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Girls gone bad: Lena Dunham’s Too Much is just not good enough

3 days ago
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There is one TV show that has been enjoyed most often, and most reliably, among my cohort in New York: Girls, the seminal HBO dramedy about Brooklyn’s downwardly mobile and highly self-important creative class of the 2010s.Though a cultural lightning rod when it aired from 2012 until 2017 – its whiteness, convincing narcissism, frank sexuality and frequent nudity all catnip for the cresting blogosphere and cyclical moral panic – Girls has rightfully settled into its status as one of the best television series of the 21st century, a foundational text for millennials as well as a biting satire of solipsistic, Obama-era striving.(Although viewers too young to remember it as anything other than canon now see the girls’ flailing – their freedom to wear terrible prints, listen to Vampire Weekend and be earnest – as something to be envied rather than derided, a core tenet of the millennial redemption arc.)The show was always sharper than tendentious criticism acknowledged, a knowing send-up not to be taken too seriously, though it did seriously shape the TV that followed – the idea of an “unlikable” female protagonist was always ahistorical, but messy, compelling women on television proliferated in Hannah Horvath’s wake, from the girls of Broad City to Insecure’s Issa, Phoebe Waller-Bridge’s Fleabag to Pamela Adlon’s Better Things.It is unfortunately still radical to see someone who looks like creator, writer and star Lena Dunham be naked on screen without judgment; though television has explored sex much more successfully than movies in the years since, no show has fully succeeded Girls’ unvarnished vision of sex as something both banal and essential.

No wonder so many people are rewatching it.All of which is to say: expectations were high for Too Much, Dunham’s new TV series for Netflix.Though not her first project since Girls – she helmed HBO’s ill-fated series Camping, made two feature films (one much better than the other) and directed the (excellent) pilot of Industry – Too Much is the first true follow-up to the show that made her a cultural flashpoint at the age of 26.From the jump, Jessica, played by the comedian Megan Stalter, appears as a natural successor to Dunham’s annoying but subtly endearing Horvath.Once again in Brooklyn, Jessica does something headstrong and inadvisable: she breaks into her ex-boyfriend Zev’s (Michael Zegen) apartment and screams him and his new girlfriend Wendy (longtime Dunham friend Emily Ratajkowski) awake, hysterically demanding that he declare leaving her to be the worst thing anyone has ever done.

The amateur and ultimately futile home invasion is the first sign that Too Much will, like Girls before it, concern at least one prickly and off-putting character who is refreshingly and unashamedly not skinny.It is also the first sign that something is off.Whereas Hannah annoyed with a recognizable, skewering self-obsession, Jessica’s Too Much-ness – shocking volume, machine-gun delivery, inherent awkwardness – is a gag.Stalter comes from the world of front-facing camera internet comedy, where heightened bits and jarring phrases reign supreme (her best work – “hi, gay!” – will get stuck in your head for hours).The translation to television works in small parts, as in Hacks, but flounders as a lead, particularly one supposed to attract a handsome musician (Will Sharpe) at a pub and succeed as an advertising director while showing up to work in bunny ears.

Dunham is now in her late 30s and married (her husband, the indie musician Luis Felber, co-created the show with her); no one will begrudge her avoiding a repeat of the Girls formula, which no show has been able to crack (Adults tried this spring, and failed).With Too Much, she steers far from any specific scene, instead focusing on the relationship between Jessica and Sharpe’s Felix, loosely based on her own.The 10-part romcom features the welcome presence of Dunham’s underrated acting, a buzzy lead in Stalter, a refreshingly grey vision of London, a murderers’ row of cameos – among them, Andrew Scott, Naomi Watts, Stephen Fry and Kit Harington – and sensitive scenes between two weirdo lovers.But without a scene or a trope to satirize – Dunham, through Jessica, is thoroughly enamored by English romcoms from Pride & Prejudice to Notting Hill – its comedy falters.Long on grating gags and short on zingers, Too Much is, and I say this begrudgingly, an overlong and underbaked disappointment.

It is, however, very much of its era in television, when the downsides of the streaming boom have come into clearer focus,Episode lengths for Too Much vary from 31 minutes to a baggy 50+, less evidence of creative flexibility than a resistance to editing,Like Jessica’s favored nightgowns, the chapters are oversized and diaphanous, standard Netflix second-screen fare; some, such as the standout third episode depicting an accidental all-nighter punctuated by repeated, insistent sex as Jessica and Felix fall in love, believably advance their relationship with Dunham’s distinctive sense of erotic realism,Others, such as a Jessica meeting Felix’s friends and, true to form, doing too much ketamine, trap the characters in a cyclical loop of dysfunction,Dunham is, as the critic Lili Loofbourow put it, an excellent miniaturist – Too Much shines when the world falls away from Jessica and Felix, as they build the couple’s secret language of bits, vulnerabilities and callbacks.

But as soon as the show meanders – to some egregiously overdrawn co-workers, to Jessica’s mother (Rita Wilson) on FaceTime across the pond, Dunham loses her grip.One scene, Jessica is getting a dressing-down from her boss (Richard E Grant) for her performance; the next, they’re bingeing coke at a work party at his house.But perhaps most disappointing to me, as a fan of Girls, is the show’s tenuous grip on the reality of the body.It is refreshing to see Stalter, a plus-size actor, play an unabashed character who generally gets what she wants, and whose romantic rivals are played by Ratajkowski, the epitome of conventional hot on Instagram, and the French movie star Adèle Exarchopoulos.It also feels a bit disingenuous to not acknowledge appearances at all, particularly when the culture is regressing back to the eating disorder-riddled “thin is in” of the 2000s.

