‘The Gilded Age' Season 3 Trailer: A New Generation Rises as Carrie Coon Tries to Secure Her Status in High Society
The Season 3 logline reads: 'Following the Opera War, the old guard is weakened and the Russells stand poised to take their place at the head of society. Bertha sets her sights on a prize that would elevate the family to unimaginable heights while George risks everything on a gambit that could revolutionize the railroad industry — if it doesn't ruin him first. Across the street, the Brook household is thrown into chaos as Agnes refuses to accept Ada's new position as lady of the house. Peggy meets a handsome doctor from Newport whose family is less than enthusiastic about her career. As all of New York hastens toward the future, their ambition may come at the cost of what they truly hold dear.'
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'The Gilded Age' is an Emmy-nominated drama from 'Downton Abbey' creator Julian Fellowes. Along with Coon, the series stars Christine Baranski, Cynthia Nixon, Morgan Spector, Louisa Jacobson, Denée Benton, Taissa Farmiga, and Harry Richardson.
The ensemble also includes Blake Ritson, Ben Ahlers, Ashlie Atkinson, Dylan Baker, Kate Baldwin, Victoria Clark, John Ellison Conlee, Michael Cumpsty, Kelley Curran, Jordan Donica, Jessica Frances Dukes, Claybourne Elder, Amy Forsyth, Jack Gilpin, LisaGay Hamilton, Ward Horton, Simon Jones, Celia Keenan-Bolger, Ben Lamb, Nathan Lane, Andrea Martin, Audra McDonald, Brian Stokes Mitchell, Debra Monk, Hattie Morahan, Donna Murphy, Kristine Nielsen, Paul Alexander Nolan, Kelli O'Hara, Patrick Page, Rachel Pickup, Taylor Richardson, Douglas Sills, Bobby Steggert, Erin Wilhelmi, John Douglas Thompson, Leslie Uggams, Merritt Wever, Bill Camp, and Phylicia Rashad.
'The Gilded Age' Season 3 will debut at Tribeca. Fellowes is the creator/writer/executive producer of the show. Gareth Neame, Bob Greenblatt, and David Crockett also executive produce, along with directors Michael Engler and Salli Richardson-Whitfield and writer Sonja Warfield. 'The Gilded Age' is a co-production between HBO and Universal Television, a division of Universal Studio Group.
'The Gilded Age' Season 3 premieres June 22 on Max. Check out the trailer below.
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Business Insider
2 hours ago
- Business Insider
How the Black aristocracy of the Gilded Age ushered in a new era of education and freedom
Season three of "The Gilded Age" has continued to explore what it was like for wealthy Black Americans in the late 1800s in New York City. One main storyline in "The Gilded Age" follows Peggy Scott (played by Denée Benton), an author, journalist, and daughter of a formerly enslaved man, Arthur Scott, who is a successful pharmacist and business owner in Brooklyn. Her mother, Dorothy Scott, is an accomplished piano player. Peggy's character was inspired by a few real-life women, including Julia C. Collins, the first Black female author to publish a novel. "The Black elite of the Gilded Age signaled that we, too, have taste. We too have education. We are like other citizens," Carla Peterson, historian and author of "Black Gotham: A Family History of African Americans in Nineteenth-Century New York City," told Business Insider. After the Emancipation Proclamation was signed in 1863, the Gilded Age ushered in a Black aristocracy. The new class was made up of Black Americans who managed to amass wealth they'd previously been barred from. Industrialization and the railroad boom opened up business opportunities across the US. Many of the Black elite were made up of the "shopkeeping aristocracy" who owned retail and grocery stores and pharmacies, according to Peterson. "After the Civil War, there was an incredible explosion of modern industry, technology, and science, which fueled the money that makes the Gilded Age," Peterson said. "Black families of wealth emerged in this context." For example, Thomas Downing became one of the wealthiest people in NYC and was known as the"New York Oyster King." Thomas Downing, the son of formerly enslaved parents, moved to New York City and became a savvy businessman who popularized oysters, which had once been considered common food. In 1825, he opened the upscale Thomas Downing Oyster House, a restaurant so popular that Downing was nicknamed "the "New York Oyster King." Downing was one of the wealthiest people in New York City at the time of his death in 1866 — a millionaire in today's money, per The Virginian-Pilot. Still, he was prohibited from acquiring US citizenship until the Civil Rights Act of 1866 was passed, just one day before he died. Or maybe you've heard of Pierre Toussaint. Toussaint was born into slavery in Haiti and was eventually freed in New York City. He became a highly sought-after hairdresser among the society's upper crust, and used his new wealth to support orphans and immigrants to gain education and employment. Women also became more independent and wealthy, such as Mary Ellen Pleasant. Mary Ellen Pleasant became a self-made millionaire after she moved to San Francisco, following the glimmer of the California Gold Rush. While she worked as domestic help, she listened to the wealthy men she served as they exchanged information on making proper investments and managing money. Pleasant used that knowledge to buy up boarding houses, laundromats, restaurants, and Wells Fargo shares, becoming a famous figure in San Francisco in the second half