Plus: Tavi Gevinson, Allen v Farrow, stale bread, Nyan Cat and good links
Saved For Later | The Guardian
Saved For Later
Thyla-scene
It’s been an entire year since the best day, this is our 60th newsletter, and time means nothing. Have a nice weekend!

– Steph Harmon (Alyx is on holidays)
We can't stop talking about...
and other must-watch docos
Britney Spears / and other must-watch docos
Every take has already been written about Framing Britney Spears, but it will finally air in Australia on Tuesday night on Nine. In this piece, Grace Medford situates Britney's mistreatment by the industry and media in the canon of horrifyingly similar pop star narratives, from Rihanna to Beyonce to Taylor Swift.
On AppleTV+ / Billie Eilish: The World's A Little Blurry is a mesmerising, intimate look at the artist, her process and fame.
On Foxtel / The first episode of the exhaustively researched series Allen v Farrow is out now, unpicking in painstaking detail the case against Woody Allen.
In cinemas / Frank Zappa's wife and business partner Gail delivered an "infinite amount of noes" to hopeful documentary-makers – until Alex Winter came along.
Cook this
Fix stale bread by frying it
Cheese pull / Fix stale bread by frying it
What do you do with an unloved loaf? Stuff it with mozz, batter it up, and whack it in a pan.
Extremely online
Extremely online
The week’s biggest heroes are Jacqui Lambie’s new painting, this iceberg thing, your ex-boyfriend, and Nyan Cat, an aged meme who offers yet more proof that the digital art market is insane. Speaking of aged memes, Your Fave Is Problematic – which, speaking of: Reply All is on pause, a cookie virtue signals, and next week’s Golden Globes had no black voters and were bribed by Emily in Paris.

The best Britney reads come from Tavi Gevinson and Mara Wilson; the greatest Cameo comes from Jon Lovitz; and the purest content comes, weirdly, from the SMH.
The funniest things on the internet
of her browser history
Danielle Walker's guided tour / of her browser history
Danielle Walker loves watching absolute chaos unfold, and actually has an attention span. Her list of very long and deeply strange videos reflects both of these preferences.
Top of the list
A show - perfect trash / Now on Netflix, Ginny & Georgia – about a 30-year-old free spirit mum and her 15-year-old daughter – is "Desperate Housewives meets Gilmore Girls meets Buffy". Aka: absurdly entertaining.
Now on Netflix, Ginny & Georgia – about a 30-year-old free spirit mum and her 15-year-old daughter – is
A book - to sink into / The Performance by Claire Thomas is told from three women's perspectives as they watch Happy Days by Samuel Beckett; it's a fun, thoughtful and clever read.
The Performance by Claire Thomas is told from three women's perspectives as they watch Happy Days by Samuel Beckett; it's a fun, thoughtful and clever read.
A book - to think into / From aliens to creationism to ghosts, the Believer by Sarah Krasnostein – the acclaimed author of the Trauma Cleaner – examines all types of magical thinking, and is out next week.
From aliens to creationism to ghosts, the Believer by Sarah Krasnostein – the acclaimed author of the Trauma Cleaner – examines all types of magical thinking, and is out next week.
An album - for the world's end / Nick Cave and Warren Ellis's new album Carnage "gives good apocalypse", gets good review.
Nick Cave and Warren Ellis's new album Carnage
What people you read are reading
'Wildlife expert pours cold water on claims Tasmanian tiger family spotted', by Naaman Zhou / "The saga of the Thylacine has everything: the chance of a hero risen from the dead, eager ameteur detectives, crushing disappointment, and lots of fun info about pademelons."
'How will Joey live on the new jobseeker rate?', from the Full Story podcast / "Joey can't afford housing – and the new Jobseeker rate is not enough for her to start the pet grooming business she has dreams of. On $44 a day, she can barely buy clothes or fresh food. She is the face of the government's lack of compassion."
'How the wellness and influencer crowd serve conspiracies to the masses,' by Michael McGowan / "Those who fall victim to conspiracy theories often arrive at it from vastly different places, but the two main points seem to be evangelical Christianity and the wellness community. This is a good insight into how the latter get sucked into it."
This week's weirdest story
and his 35kg fleece :')
Baarack the sheep / and his 35kg fleece :')
An escaped ram was found wandering around regional Australia with an overgrown coat that, when shorn, could make 490 very bad socks. He's recovering well!
Enjoying this newsletter?
Have a friend who might? Forward this to them, or tell them how to get it.
Get closer to Guardian Australia journalism
A digital subscription gives you the richest Guardian experience, including exclusive access to the new Australia Weekend app, while helping to fund our vital work.
You are receiving this email because you are a subscriber to Saved For Later. Guardian News & Media Limited - a member of Guardian Media Group PLC. Registered Office: Kings Place, 90 York Way, London, N1 9GU. Registered in England No. 908396