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Too Much: Lena Dunham's mega-hyped new romcom is destined for best comedy awards

Too Much: Lena Dunham's mega-hyped new romcom is destined for best comedy awards

The Guardian2 days ago
Too Much (Netflix, Thursday 10 July) opens with a montage of the kind of woman you could be, if you were a carefree New Yorker who upped sticks and moved to London on a whim. You could be a candlelit period heroine, roaming across the moors, or one of Jack the Ripper's victims, or you could be a sturdy northern police sergeant, which leads to the slightly strange spectacle of seeing Megan Stalter from Hacks doing a French and Saunders-style parody of what looks a lot like Happy Valley.
The much-hyped new Lena Dunham comedy follows Jess (Stalter), an open-hearted American woman who moves to London to escape a broken heart. There, she falls for a messy indie musician called Felix, whom she meets when he's playing a gig in a pub. Dunham co-created the series with her husband Luis Felber, and it is loosely based on their real-life romance and marriage.
Jess decides to reinvent her life following the decline of her relationship with the highly strung Zev (Michael Zegen). Zev has quickly moved on to an influencer, played by Emily Ratajkowski, and Jess records long videos about her feelings, addressed to Zev's new girlfriend, which she never plans to send … but you can probably guess that they won't stay private for ever. Following a post-breakup spell amid the matriarchs of her Long Island family home, she packs her bags and books a room on a British estate. What Jess imagines an estate to be is basically Mr Darcy emerging from the lake at Chatsworth. You can imagine the estate she ends up on when she arrives in London.
This culture-clash, fish-out-of-water strand is not the main point, though it does bubble under throughout. It offers the chance to hear British slang and idioms with new ears: if 'getting a bollocking' never sounded strange to you, then it is worth considering that if you have no idea what it means in the first place, it can come across as a little smutty. I wonder if it is also the first time 'oi oi saveloy' has made its way on to a Netflix series.
When Jess meets Felix (Will Sharpe, in leather jacket, lipstick and nail polish), her Mr Darcy/Mr Rochester dreams shuffle off in a very different direction. It is clear from the off that they like each other very much, but they don't have the patience to pretend to be better people, or show each other their best sides. Instead, they come together over their flaws and oddities, finding a way to be together despite their considerable excess baggage. Too Much presents itself as a romcom, at least on the surface – Jess loves Love Actually and Notting Hill, and each of the episodes gets a romcom pun as its title – but in the end, it is an abrasive, complicated, grownup version of romance, rather than any picture-perfect illusion.
The Bear has sparked an ongoing debate about what counts as comedy and what counts as drama, by entering itself into various comedy categories at awards shows, despite being defiantly laugh-free and deeply traumatic in almost every scene. While Too Much isn't quite on that same level of harrowing, viewers should know in advance that it is not exactly a laugh-a-minute lolfest. Jess must slowly work out how she lost herself in her relationship with Zev, while Felix's family are an eccentric, unreliable nightmare, and his struggles with sobriety are pressing and ongoing. You begin to hope that it's only loosely based on real life when it delves into the grotesque, cartoonish awfulness of the English upper classes. Not even the most obnoxious of interlopers deserves to be exposed to a country house horror show in which grown women have nicknames that make them sound like horses.
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Too Much is stacked with a stupidly strong cast, who drop in seemingly for fun: Richard E Grant, Stephen Fry, Rita Wilson, Rhea Perlman, Naomi Watts, Andrew Scott, and that really is only scratching the surface. But in the end, despite being dressed up in romcom clothing, Too Much is about broken people finding love, actually, while learning to live with pain. Look out for it in those best comedy categories, 2026.
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Lily Allen shows off the results of her boob job in a sheer bralet and matching shorts as she poses for racy snaps during a day out in London
Lily Allen shows off the results of her boob job in a sheer bralet and matching shorts as she poses for racy snaps during a day out in London

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Lily Allen shows off the results of her boob job in a sheer bralet and matching shorts as she poses for racy snaps during a day out in London

