We've asked a bunch of Passerbuys from across the States and in Europe for their TV shows of the year, and most of them are available now for binge-watching. So it's time to catch up before the year ends.
Read Moreculture
The Passerbuys Best Albums of 2017
We've asked a bunch of Passerbuys from across the States and in Europe for their albums of the year, and some debut albums made the list giving us brand new artists to look forward to next year.
Read MoreThe Passerbuys Best Movies of 2017
We asked the over 300 women of Passerbuys from LA and New York to London and Paris for their favorite movie of the year, and we've rounded them up for you right here.
Read MoreRecord Shopping at Commend Records
For the latest in an eclectic collection of music, Commend Records in the Lower East Side has a variety of records and cassette tapes to serve the local community of artists.
Read MoreA Movie At Syndicated
Syndicated is Bushwick's first and only dine-in movie theater, bar, and restaurant. Offering screenings of everything from Hollywood classics to indie flicks and box office hits paired with a cinema-inspired cocktail menu, we stopped by the spot recommended by passersby like Jenna Wortham.
Read MoreBook Shopping At Molasses Books
Part-used bookstore and part-bar, Molasses Books is at the center of Bushwick's lit scene, offering a place to trade in your old books for someone else's while also grabbing a drink.
Read More12 Podcasts to Listen to During Your Commute
Whether you're new to the world of podcasts and don't know where to start or just looking for some new programs to listen to, we asked passersby for their favorite podcasts to help you in your search.
Read MoreClemence Poles' Top Ten TV Shows of 2016
From brand new series to new seasons, these are the ultimate binge-worthy series you need to know about. These next couple of weeks really are meant for clicking that 'continue watching' button on Netflix — though we admit we're a little hurt every time it asks. (Yes, Netflix, I really am going to watch this episode of The Office for the 52nd time.) But for these shows you'll definitely want to clear your schedule and hunker down to run through these episodes. Happy Bingeing!
1. Atlanta
Atlanta is 2016's new comedy show written by and starring Donald Glover. The show centers around life in Atlanta with Alfred Miles, a hot up and coming rapper, and his entourage.
2. Togetherness
Togetherness follows two couples living together in Los Angeles. It catalogues their relationships as friends, couples and as individuals pursuing their dreams.
3. Better Things
Better Things revolves around the life of a single mom raising three teenage daughters and trying to hold onto her acting career. The brilliant writing is the result of the shows star, Pamela Adlon, and comic genius Louis C.K.
4. Transparent
Transparent is - in our opinion - one of the greatest shows of the decade. The Amazon show follows a family as they learn that their patriarch has kept his identity as a transgender person private from his children. We watch as family dynamics change, become raw and other family secrets come to light.
5. Veep
Julia Louise-Dreyfuss plays VP Selina Meyer in this uber-successful HBO series that, very appropriately, released a new season right in the midst of the election. Personally, if she were real, we would've preferred a President Meyer than what we ended up getting.
6. Narcos
This years new Netflix series follows infamous Colombian kingpin, Pablo Escobar. We alternate POVs between the Drug Enforcement Agency and Escobar as they play out their game of cat and mouse.
7. Last Week Tonight With John Oliver
A weekly roundup of all things cultural and political - and generally relevant - with a splash of satire courtesy of John Oliver. Perfection.
8. The Night Of
In the era of Serial, Making a Murderer and The Jinx it should hardly come as a surprise that HBO contributed another series to add to the genre. The Night Of, an eight episode mini-series, explores an odd murder in New York City that brings in issues of culture and politics.
9. Stranger Things
This pick shouldn't come as a surprise as this kid crew has pretty much taken the world by storm. Stranger Things is set in 1980 in a small town in Indiana. The plot of this science fiction show follows the disappearance of a young boy from the town and the mysteries his friends and families have to unravel in order to find him.
10. Mr. Robot
Mr. Robot is about a mentally unstable computer hacker in New York City. The show is wildly confusing and totally worth it. We want to think this is what Anonymous is like. Kind of. This show originally premiered in 2015, but released its second season just recently in fall 2016.
