What's Making Us Happy: A guide to your weekend snacking, viewing and listening

By Bob Mondello

What's Making Us Happy: A guide to your weekend snacking, viewing and listening

Here's what NPR's Pop Culture Happy Hour crew was paying attention to -- and what you should check out this weekend.

When I was a kid, I always made Bourbon Balls with my mom at this time of year. I still have the recipe that she had in her little box of cards. I made Bourbon Balls the other day -- they are just amazing. They're delicious, brownie-like things and I make way too many every year.

What I remember most about them was two weeks later, when we finally ate them, me at 5 or 6-years-old would have a little bit of one then make a terrible face because it tasted like alcohol and then pretend to be drunk for the next five minutes. And everybody at whatever party would just think that was adorable. That's what I'm going for. -- Bob Mondello

I'm obsessed with Somebody Somewhere on Max. It took me a minute to get into, I remember watching the first season and the first episode thinking this moves really slow, but for some reason it just clicked for me recently. I've binged it and I'm so sad that it's in its third and final season. Bridget Everett and that entire cast is absolutely incredible and it's actually become a comfort show for me. It's this exploration of being an outsider in a small rural town. And as someone who grew up in the South and in a small, suburban, rural town, it really hits in all the best ways. -- Ryan Mitchell

I recently started a rewatch of The Amazing Race on Paramount+. A throwback from another time. We were in a different world back then. It is so beautiful just to see regular people traversing the world and conquering their fears. I find it quite entertaining and calming. So check it out. -- Tre'vell Anderson

I've been listening to the great Tim Curry reading a story that has been co-opted by Big Christmas for far too long: A Christmas Carol. It's sappy, sentimental, treacly. Yes. That's why you need Tim Curry in the mix. He cuts through the treacle. He does not milk the sentiment. What he leans into is the language and the voice of the narration, it's my favorite thing. I just started my annual listening and I always forget how much funny throat clearing there is in those opening pages where Dickens is like: Why is it dead as a doornail and not dead as a coffin nail? And he goes into this tangent about Hamlet's father's ghost. It's just the best. -- Glen Weldon

The Netflix action movie Carry-On wants very badly to be Die Hard (as Sam Adams has noted in Slate), and it is very much not Die Hard. It's not as witty, and I don't think I'm shocking anyone by saying that Jason Bateman is not Alan Rickman. However! With that said, it's an entertaining and silly little diversion, nicely shot and choreographed, and featuring another good supporting performance from the terrific Danielle Deadwyler. Worth your time on a weekend evening or afternoon.

The funniest thing I read this week was Kathryn VanArendonk at Vulture, talking about what Taylor Sheridan is currently doing with Yellowstone. Truly, it is much weirder than whatever you're thinking if you don't watch.

I hope you'll spend some time with the list of best TV and movies of 2024 that was assembled by some NPR critics: me, Glen, Aisha, Bob Mondello and Eric Deggans. Lots to love.

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