’s “A Bar Song” on repeat a lot, so I have to give it a shout-out along with the album, Where I’ve Been, Isn’t Where I’m Going, which I think is doing interesting things in genre-bending country, similar to Beyoncé’s Cowboy Carter. Along with these, I have to give a nod to Esther Perel’s podcast, which is among the best out there, teasing out contemporary platonic and romantic relationships matters from sex to grief to family, unpacking a lot of taboo topics with clarity and empathy.
Marissa Lorusso, Newsletter Editor
Best Book I Read: Mating by Norman Rush. A friend recommended this 1991 National Book Award-winning novel to me with such enthusiasm earlier this year that I couldn’t resist. It tells the story of two Americans in Botswana—a woman who’s in graduate school and a man who’s an anthropologist and is trying to start a matriarchal society in the desert. They fall in love, work alongside each other, argue about politics and gender and history—it all makes for a long, immersive, heartfelt, and genuinely unique novel.
Best Thing I Watched: I Saw The TV Glow. Even if you only interpret it as an allegory for the fear, isolation, and regret that can sprout up when we ignore serious questions about our gender identity, I Saw The TV Glow is a deeply moving film in a league of its own. But then there’s everything else the film tackles, too, right on its surface: life in the suburbs, the way our tastes shape our identities (and vice-versa), pivotal teenage friendships. Together, these themes and subtexts all add up to a brilliant and strange viewing experience I kept close to my heart all year. (Plus its soundtrack, filled with original songs by an impressive slate of indie-rock luminaries, is pitch-perfect.)
Best Thing I Listened To: I Got Heaven by Mannequin Pussy. The punk band, led by Marisa Dabice, has been churning out an impressive blend of confrontational rock, gauzy guitars, and razor-sharp pop melodies for several records. But their latest is an impressive level-up, filled with moments of iridescent beauty alongside the kind of righteous rage I needed to sustain me this year.
Kiera Wright-Ruiz, Social Media Manager
Best Book I Read: My favorite book this year is Bodega Bakes: Recipes for Sweets and Treats Inspired by My Corner Store by Paola Velez. Paola is such a force in the kitchen. Her imaginative recipes like thick’em (an ultra thick cookie) and plantain sticky buns (!!!) make me ecstatic to preheat the oven.
Best Thing I Watched: I LOVED Netflix’s Chicken Nugget. In this K-drama, a woman steps into a machine and accidentally transforms into a chicken nugget. It’s absurd, funny, and, oddly, moving.
Best Thing I Listened To: Whenever I listen to NPR’s Code Switch, the episodes tend to linger and give me something to chew on for days or even months afterward. Their episode from January called “Taylor Swift and the era of the ‘girl’” is something I keep revisiting. It’s about those who get to embrace girlhood and those who don’t.
Gina Mei, Executive Editor
Best Book I Read: As I’ve already sung the praises of Annie Jacobsen’s Nuclear War: A Scenario, which was easily my most haunting read of the year (and perhaps my life), I’ll choose The Future of War Crimes Justice by Chris Stephen as another equally depressing 2024 favorite. I found it to be a super digestible and straightforward look at the history of war crimes justice, and all the reasons (mostly bureaucratic, all utterly enraging) that so few war criminals have ever been tried for their crimes, let alone convicted. For something lighter, My Lesbian Novel by Renee Gladman was an enjoyably strange, genre-bending book that even got me out of a writing slump. For something in-between, Intermezzo by Sally Rooney seems to have become her most divisive book to date—but personally, I thought it was her best.
Best Thing I Watched: My film/TV consumption this year skewed very international, and with movies, often independent, which led me to a lot of what one Letterboxd user dubbed “freaky movies for freaks”—appropriately, in their review of 2022’s Babysitter. Directed by and co-starring Monia Chokri, the film is strange and horny and feminist to its core, as much a playful skewering of casual misogyny as it is a psychedelic fairytale about exhausted motherhood. Combined with an utterly delightful performance from Nadia Tereszkiewicz as Amy (the titular babysitter), and a perfect one-and-a-half hour run time (bring back movies that aren’t exclusively 3-plus hours), it’s also a total technicolor feast, worth a watch just for the visuals alone.
As far as TV goes, I’ve started dabbling in more K-dramas this year, and ended up watching Netflix’s The 8 Show, which drew a lot of comparisons to Squid Game when it first came out. I’m here to tell you: The 8 Show is much, much darker, and far more violent, and somehow, an even more scathing critique of the power that money affords and denies us.
Best Thing I Listened To: “Don’t Forget Me” by Maggie Rogers was one of my most-listened to songs of the year, and has not once failed to make me feel something when I listen to it. But overall, I didn’t listen to as much new music this year—although Faye Webster’s new album Underdressed at the Symphony was a notable exception, and is filled with gentle tunes perfect for basking in all your sparkling melancholy.