Culture Gabfest - Somehow, Miranda Priestly Returned Edition
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Slate
3.9 • 1.1K Ratings
🗓️ 6 May 2026
⏱️ 58 minutes
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Summary
This week, Julia Turner and Dana Stevens are joined by Slate’s own Rebecca Onion to discuss The Devil Wears Prada 2, BEEF season 2, and the NYT’s best living songwriters package with Slate’s music critic Carl Wilson.
Twenty years on, we return to the world of The Devil Wears Prada. In the sequel, Andy, Anne Hathaway’s character, must save Runway Magazine from the forces of capital, who are selling the Vogue-analogue for parts, as Meryl Streep’s Miranda Priestly struggles to hang on to her own power. The movie has a lot to say about the state of journalism and media with plot lines seemingly ripped from the gossip pages, but does it all come together in the edit? We discuss.
Then, the second season of A24’s anthology series BEEF stars Oscar Isaac and Carey Mulligan as a volatile millennial couple who enter into a feud with a younger couple, played by Cailee Spaeny and Charles Melton. Set at a rich Californian golf resort and its environs, the show satirizes class and generational resentments as the characters scramble to claim the scraps of their betters at the expense of everyone else. The characters are mostly unlikeable, and the premise might be a little less original than the first season, but given BEEF’s stacked cast and pedigree, does the show sizzle?
Finally we’re joined by Carl Wilson, Slate’s music critic and author of the newsletter “Crritic!” to discuss the New York Times package: The 30 Greatest Living Songwriters. Carl submitted a ballot for the list, and the polished version isn’t too far from his submission. He gets into his picks and discusses what the list is saying about the field of songwriting and the idea of a songwriter as it’s been expanded to include non-traditional instrumentation and digital composition. But like all lists it has sparked debate about the inclusions (Carole King, Stevie Wonder) the exclusions (Randy Newman, Liz Phair, David Byrne) and whether Taylor Swift’s inclusion was solely to get an interview. Together with Carl, we try and make sense of the list and talk about our favorites.
As promised, here is Carl’s full ballot (The asterisks indicate people who Carl voted for but who have since died):
Willie Nelson
Smokey Robinson
Bobby Braddock
*Brian Wilson
Bob Dylan
Carole King
Randy Newman
Dolly Parton
Stevie Wonder
*Sly Stone
The Flatlanders (Butch Hancock/Jimmie Dale Gilmore/*Joe Ely)
Tom Waits & Kathleen Brennan
Nile Rodgers
David Byrne
Mark Eitzel
Chuck D & the Bomb Squad
Jimmy Jam & Terry Lewis
Stephin Merritt
Liz Phair
John Darnielle (The Mountain Goats)
Missy Elliott & Timbaland
The Love Junkies (Hillary Lindsey/Lori McKenna/Liz Rose)
Outkast (Big Boi/Andre 3000)
Josh Osborne/Brandy Clark/Shane McAnally
Phoebe Bridgers
Endorsements:
Julia: The SNL sketch featuring Teana Taylor, Grandpa At The Wedding.
Rebecca: The new Lord Of The Flies adaptation on Netflix.
Dana: The article in Vogue: Meryl Streep and Anna Wintour on Power, Fashion, and Acting the Part by Chloe Malle.
Email us your thoughts at culturefest@slate.com.
Podcast production by Benjamin Frisch. Production assistance by Daniel Hirsch.
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | I'm Julia Turner, and this is the Slate Culture Gab Fest, Somehow Miranda Priestley returned edition. |
| 0:17.2 | It's Wednesday, May 6, 2006, and on today's show, we're talking about the devil wears Prada 2, which flounces back to us in Hote Couture and delivers a treatise on the bleak state of journalism and magazines and capitalism. |
| 0:32.4 | Then, season 2 of Beef, this time starring Oscar Isaac and Carrie Mulligan as an embittered couple running a |
| 0:38.4 | Montecito-style golf resort and simmering with omnidirectional resentment. |
| 0:43.7 | Finally, we'll dig into the New York Times Magazine's big package on great songwriters, |
| 0:48.5 | the 30 greatest living American songwriters, to be precise, which is a sprawling attempt to define excellence |
| 0:56.3 | in a form that's a little hard to get your head around. There's a lot of different kinds of |
| 0:59.9 | musicians on this list. We will discuss with Slate's own Carl Wilson in our third segment. |
| 1:05.8 | Dana Stevens is here with me today. Hi, Dana. Good morning. And joining us in Steve's stead is Rebecca Onion. Hello, Rebecca. |
| 1:14.0 | Hi. How's it going? It's going great. Let's make a shout. Let's start with the Devil Wears Prada 2, |
| 1:21.4 | which arrives two decades after the original 2006 film, which made being an editorial assistant in New York City seem like one of the most important and fraught avenues of ambition a smart young woman could pursue. |
| 1:33.4 | The sequel brings back Merrill Streep as Miranda Priestley, the Anna Wintour-esque imperious runway magazine editor, who is now navigating a media landscape that has been hollowed out, digitized, |
| 1:45.3 | and in some ways democratized, though not necessarily made kinder. |
| 1:49.7 | Anne Hathaway's Andy is also back, now an acclaimed investigative journalist, |
| 1:54.4 | who is returned to runway to bring them credibility as they navigate a scandal. |
| 2:00.7 | We've also got Emily Blunt and Stanley Tucci back from the original as well. |
| 2:05.7 | Winy boyfriend, Adrian Grenier, does not return. |
| 2:09.1 | Sniff, sniff. |
| 2:10.5 | Before we dive into this movie, let's listen to a clip. |
| 2:14.1 | Here we've got Miranda Priestley, Andy, and Tucci's Nigel, just after Andy has been |
| 2:20.0 | brought back into the magazine, not by Miranda, visiting an important advertiser, Dior, |
| 2:26.6 | whom they need to placate, and who do we find running Dior or running this portion of Dior? |
... |
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