She recently set pulses racing during a wild weekend at Glastonbury. And Lily Allen showed off her figure once again as she posed for eye-catching snaps in a sexy nude bralet during a day out in London. Taking to Instagram on Sunday, the singer, 40, showed off the results of her recent boob job in the daring top with a black lace print and matching shorts. Lily shared the gallery of snaps after enjoying the outing with her pal Gracie Allen, and posed for snaps in the revealing crop top from ethical lingerie brand Studio Pia. No doubt hinting at the racy nature of her outfit, Lily captioned her post with a string of snake emojis. In March, Lily, who split from husband David Harbour last year, shared she underwent an 'incredible' boob job, and she has been buying lingerie to show it off. Lily, who split from David at the end of last year, had the surgery in February, but admitted that the time she felt her new cleavage doesn't match her face. She told her close friend Miquita Oliver on their Miss Me? podcast: 'How do I feel about ageing? Well, I just got some additions to the family - don't know if you'd noticed?' Miquita told her: 'I noticed because you pulled your top off a month ago and showed them to me. I was like ''absolutely incredible''.' Lily, who shared insight into her boob job ahead of her 40th birthday, continued: 'They look really incredible when I take my top off, and my bra off, but there's definitely a contrast in age between my breasts and my face. 'I'm like 40, 18, 40, 18. I'm just thinking 'maybe I get the BBL (Brazilian butt lift) next'. I quite want the bum.' Lily added on her new boobs: 'There's a thing that happens a few months after you get them which is they drop and fluff. 'So they're still quite high and they're still quite hard. When they drop and fluff they feel like normal boobs. 'So I haven't got to drop and fluff yet, I'm very much looking forward to that. In March, Lily, who split from husband David Harbour last year, shared that she underwent an 'incredible' boob job, and she has been buying sexy lingerie to show it off 'I feel like it's really fun. I'm like buying fancy lingerie that my boobs can actually fit in and taking pictures on my phone. 'Haven't sent them to anyone yet, but it will hopefully get there at some point. 'On my 40th birthday I'm going to drop and fluff.' Last month, Lily enjoyed a date with actor James Norton, 39,, after meeting on the celebrity dating app Raya. The duo made the most of their first outing together, with the pair reportedly seen kissing backstage while attending Charli XCX's Lido Festival show. The singer and actor, 39, were pictured cosying up to one another and sipping on non-alcoholic beers as they watched Charli's show in the capital, before heading to a backstage compound to party with the singer. Lily ended her marriage to Stranger Things star husband David Harbour, 50, in December 2024 after four years of marriage, following her discovery he had a secret profile on Raya. James is said to have .

The brothers from Bolton who've made £120m dressing pop stars
The brothers from Bolton who've made £120m dressing pop stars