Clemence Poles' Top Ten Albums of 2016
Usher's No Limit is probably my favorite song in 2016, along with Young M.a.'s OOOUU. Still I can't help but miss the experience of a great album, and it was refreshing to see what artists went that route, with Frank Ocean, Blood Orange and Solange setting the bar high. Hopefully that'll inspire more artists to follow suit next year. In the meantime, here's yet another playlist, my favorite tracks of 2016. There were a select few albums that did it for me, from songs that grew on me with repeat listens (Anohni), to songs that immediately grabbed me but I might not listen to in 2017... which you won't find here! So without further ado, here are favorite albums of the year. I'd also love to hear what you've been listening to (in the comments below.) And don't forget, every week we publish playlists from featured Passersby, so if you're still looking for more great music, be sure to follow along. Happy listening!
♫ Listen to Passerbuys' Favorite tracks of 2016 | FIND US ON SPOTIFY
1. Anohni 'Hopelessness' [SECRETLY CANADIAN / ROUGH TRADE]
2. Jenny Hval 'Blood Bitch' [SACRED BONES]
3. Solange 'A Seat At The Table' [COLUMBIA]
4. Mary Lattimore 'At The Dam' [GHOSTLY]
5. Curren$y 'Andretti 9/30' [MIXTAPE]
6. Death Grips 'Bottomless Pit' [hARVEST]
7. Dawn Richards 'Redemption' [lOCAL ACTION]
8. Frankie Cosmos 'Next Thing' [BAYONET]
9. Rae Remmurd 'Sremmlife 2' [INTERSCOPE]
10. A Tribe Called Quest 'We Got It From Here...Thank You 4 Your Service' [EPIC]
Honorable Mentions
By Clémence Polès
Clemence Poles' Top Ten Movies of 2016
I had no readers, yet for some reason it’s become a thing I’ve looked forward to every year - I even get made fun of for taking it so seriously! My Decembers have been reserved for canceling every plan I may have so that I can binge watch the remaining movies of the year. I’m not going to lie, I’m glad I started Passerbuys because now I have a better platform to inflict my list upon (I’m sorry!) I’m not much of a writer, so I’ll let the synopses take it from here, but I do hope that you enjoy these films as much as I did.
1. Elle by Paul Verhoeven
After being attacked in her own home, the ruthless head of a video game company tracks down her rapist and is drawn into a thrilling game that threatens to spiral out of control at any moment.
Watch THE Trailer
2. Embrace of The Serpent by Ciro Guerra
Karamakate is an Amazonian shaman and the last survivor of his people. In the early 1900s, he befriends two German scientists as they search for a rare healing plant over the course of 40 years.
Watch the Trailer
3. Wiener Dog by Todd Solondz
A dark, starkly funny story of a single dog and the many different people she touches over the course of her short lifetime that offers an honest look at the American experience.
WATCH THE TRAILER
4. Everybody Wants Some!! by Richard Linklater
In 1980, a group of college baseball players navigate their way through the freedoms and responsibilities of unsupervised adulthood.
Watch The Trailer
5. American Honey by Andrea Arnold
A teenage girl with nothing to lose joins a traveling magazine sales crew and gets caught up in a whirlwind of hard partying, law bending, and young love as she criss-crosses the Midwest with a band of misfits.
Watch The Trailer
6. Our Little Sister by Hirokazu Koreeda
Three sisters who live together travel to the countryside for the funeral of their estranged father and meet their shy teenage half-sister. Bonding quickly with their orphaned sibling, they invite her to live with them.
WATCH THE TRAILER
7. Handmaiden by Park Chan-wook
In 1930s Korea, during Japanese occupation, a new girl hired as a handmaiden to a Japanese heiress is secretly involved in a plot to defraud her.
Watch The Trailer
8. Moonlight by Barry Jenkins
A young man deals with his dysfunctional home life and comes of age in Miami during the "War on Drugs" era. The story of his struggle to find himself is told across three defining chapters in his life as he experiences the ecstasy, pain, and beauty of falling in love while grappling with his own sexuality.