of the 19th century. Some estimates by historians put her wealth around $30 million, which would be almost a billion in today's money. Gaining access to education was one of the ways Black New Yorkers achieved upward mobility. Money alone didn't grant access to the upper echelons of Black society. In addition to having "character" and "respectability," the Black elite emphasized both education and hard work as core values, according to Peterson. "Since Blacks came to this country, education has always been number one," Peterson told Business Insider. "There is a belief that if you had ambition, you could do anything you wanted. And ambition started with education." On February 25, 1837, Quaker philanthropist Richard Humphreys founded the first HBCU in the country, the African Institute — now Cheyney University — in Pennsylvania. The majority of HBCUs originated from 1865 to 1900, the period following the Emancipation Proclamation. Education was key to unlocking the skills to become a doctor or pharmacist, and also led to a flourishing of interests in humanities and the arts, according to Peterson. Scholars like W.E.B. Du Bois advocated for the need for an educated class. "The Negro race, like all races, is going to be saved by its exceptional men," Du Bois wrote in his essay, 'Talented Tenth." But as the name "Gilded Age" implies, not everyone was raking in wealth. Not everyone lived lavish lifestyles. The Gilded Age was also notorious for having the most significant wealth inequality in American history. The vast majority of workers, especially Black Americans and immigrants, faced extreme poverty and harsh working conditions in factories. "Chattel slavery is dead, but industrial slavery remains," economist and New York mayoral candidate Henry George said in 1886. And racism prevented even the most successful people of color from becoming fully integrated. Even those who did manage to gain wealth faced pervasive systemic inequities. White society largely viewed Black Americans as "a homogenous mass of degraded people," according to historian Willard B. Gatewood in his book, "Aristocrats of Color: The Black Elite." There was, however, a "certain amount of cooperation and interracial alliances between Blacks and whites," Peterson said. Peterson described how professional relationships enabled Black Americans to climb the ranks within businesses. She also pointed to the King's Daughters, a nationwide charity organization where white and Black women worked together to help those in need. Friendships between characters like Peggy and Marian, a white woman, in "The Gilded Age" were not unheard of. Erica Armstrong Dunbar, a professor of history at Rutgers University, told The Los Angeles Times about "the letters of white suffragists, women who had deep relationships with Black women, from the era of abolition up through the early 20th century." Activism of the 20th century would not have been possible without these men and women. Peterson said the emergence of the Black elite is inextricably tied to the burgeoning political and social activism in the 20th century, as exemplified by the 1909 founding of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, the political magazine The Crisis, and the Harlem Renaissance.


New York Post
2 hours ago
- New York Post
These are the Top 10 most streamed Billy Joel songs on Spotify
We're all in the mood for these melodies. Spotify compiled a list of the Top 10 most streamed Billy Joel songs for The Post — and the tune that took the crown pays homage to his supermodel ex. The 1983 hit 'Uptown Girl,' which Joel penned for his future wife, Christie Brinkley, landed in the No. 1 spot, according to the stats, compiled after the July 26th soundtrack album release for Joel's new HBO documentary 'Billy Joel: And So It Goes.' 'I wasn't even dating Christie when I started writing the song, I was dating Elle [Macpherson],' Joel once told Howard Stern. 'And then I started dating Christie and rather than it be about all these different girls, she became the 'Uptown Girl.'' 4 Spotify complied a Top 10 list of most streamed Billy Joel songs. Jack Forbes / NY Post Design The Top 10 most streamed Billy Joel songs on Spotify globally are: 'Uptown Girl' 'Piano Man' 'Vienna' 'She's Always a Woman' 'My Life' 'We Didn't Start the Fire' 'Just the Way You Are' 'It's Still Rock and Roll to Me' 'Only the Good Die Young' 'Movin' Out (Anthony's Song)' In the film, Brinkley, who was married to Joel from 1985 to 1994, said she enjoyed being his muse. 'It was fun to be having this whirlwind romance and having certain aspects of that turn into music,' she gushed. 'Piano Man,' in second place, was the six-time Grammy winner's first hit, released in 1973. It was inspired by characters Joel met at The Executive Room, the bar where he played when he and his first wife, Elizabeth Weber, moved to Los Angeles after his first record 'Cold Spring Harbor' flopped. 4 Joel's second wife, Christie Brinkley, is the subject of the first song on the list, 'Uptown Girl.' Getty Images Weber, who worked at the bar as well, was the one Joel refers to in the lyric 'the waitress is practicing politics' — and she told The Post how her now-famous serving gig came about. 'Bill didn't drive and when he went to work, I drove him and waited around to drive him home. John at the bar convinced me to be a cocktail waitress even though I had no experience,' she recalled. 