Times

time2 hours ago

  • Times

The brothers from Bolton who've made £120m dressing pop stars

I know I have arrived at the right industrial estate near Bolton when I clock the cars. They are parked next to each other, a humdinger of a Roller and an even larger Bentley, with matching his 'n' his personalised number plates. The letters on those plates make it clear that the cars belong to the Heaton brothers, Mike and George, who founded their clothing brand Represent 14 years ago in their parents' old garden shed a few minutes up the road. The shed (and house) where it all began is now owned by a 'massive Represent fan', George says. 'I think he hopes that if his sons work in that shed they will have the same luck we did.' Mike is now 34, George is now 32 and Represent is now a phenomenon. You may not have heard of it but every teenage and twentysomething male I have spoken to has. In May the pair appeared at No 31 in The Sunday Times's 40 Under 40 Rich List with a combined fortune of £122 million. Celebrity fans include Justin Bieber, Dua Lipa and Kim Kardashian, plus a gentleman who goes by the name of Bad Bunny. The brand only just missed its stated ambition of a £100 million turnover in the last financial year by a squeak. They are fine with that, they claim. 'It was a very lofty ambition,' George says. 'We pushed and we pushed. Our aim now is to get to £250 million in the next three to five years.' Mike nods. 'If we can crack America the market's seven times the size of the UK.' Represent opened boutiques in Los Angeles and Manchester (in that order) last year, and will open in London on July 12. A sweatshirt starts at £130, though the more expensive items — many of which feature the kind of line drawings Mike was doing while studying graphic design at the University of Salford when the pair decided to launch their own brand — can be more pricey. Still, theirs is, George insists, 'An attainable price point. Not cheap, but not too expensive for the everyday lad.' Or indeed lass. They branched out into womenswear in February. As you can probably tell, George is the Heaton who has more to say for himself. Yet even he — for someone whose look-at-me Los Angeles house and car collection, plus even more look-at-me musculature, is all over Instagram — is surprisingly softly spoken. Neither of them come across as a C-suite cliché. 'That's not for us,' George says. 'We have always been like this. I think it would be exhausting to try to be any other way.' Mike — who seems verging on shy — tells me he doesn't use his upstairs office much 'as I don't like to have to make people come up here'. Theirs is an unusual combination of something that is akin to reticence with so much inner fire you can almost smell it. They both use the word 'grafting' several times during our conversation. The Heatons may be the second-most famous brothers to have come out of Greater Manchester but they couldn't be more different from the first, those ever-sparring Gallaghers. With whom, as it so happens, Represent is collaborating, producing merchandise for this summer's Oasis reunion. But I still have to ask: who is Noel and who is Liam in their relationship? Their answer says it all. Mike: 'Ha! That's a good question.' George: 'Even though Liam was the frontman, I think Noel was more of the …' Mike: '… He was the brains, weren't he?' George: 'Yeah, yeah.' Mike: 'Maybe I am Noel and you are Liam!' George: 'I'll have either!' They both chortle. There's clearly no power struggle here. Represent sells a slightly Californian take on streetwear that was first inspired by the Heatons' teenage love of skateboarding and vintage band T-shirts. Growing up in the Noughties, they were anomalies in their area with their long hair, baggy jeans and the wooden skate ramp their dad — who ran a business converting minibuses for disabled users and also chauffeured vintage Rolls-Royces at weddings — built for them in the back garden. 'We always looked to the States,' Mike says. 'We just didn't fit in around here,' George says. 'We started out simply creating clothes that we wanted to wear.' • Stars out for Max Mara show that offers light touch in the heat 'You were either a mosher or a chav,' Mike says. A mosher? 'You had long hair and skated, and were maybe a bit greasy and a bit of a weirdo.' Their brand's broad appeal today tracks a wider shift: the transformation of skateboarding — and the sartorial bagginess, not to mention grunginess, that went with it — from mosher to mainstream, from counterculture to what dads do with their daughters at the weekend. Just one of the things Represent does well is create faux vintage gear that somehow looks just the right amount of knackered and also as if it smells of fabric softener. Today both brothers are sporting faded black sweatshirts that are — if you are the sort of person who is into faded black sweatshirts, and lots of people are — nothing less than perfect. In this their success tracks a second cultural shift. Not only has mere 'second-hand' become 'vintage', but 'vintage' — the right sort of vintage — is now such a status symbol as to be faked. Mike tells me they think nothing of spending $2,000 on an original tee from one of Los Angeles' bouji vintage stores to use as inspiration. What on earth makes a second-hand T-shirt worth that much money? 