Before the 2016 presidential election, writer/director Andrew Bujalski didn’t think his film about the workers at a roadside sports bar was very relevant.
But after President Trump got elected, the man behind “Support the Girls” thought it was the perfect time to tell the stories of Americans who often go overlooked.
“It’s not an advocacy movie though,” Bujalski said in a recent interview. “It’s really just about these characters, these people, their feelings, what they’re going through.”
"Support the Girls" stars Regina Hall as an optimistic manager of a “bar with curves”. The film explores her relationship with her husband, her boss, and her female employees. The women become like a family as the story unfolds.
Hall told Cheddar that she admires how Bujalski was able to make the cast relatable.
“Everyone was different, but kind of united in that familial situation, all really human,” she said during the interview. “They’re people like us, with the same needs, wants, desires, disappointment, frustrations, everything.”
"Support the Girls" premiered at the South by Southwest Festival in Austin, Tex. this past weekend. It was the first film to secure a distribution deal at the event, with Magnolia Pictures getting on board.
For the full interview, [click here](https://cheddar.com/videos/how-this-comedy-landed-sxsws-first-major-distribution-deal).
Black-owned bookstores have benefited from the renewed interest, but some mom-and-pop operations have struggled to keep up with the soaring demand.
Would you pay $50K to go to college online? Harvard thinks you will. Jill and Carlo get into the question on the minds of every parent and student in America: what school will look like in the fall. Plus, the curious case of the PPP loans, and Trump doubles, then triples, down on the culture war.
A white woman walking her dog who called the police during a videotaped dispute with a Black man in Central Park was charged Monday with filing a false report.
Lauren Paylor, a bartender and mixologist, most recently at Silver Lyan, a newly-opened cocktail bar in Washington, DC., talked to Cheddar about unemployment amid the coronavirus pandemic.
Jill and Carlo catch up on all the news from the holiday weekend including the latest on the pandemic, President Trump's new re-election messaging, the Redskins name debate, a major tech acquisition, and whatever Kanye West is up to.
The number of confirmed coronavirus cases in the U.S. climbed to a new high of more than 50,000 per day on Thursday.
The FBI says a British socialite has been arrested on charges she helped recruit three girls to have sex with financier Jeffrey Epstein.
Sotheby's holds its first record breaking virtual auction amid the coronavirus pandemic. CEO, Charles Stewart, talks demand for virtual tours and auctions in the art world.
The no-good-very-bad year of 2020 is officially more than half over, though Dr. Fauci has a warning about where we're headed as we head into the peak of summer. Plus, some election results, the latest decision from the Supreme Court, and the national coin shortage. We lose Jill to some technical difficulties, but Carlo takes us home.
Ahead of a long weekend, Jill and Carlo reflect on what it means to celebrate Independence Day in this strange year. Plus, more states roll back their reopenings as we hit 50K cases a day. Also, why 'Mad Men' won't remove a controversial episode, and Love, Hate, Ate - holiday edition.
Load More