'He knew we had little money and figured if I had to be there while Bill was working, I could make some money too.' The piano man, 76, who has been married four times, admitted that many of his hits were about Weber. 'They say 'Write what you know,' so I wrote what I knew. A lot of the songs were based on Elizabeth,' Joel, a Bronx native who grew up on Long Island, said in the film. 4 In the HBO documentary 'Billy Joel: And So It Goes,' Joel explains that his first wife, Elizabeth Weber, was his muse. Getty Images Two of the songs on the Top 10 list — 'She's Always a Woman' and 'Just the Way You Are' — are based on Weber. 'Oh, I couldn't answer how many songs are about me,' she said. 'We were just living our lives together and we never spoke of it.' The 1977 song 'Vienna,' which Joel wrote about visiting his father — who abandoned him when he was 8 — in the Austrian city in his 20s, came in third place. 4 Joel, a Bronx native who grew up on Long Island, sold more than 150 million records in his career. Getty Images Joel has sold over 150 million records in his career — making him one of the most popular recording artists on the planet — and it's not hard to understand why his songs still resonate, Weber said. 'The human condition has not changed since time began. We all fall in love, experience pain, sorrow and joy,' she said.


CNBC
2 hours ago
- CNBC
Nearly 60% of millennials and Gen Zers say their social life is hurting their financial goals
Emmy, a 31-year-old living in Los Angeles, has been in a credit card debt cycle — racking up balances, paying a card off and then maxing it out again — since she was 18. When Emmy, who uses a pseudonym online to protect her privacy, started sharing her debt journey on TikTok in March, her total balanced exceeded $28,000. "I know this is my fault," she tells CNBC Make It. "I was always the friend that'd be like, 'Shots on me,' or 'Oh, don't worry, I got it' or 'Just pay me next time,'" she says, adding that she wouldn't always follow up on requesting friends pay her back. She's not alone. Nearly 60% of millennials and Gen Zers say their financial goals have been impacted by social spending, according to a new survey from Ally Bank. Spending money on time with friends isn't necessarily a bad thing. In fact, "you're going to get the highest return on your well-being doing that," says Jack Howard, head of money wellness at Ally. "But then we're getting into trouble, because we're finding that 42% of folks are overspending," she adds, citing the survey, which found that 42% of millennials and Gen Zers report overspending on their social budgets several months out of the year. American adults seem to prioritize social time, with 69% of survey respondents saying they try to connect with their friends in-person at least once a week. And on average, they spend $250 a month on social activities, Ally found. But few adults seem to properly budget for social spending. Just 18% of Gen Zers and millennials say they have a strict budget for activities with friends, Ally found. "You gotta just put it in your budget," Howard says. "I think a lot of people just don't realize that cocktails with my girlfriends this day and brunch this day, and then I DoorDash with my partner another day, all of those expenses add up." Look at money as "a tool to enhance your values and your experiences," Howard says. Think deeply about your values and see if they are reflected in your spending, she says. If costly activities like going out to dinner or traveling with friends are important to you, you may have to make cuts in other areas of your life in order to prioritize them. Outside of making budget adjustments to allow for more social spending, Howard also recommends finding cheap or free activities to do with your friends — something only 23% of millennials and Gen Zers say they prioritize, Ally found. "What you really want is the experience. What you really want is the time with your friend," Howard says. "[We need to] really get back to the basics of understanding that we need these friendships to increase our well-being … but we don't want to overspend to where we're getting into financial trouble." Emmy is working on "adjusting the language with my friends" to suggest free or cheaper hangouts as she focuses on paying down her credit card debt. However, it's been difficult to make the change because she was so comfortable spending money with her friends, and they don't know about the level of debt she's dealing with, she says. "I can confidently say that they would not judge me if they knew what I was doing, but I still just [have] the fear of being perceived by the people that you love," she says. That kind of shame is common, Howard says, and can contribute to continued overspending. She recommends trying to identify where the feeling is coming from so you can better understand why you're inclined to say "yes" to things you may not be able to afford. It's a money mindset that often stems from how you were raised or something that happened in your early years, Howard says. "Until you really connect that past to the present, you tend to do those things over and over again, which will show up not only in how you spend on yourself, but also in how you spend in your relationships with friends and family," she says. If you're struggling to figure out how to better manage your money, consider working with a professional like a certified financial planner or a financial therapist who can offer guidance on your specific situation.