'The way it's been worn, the distressing,' he says. • Brad's midlife crisis wardrobe 'We're the best in the world at creating new versions of vintage products,' George says. 'I've never come across another brand that's been able to replicate a vintage tee like we do.' Business really started to fly when the brothers started sharing their lives on social media. 'It took us three years to put one YouTube video out,' George says with a laugh. 'Just because, like, filming yourself, you think, 'What will other other people perceive me as? Am I cool enough to match how cool the brand is?' But people just started loving it and it became a thing and, yeah, we like to do it.' What's become important to them, George continues, is 'that we kind of position ourselves as motivational rather than just, you know, like a rapper would. They just show off everything they do and buy. Whereas our position is, we get up, we train, we work, we sleep.' • 40 richest people under 40 in the UK Not that they are, as discussed, entirely without the rapper accoutrements. They are both wearing a gold and diamond Rolex the size of a sundial today, for example, though they tell me they were inherited from their father and grandfather respectively. (There's clearly more money in minibuses than one might think.) They also concede, laughing, that the further back one delves into their social media, the more rapper it gets — the more 'chunky chains' there are, for example. 'Mike was wearing a chain once and went into the sun and then the pattern was burnt into his neck,' George says. 'Yeah,' Mike says with a chuckle, delighted. 'Yeah.' Given how relentlessly on-brand their social media profiles are, what do they have in their lives that isn't? 'I always wanted an English bull terrier,' George says, 'and we've always used them in shoots. I always had this vision of driving around LA in a vintage Rolls with the top down and an English bull terrier hanging out. Instead I ended up with a goldendoodle.' He does, needless to say, have the vintage Rolls over in LA, where he now lives for much of the year, as well as the new one in the car park outside. There is also a Range Rover in California 'for everyday'. Aside from the clothes themselves, it's the Heatons' take on 21st bro-dom that is a big part of their appeal. What goes down in the weights room seems to have become more important than what goes down at the skate park in the world of Represent, which now includes a fitness-focused line called 247. At their HQ the gym takes up almost as much space as the office. When I visit mid-afternoon there are just a couple of people in there — one of them Mike's girlfriend — pumping impressive amounts of iron. They run classes every morning, the women's at 6am, the men's at 7am, as well as at lunchtime. It seems a bit unfair that the women have to get up earlier if they want to do the morning class, I say. 'It was the result of a vote,' George says. 'The women wanted more time to get ready after.' George is the most impressive in the gym, volunteers the ever-generous Mike. 'He has got the best bench press in the office.' Mike's forte is apparently 'the GHD'. The GHD? 'The glutes and hamstring developer. Though I did manage to get myself a hernia off it.' So more of a glutes and hernia developer, then? They guffaw. • We surfed the West Coast wave when our designs hit the streets George moved to Los Angeles just before they opened their store there, the better to, as he puts it, 'bring people on the journey with us, the Brit in LA'. This has become an established path among youth-targeting British brands. Conna Walker of the bodycon-fuelled House of CB is another thirtysomething founder who spends part of her year there and makes sure to post regularly to tell us about it. It seems remarkable that Represent, a business that had its foundations in selling a particular take on the American dream — a grungy, long-haired take — to the British, should now be selling it back to America. Forget coals to Newcastle, think hoodies to West Hollywood. But what's even more remarkable is that two brothers with no backers and no connections have gained such ground in an arena that should theoretically be locked down by the vast marketing spends and real estate — whether concrete or digital — of established brands such as Nike and Adidas. Not that Represent is entirely anomalous. Castore, founded by two more brothers, Tom and Phil Beahon, aged 35 and 32 respectively, from just down the road in Liverpool, are at No 14 on the 40 Under 40 rich list, with a combined fortune of £350 million. Social media has been one enabler but so too has the fact that Represent — and the two men behind it — seems real, authentic and at times downright quirky, what with those tattoo-adjacent graphics of Mike's, plus that love they inherited from their father of all things Rolls. This manifests not only in George's car collection (not to mention, he tells me, in his tattoo collection) but also in one of their most popular logos. 'It's called Represent Owners' Club,' Mike says, 'and it was inspired by the Rolls-Royce owners' club. Our dad would get the magazine when we were growing up. It made you feel a part of something.' 'We have used a lot of what Rolls does as inspiration,' George says. 'The way they built that brand, we're obsessed. How they talk about the cars is how we talk about the clothes.' Next stop £250 million. I'd put money on it.