Watch The Trailer
9. Things to Come by Mia Hansen-Løve
Nathalie is a philosophy teacher with a seemingly settled existence, juggling a rich life of the mind with the day-to-day demands of career and family. But beginning with the bombshell revelation that her husband of twenty-five years is leaving her, one by one the pillars of Nathalie's life start to crumble.
WATCH THE TRAILER
10. I, Daniel Blake by Ken Loach
A middle aged carpenter recovering from a heart attack befriends a single mother and her two children as they navigate their way through the state welfare system.
Watch The Trailer
Honorable Mentions
Words by Clémence Polès
Clemence Poles' Top 8 Books of 2016
From memoirs to fiction, non-fiction, short stories and philosophy this list is bound to snag your interest. It was hard for us to limit the list, but we fought our Rory Gilmore instincts and refined the list to a somewhat manageable number. So end 2016 and start 2017 off right by treating yourself to the works of some of todays most brilliant minds.
1. The Girls By Emma Cline
Emma Cline's first novel is a fictional telling of the late 1960's in Northern California. Our protagonist is a young teenager, called Evie, and her temptation and ultimate induction into a Manson Family inspired cult. Though Cline cites this as fiction, this is primarily due to her creation of the narrator and Evie's personal story. The details of the cult she joins directly align with the notorious stories of the formidable Manson Family. For a little pre-reading research be sure to check out the book Helter Skelter written by the head prosecutor on the Manson trial, Vincent Bugliosi.
2. Frantumaglia: A Writer's Journey By Elena Ferrante
Okay Ferrante fans, here you go. This may not be a new installment in the Neapolitan series, but it does give us great insight into the mind of the otherwise enigmatic Italian author. Through decades of letters, and notes readers will learn about the writers process and her decision to remain anonymous.
3. The Glorious Heresies By Lisa McInerney
The Glorious Heresies is one of the greatest novels to come out of Ireland this decade. Lisa McInerney - Ireland's contemporary pride and joy - tells a story of four dysfunctional strangers united by an unlikely event. This deep delving and darkly humorous novel is sure to become a favorite.
4. Please Kill me: 20th Anniversary Edition By Legs McNeil
Okay, we know this isn't technically a new book in 2016 — okay, it isn't at all. However, we do want to add this punk bible to our list because the recently released 20th Anniversary Edition includes new interviews and sections previously unpublished. If you've read it already, this update is definitely worth it and if you haven't read it before, stop what you're doing and start right this second.
5. Swing Time By Zadie Smith
Award-winning author Zadie Smith's new novel story will make an imprint on your heart. Swing Time tells the story of best friends Tracey and Aimee. As we read we go through their journey alongside them. We watch them create their identities, pursue their passions and face the sometimes difficult realities of growing up and growing apart. Tracey remains in London whereas Aimee heads to West Africa straining their lifelong friendship. Swing Time is a tribute to female friendships, the pursuit of dance and the bittersweetness of time.
6. At the Existentialist Café: Freedom, Being, and Apricot Cocktails By Sarah Bakewell
This biographical and philosophical work by Sarah Bakewell takes us to the Parisian cafés where De Beauvoir, Sartre, Camus and other profound existentialists gathered and inspired one another. We learn the sources and connections between these iconic thinkers works, their love affairs and the other lesser known - but no less important - people who contributed to the way of thinking.
7. Patience By Daniel Clowes
Ghost World creator Daniel Clowes is back again with his new graphic novel, Patience. This nearly 200 page work is presented in Clowes signature aesthetic. The storyline is once again told in a surreal, distant and yet somehow still welcoming tone that is reminiscent of Ghost World, but is by no means repetitive.
8. Eyes on the street: The life of jane jacobs By Robert Kanigel
Jane Jacobs is an iconic figure every woman should know about, she was an absolute force of nature, and somehow this is one of the only biographies ever to come out on her. Jacobs was an urban theorist whose activism and initiatives were imperative to the rescuing of Manhattan's Greenwich Village during which she fought against Robert Moses — who is also worth a Google search to learn more about a few of his less than convenient projects. One of the great works of urban theory was written by Jacobs entitled Death and Life of American Cities. Jacobs was one of the only woman in a field made up entirely of men, despite this she fought - and was arrested twice - and is without a doubt worth reading about.