During one early sex scene, Felix lays a hand on Jessica’s bandaged stomach – always hapless, she burned herself – but does not grab her, as if he respects her curves, but does not crave her, as if they are beside the point of attraction.Such is the muted energy of Too Much, a show at once too broad and not enough.Dunham, once the tongue-in-cheek “voice of a generation”, has succeeded again – unfortunately this time, it’s in making Netflix background TV.
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BP agrees to sell US onshore wind business as it shifts back to oil

BP has agreed a deal to sell off its onshore wind business in the US as the oil multinational turns its back on renewable energy after a failed attempt to go green.The company said it would sell its share of 10 windfarms, which generate enough clean energy to power more than 500,000 US homes, to the New York-headquartered LS Power.The terms of BP’s deal with the power and energy infrastructure company were not disclosed. However, the value of the windfarms, nine of which are operated by BP, is understood to be lower than the $2bn (£1.5bn) valuation estimated for BP’s onshore wind business in the past

about 18 hours ago
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Festivalgoers help drive Burberry to best sales performance in 18 months

Shoppers snapping up Burberry wellies, scarves and light jackets to wear at music festivals have helped the fashion brand to its best sales performance in 18 months despite lacklustre spending by tourists around the world.Sales of the luxury British brand fell by 2% to £433m in the three months to the end of June, with a 1% decline at established stores, an improvement from the 6% fall in the previous quarter and the best performance since Christmas 2023.Shares in Burberry rose by more than 4% on Friday morning on the better-than-expected performance, as CEO Joshua Schulman, who was appointed a year ago, attempts a turnaround.Sales rose in Europe and the Americas but continued to fall in Asia, including its all-important Chinese market, which accounts for 30% of sales.Schulman, the former boss of the US fashion brand Coach, said: “Its a tough macro [environment] out there and we are taking things step by step but we are optimistic about the quarters ahead and the business in general

about 20 hours ago
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Jaguar Land Rover delays launch of new Range Rover Electric

Britain’s largest carmaker, Jaguar Land Rover, has delayed the planned launches of its new electric Range Rover and electric Jaguar models to give it time for more testing and for demand to pick up, the Guardian can reveal.JLR has written to customers waiting for the Range Rover Electric to inform them that deliveries of the new version of the model will not start until next year, after initially aiming for late 2025.Two people with knowledge of the carmaker’s plans said that two planned Jaguar models – much anticipated since a viral pink-and-blue rebrand – may also be pushed back by several months compared with original plans.JLR has been hit by the impact of Donald Trump’s tariffs in recent months; this week it reported a 15.1% drop in sales in the three months to June after a temporary pause in exports to the US

1 day ago
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New ‘buy now, pay later’ affordability checks may cover even smallest loans

Lenders may have to carry out affordability checks on even the smallest buy now, pay later loans under new rules drawn up by the City watchdog.The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA)on Friday published details of its plan to regulate the £13bn buy now, pay later (BNPL) market.The proposals include requiring firms to offer support to customers in financial difficulty. Borrowers will also be able to complain to the financial ombudsman service if something goes wrong.Sarah Pritchard, the FCA’s deputy chief executive, said the regulator had wanted to police the sector for some time, amid rapid growth in demand for this type of loan

1 day ago
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White House seeks inspection of Fed building as Trump piles pressure on Powell

The White House is pushing for an inspection of the US Federal Reserve headquarters in Washington after Donald Trump suggested the central bank had mismanaged funds for building renovations.The scrutiny comes as Trump has unsuccessfully tried to pressure the Fed chair, Jerome Powell, to quit and demanded he and other officials lower interest rates. Powell has said that lowering rates prematurely could lead to higher inflation, and that Trump’s tariffs had contributed to price increases.In response to the Fed chair’s resistance, Trump has threatened to fire Powell multiple times.Yesterday, after reports that Trump floated the idea of firing Powell to House Republicans, Trump said: “I don’t rule out anything, but I think it’s highly unlikely unless he has to leave for fraud

1 day ago
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‘Worse than Covid’: hospitality bosses blame Reeves’ budget for UK downturn

“From a financial point of view, last year’s budget was worse for hospitality than Covid,” says Philip Thorley, who owns 18 pubs across Kent and employs about 400 people.Usually he is looking to recruit staff to help out in the summer months but this year will be different, he says, as the £25bn increase in employers’ national insurance contributions (NICs) that came into force in April has been “catastrophic for our company and industry”.He says the fact that Thorley Taverns is now taxed at about £8,000 a week, totalling more than £400,000 a year, means it cannot afford to take on anybody new during busier months. Current staff will have to work harder, Thorley adds, and the extra pressure could affect customer service levels and opening times.“This affects anybody in retail, in the high street and other entry-level jobs, especially young people,” he says

1 day ago
technologySee all
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AI firms ‘unprepared’ for dangers of building human-level systems, report warns

2 days ago
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Zuckerberg says Meta will build data center the size of Manhattan in latest AI push

2 days ago
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Sage iPhone for children review: ‘Would it make me want to divorce my parents?’

2 days ago
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Internet-safe iPhone for children goes on sale for £99 a month

3 days ago
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WeTransfer says user content will not be used to train AI after backlash

3 days ago
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Apple inks $500m deal for rare earth magnets with US mining firm

3 days ago