Food lovers, this one's for you! Snap up an exclusive 40% saving on National Geographic Traveller (UK) Food Festival tickets
Food lovers, this one's for you! Snap up an exclusive 40% saving on National Geographic Traveller (UK) Food Festival tickets

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Food lovers, this one's for you! Snap up an exclusive 40% saving on National Geographic Traveller (UK) Food Festival tickets

Tired of scrolling past yet another soggy salad on your feed? Swap the doomscroll for a forkful of inspiration at this summer's National Geographic Traveller (UK) Food Festival, returning to London with its biggest line-up yet. And thanks to MailOnline's exclusive flash sale, you can taste the world for less — but only if you move fast. Save 40% — how to claim From 8am on Monday 7 July until 11.59pm on Wednesday 9 July, MailOnline readers can save 40% on general admission tickets. Simply head to the festival booking page and enter the code that matches your preferred day at checkout: Day: Full price Flash-sale code Your price* Saturday 19 July £25 NGTSAT40 £15 Sunday 20 July £25 NGTSUN40 £15 *Discount applies to standard adult admission only. Offer strictly available during the flash sale window. Tickets are limited and once they're gone, they're gone — so set a reminder, gather your fellow food lovers and lock in those savings before they're gone. Star chefs you won't want to miss The 2025 festival welcomes an impressive roster of culinary talents: • Yotam Ottolenghi makes his long-awaited festival debut on the Main Stage, promising vibrant Mediterranean flavours and plenty of crowd-pleasing tips. • Andi Oliver, TV presenter and champion of Caribbean cuisine, returns for her fourth appearance to headline Sunday's programme. Expect punchy spices, infectious energy and stories that will have you booking your next island escape. • Asma Khan, renowned for her authentic Indian cuisine and storytelling through food, showcases recipes from her newest cookbook, Monsoon. • Karan Gokani, founder of Hoppers, brings his unique blend of South Asian flavours inspired by India and Sri Lanka. • José Pizarro, the king of Spanish food in the UK, shares his passion for Iberian cuisine and storytelling. • Clodagh McKenna, Irish chef and TV favourite, brings seasonal recipes to life. • Dina Macki, cookbook author and chef, celebrates Omani flavours with dishes like salmon, tamarind and aubergine curry. • Jeremy Pang, wok master and crowd favourite from the School of Wok, offers a taste of Hong Kong with dishes like wonton braised noodles and dry-fried green beans with pork mince. They'll be joined by a who's who of global gastronomy, including cookbook authors, wine experts and travel insiders. More than a tasting ticket Two flavour-packed days at the Business Design Centre will bring you: • Live demos: Bag a front row seat as chefs plate up signature dishes, share trade secrets and take audience questions. • Tasting workshops: Hone your palate at expert-led sessions covering everything from British farmhouse cheese to Georgian qvevri wines and Caribbean cocktails. • Speakers' Corner: Hear food writers, photographers and adventurers unpack the culture behind each bite. • Marketplace & street food: Stock up on artisan goodies and graze your way around the globe without leaving N1. • Photo clinics & masterclasses: Learn to capture edible works of art (before devouring them). Whether you're a seasoned supper-clubber, budding chef or just love a good free sample, there's something to satisfy every appetite. Plan your visit • Venue: Business Design Centre, 52 Upper St, Islington — just a five-minute walk from Angel Tube. • Getting there: Victoria, Northern and Overground lines are all nearby; there are plenty of bus routes and cycle racks. • Accessibility: Step-free access throughout; companion tickets available on request. Why book now? Secure your slot during the 48-hour 40% discount window and you'll: • Save £10 on every ticket. • Beat the inevitable last-minute sell-out. • Free up cash for an extra session — truffle-tasting, anyone? How to redeem • Visit the official ticket portal (link below). • Enter NGTSAT40 or NGTSUN60 in the Promo Code box. • Choose General Admission for your chosen day. • Check out and start counting down the days until your food adventure. Book tickets here (codes valid 7-9 July only). MailOnline may earn commission on sales generated from this article, but this never influences our editorial independence. Prices and availability are correct at time of publication. Flash-sale discount applies to adult general-admission tickets purchased between 08:00 BST on 7 July 2025 and 23:59 BST on 9 July 2025. Tickets are sold subject to the festival's terms and conditions. For full FAQs, visit the National Geographic Traveller (UK) Food Festival website. Bags packed? Appetite primed? With a 40% saving, the hardest part will be waiting until the gates open on 19 July. See you at the Main Stage!

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